Rucker: Pruitt facing tough decisions for Vols' future

#4
#4
It is unfathomable why Pruitt continues to put JG on the field.

From the article:


But Jarrett Guarantano is holding back this Tennessee offense in ways I never thought possible.

Some of Guarantano’s throws Saturday were some of the worst throws I’ve ever seen from an SEC quarterback. Several players were absolutely wide open within 15 yards of him, and he missed them. I can’t explain that. I don’t know who could explain it. You should be able to jar an SEC quarterback from a deep sleep at 3 a.m. and watch him complete those throws.

Guarantano has had trouble finding open players downfield. That’s not good, but it’s the kind of thing you see even at the major-college level from time to time. You can work around that and still be a decent team. You won’t win a championship, but you can win some games.

You can’t work around some of the throws and some of the decisions Guarantano made at The Swamp on Saturday. You just can’t.

The opening moments of Saturday’s second quarter couldn’t be believed despite being seen.

Guarantano was flagged for delay of game to start the quarter. The Vols had a three-minute stoppage of play before going to the line of scrimmage to start that quarter, and they still couldn’t get a play off in time. On literally the next snap, Tennessee offensive coordinator Jim Chaney made essentially a perfect play call that created confusion on the back end of Florida’s defense and led to senior tight end Dominick Wood-Anderson running free with absolutely no one within 10 yards of him. He could have caught the ball, stopped, tied his shoes and still had a chance to score an 83-yard touchdown that would have put the Vols an extra-point away from tying the score and silencing The Swamp.


And … Guarantano overthrew him by a wide margin.

You can’t watch that play enough times to make any sense of it. I can’t recall seeing anything like that in an SEC game, let alone a Tennessee-Florida game. There was no one near Guarantano or Wood-Anderson. Plays at this level do not get easier than that.


Vols junior quarterback Jarrett Guarantano (Photo: Caitie McMekin, Knoxville News Sentinel)
Guarantano, to his credit, shook that off two plays later and threw a beautiful strike to senior wide receiver Jauan Jennings to move the chains.

Three plays after that, though, Guarantano misread a Florida coverage and threw a ball 15 yards away from intended receiver Marquez Callaway and 0 yards away from Florida cornerback Marco Wilson.

Florida’s offense mustered only a field goal on the ensuing drive, but every point Tennessee allows on defense is a point the Vols’ offense will struggle to match.

Later in the second quarter, Guarantano and Ty Chandler failed to connect on a simple swing pass with no one anywhere near the running back on a third-and-8 play. It was a check-down throw. Again, a check-down throw. Whether he should have checked it down on third-and-8 is a fair discussion, but there are worse things in the word that a player as fast as Chandler getting the ball in space. But the simplest things have been unfathomably difficult for this Tennessee offense to achieve.
 
#5
#5
If you're going to turn to the youth on this team, it's now or never for this season. If they're to have a realistic chance to beat teams like USC, Mizzou, UK, Vandy, and MSU, they need reps and experience now. If we wait until the schedule gets easier, they'll just go through the growing pains and adjustment to the speed of the game against those guys instead of really being ready to compete.

You play against teams like UGA and Bama and compete and it makes the other teams a lot easier to go up against. I'm not the coach, but I'd load the lineups with youth and play 'em these next two games. Then let's see if we can gel and knock off a few sec foes as the season winds down.
 
#7
#7
Well stated. Someone once told me a great strength without checks can become a great weakness. When CJP arrived, there were many statements from his former players and people in the Ft Payne area being glad he is getting this chance because of the person he is and how he cares about the young men as both players and individuals. I believe he has seen potential in JG and has wanted to give him every benefit of the doubt to be successful realizing the adversity of multiple coaches and schemes that have been dumped on him since he arrived. So his desire for JG to succeed may have blinded him to what the team needed which is the HC primary responsiblity. Don't get me wrong, I want every Vol to be successful - I am not pulling against JG. But like this article states several times he just is not the QB we need. The magnitude of the missed throw to DWA and throwing in the dirt to Chaney are just 2 examples. I believe he has lost confidence in himself and the players around him have lost confidence in him. He may have to go the transfer route like Peterman to find success in football.

I would also suggest we need to stick with CJP for at least 2 more years to see if he can get the job done. This dumpster fire started over 10 years ago and after 4 AD changes, 4 HC changes and multiple chancellors - well, it is just ugly. We can see first hand how our roster is not what it should be, but given the coaching carousel and the changing schemes each has recruited to right now we need stability to get a roster capable of playing his schemes.

It's going to be a long year and going forward I will not be gauging this team and coaches on wins and losses because a losing season is all but guaranteed. I want to see effort for 60 minutes, pride, discipline and improvement to start setting up the future. Let's find out who wants to be here and who is going through the motions as Wes suggests.
 
