The big question, IMO, is going to be if the coaches learn from the MANY mistakes they made this game (no prevent defense with the clock running out, poor clock management at the end of the game, no runs inside the 10 yard line, no goal line offense, running zone read with QD despite him being no threat to run, etc) and make some meaningful adjustments to give the team a chance to get past 6-7 wins.
No question the coaches made some poor decisions, but consider the flip side of the last few minutes:
1) If the Vols run Kelly three times into run blitzes and the field goal gets blocked (or Medley, not exactly Mr. Reliable, misses it), then we're all upset that Butch was too predictable. "Why didn't we open up the playbook to try and win the game?" I thought Tennessee should have run the ball at least once in that sequence, but remember that Kelly drops a sure touchdown pass on first down. Clearly the Florida defense didn't expect that play.
2) MacElwain said in the press conference afterward that the Gators were trying to pick up 25 yards or so, call a timeout, and give Pinero (a really good, big-legged kicker) a shot at the game winner. If Shoop plays three-deep or quarters zone coverage, or worse yet, only rushes three, then it plays right into the Florida play-call.
I'm as pissed as anyone at the end of the game, but if Kelly catches that touchdown pass, Kongbo doesn't let Franks escape containment, or Abernathy (I think he was the safety on Cleveland) doesn't take one false step, Tennessee wins that ballgame. Note that I'm not blaming any of the individual players-- win as a team, lose as team-- but execution absolutely crushed the Vols all day.
The biggest indictment of Butch (and Scott, if he had a free hand to call plays) is the offensive gameplan in the first half. That first-and-goal sequence was terrible, and relying on first year receivers (Palmer) at the goal line is a recipe for disaster. Watching Henderson return the tipped pass for a touchdown gave me PTSD flashbacks to the immortal AJ Suggs against Georgia back in the early 2000s.
TL;DR: The game never should have come down to Florida's best WR against a safety in single coverage, because Tennessee should have been up 13-6 or more at halftime. Who knows how the game plays out if the Vols have a halftime lead, but I don't think Tennessee loses on a Hail Mary.