#8
#8
It is unfathomable why Pruitt continues to put JG on the field.

From the article:


But Jarrett Guarantano is holding back this Tennessee offense in ways I never thought possible.

Some of Guarantano’s throws Saturday were some of the worst throws I’ve ever seen from an SEC quarterback. Several players were absolutely wide open within 15 yards of him, and he missed them. I can’t explain that. I don’t know who could explain it. You should be able to jar an SEC quarterback from a deep sleep at 3 a.m. and watch him complete those throws.

Guarantano has had trouble finding open players downfield. That’s not good, but it’s the kind of thing you see even at the major-college level from time to time. You can work around that and still be a decent team. You won’t win a championship, but you can win some games.

You can’t work around some of the throws and some of the decisions Guarantano made at The Swamp on Saturday. You just can’t.

The opening moments of Saturday’s second quarter couldn’t be believed despite being seen.

Guarantano was flagged for delay of game to start the quarter. The Vols had a three-minute stoppage of play before going to the line of scrimmage to start that quarter, and they still couldn’t get a play off in time. On literally the next snap, Tennessee offensive coordinator Jim Chaney made essentially a perfect play call that created confusion on the back end of Florida’s defense and led to senior tight end Dominick Wood-Anderson running free with absolutely no one within 10 yards of him. He could have caught the ball, stopped, tied his shoes and still had a chance to score an 83-yard touchdown that would have put the Vols an extra-point away from tying the score and silencing The Swamp.


And … Guarantano overthrew him by a wide margin.

You can’t watch that play enough times to make any sense of it. I can’t recall seeing anything like that in an SEC game, let alone a Tennessee-Florida game. There was no one near Guarantano or Wood-Anderson. Plays at this level do not get easier than that.


Vols junior quarterback Jarrett Guarantano (Photo: Caitie McMekin, Knoxville News Sentinel)
Guarantano, to his credit, shook that off two plays later and threw a beautiful strike to senior wide receiver Jauan Jennings to move the chains.

Three plays after that, though, Guarantano misread a Florida coverage and threw a ball 15 yards away from intended receiver Marquez Callaway and 0 yards away from Florida cornerback Marco Wilson.

Florida’s offense mustered only a field goal on the ensuing drive, but every point Tennessee allows on defense is a point the Vols’ offense will struggle to match.

Later in the second quarter, Guarantano and Ty Chandler failed to connect on a simple swing pass with no one anywhere near the running back on a third-and-8 play. It was a check-down throw. Again, a check-down throw. Whether he should have checked it down on third-and-8 is a fair discussion, but there are worse things in the word that a player as fast as Chandler getting the ball in space. But the simplest things have been unfathomably difficult for this Tennessee offense to achieve.
Pruitt is dying with JG..…….
 
#9
#9
If you're going to turn to the youth on this team, it's now or never for this season. If they're to have a realistic chance to beat teams like USC, Mizzou, UK, Vandy, and MSU, they need reps and experience now. If we wait until the schedule gets easier, they'll just go through the growing pains and adjustment to the speed of the game against those guys instead of really being ready to compete.

You play against teams like UGA and Bama and compete and it makes the other teams a lot easier to go up against. I'm not the coach, but I'd load the lineups with youth and play 'em these next two games. Then let's see if we can gel and knock off a few sec foes as the season winds down.

I had wondered the same thing. Maybe now is the time......
 
#12
#12
It is unfathomable why Pruitt continues to put JG on the field.

From the article:


But Jarrett Guarantano is holding back this Tennessee offense in ways I never thought possible.

Some of Guarantano’s throws Saturday were some of the worst throws I’ve ever seen from an SEC quarterback. Several players were absolutely wide open within 15 yards of him, and he missed them. I can’t explain that. I don’t know who could explain it. You should be able to jar an SEC quarterback from a deep sleep at 3 a.m. and watch him complete those throws.

Guarantano has had trouble finding open players downfield. That’s not good, but it’s the kind of thing you see even at the major-college level from time to time. You can work around that and still be a decent team. You won’t win a championship, but you can win some games.

You can’t work around some of the throws and some of the decisions Guarantano made at The Swamp on Saturday. You just can’t.

The opening moments of Saturday’s second quarter couldn’t be believed despite being seen.

Guarantano was flagged for delay of game to start the quarter. The Vols had a three-minute stoppage of play before going to the line of scrimmage to start that quarter, and they still couldn’t get a play off in time. On literally the next snap, Tennessee offensive coordinator Jim Chaney made essentially a perfect play call that created confusion on the back end of Florida’s defense and led to senior tight end Dominick Wood-Anderson running free with absolutely no one within 10 yards of him. He could have caught the ball, stopped, tied his shoes and still had a chance to score an 83-yard touchdown that would have put the Vols an extra-point away from tying the score and silencing The Swamp.


And … Guarantano overthrew him by a wide margin.

You can’t watch that play enough times to make any sense of it. I can’t recall seeing anything like that in an SEC game, let alone a Tennessee-Florida game. There was no one near Guarantano or Wood-Anderson. Plays at this level do not get easier than that.


Vols junior quarterback Jarrett Guarantano (Photo: Caitie McMekin, Knoxville News Sentinel)
Guarantano, to his credit, shook that off two plays later and threw a beautiful strike to senior wide receiver Jauan Jennings to move the chains.

Three plays after that, though, Guarantano misread a Florida coverage and threw a ball 15 yards away from intended receiver Marquez Callaway and 0 yards away from Florida cornerback Marco Wilson.

Florida’s offense mustered only a field goal on the ensuing drive, but every point Tennessee allows on defense is a point the Vols’ offense will struggle to match.

Later in the second quarter, Guarantano and Ty Chandler failed to connect on a simple swing pass with no one anywhere near the running back on a third-and-8 play. It was a check-down throw. Again, a check-down throw. Whether he should have checked it down on third-and-8 is a fair discussion, but there are worse things in the word that a player as fast as Chandler getting the ball in space. But the simplest things have been unfathomably difficult for this Tennessee offense to achieve.

Totally agree with this article...and it is JG that is holding us back. No leadership skills, no drive. Only pouting and crying with no manly qualities shown by him to lead other young men. Coach please see that and put him on the bench. Get someone else to lead this team and play QB. Go Vols!
 
#13
#13
Pruitt's in the cross-hairs of the fanbase simply because the fanbase is divided. He's damned if he does, damned if he don't. He's spot on and he's honest. He allowed B.Maurer to play in hopes of something good happening and at 1st it did. Next series was an INT and series after that he stated Maurer threw into triple coverage while missing a wide open receiver. How much more can coaches do?Did he not state in previous pressers that the two back-ups were throwing the ball to the defense more than the offense? Need to get more good players through recruiting and as Cavput stated above throw all these freshmen into the mix and get experience under their belt now including QB's. It's called sacrifice and it has to happen. No easy way out. Fans need to be patient and supportive. Get over the division. GBO !!!!
 
#15
#15
I had wondered the same thing. Maybe now is the time......

If not now, when? If they keep the kids under wraps unil the schedule lightens, you then have the younger players adjusting and making the mistakes in games we have a possible shot at winning. I'd rather them get their butterflies and adjusting to the speed of the game where the outcome is decided.

Both Bama and UGA will likely have the game well in hand by mid 3rd quarter if not halftime. We'd be putting the younger players in at that time anyway so what's the difference? They get 4 quarters of work vs 1-2 quarters of action. The outcome won't change. By playing them from the get go, we only accelerate their progress and maturation. The time for the youth movement is now. Come Monday I'd have every freshman and sophomore who is physically ready to play in the lineup.
 
#17
#17
Chaney isn't getting enough blame for this mess. JG has regressed and that is on the coaches. Plain and simple.
Perhaps, but you can’t teach someone to think faster. If JG is unable to think fast enough to play at this level by now, there’s nothing that can be done for him. He just doesn’t have “it”.

The only solution is to play the younger guys as much as possible and hope they are faster decision-makers.
 
#18
#18
Well stated. Someone once told me a great strength without checks can become a great weakness. When CJP arrived, there were many statements from his former players and people in the Ft Payne area being glad he is getting this chance because of the person he is and how he cares about the young men as both players and individuals. I believe he has seen potential in JG and has wanted to give him every benefit of the doubt to be successful realizing the adversity of multiple coaches and schemes that have been dumped on him since he arrived. So his desire for JG to succeed may have blinded him to what the team needed which is the HC primary responsiblity. Don't get me wrong, I want every Vol to be successful - I am not pulling against JG. But like this article states several times he just is not the QB we need. The magnitude of the missed throw to DWA and throwing in the dirt to Chaney are just 2 examples. I believe he has lost confidence in himself and the players around him have lost confidence in him. He may have to go the transfer route like Peterman to find success in football.

I would also suggest we need to stick with CJP for at least 2 more years to see if he can get the job done. This dumpster fire started over 10 years ago and after 4 AD changes, 4 HC changes and multiple chancellors - well, it is just ugly. We can see first hand how our roster is not what it should be, but given the coaching carousel and the changing schemes each has recruited to right now we need stability to get a roster capable of playing his schemes.

It's going to be a long year and going forward I will not be gauging this team and coaches on wins and losses because a losing season is all but guaranteed. I want to see effort for 60 minutes, pride, discipline and improvement to start setting up the future. Let's find out who wants to be here and who is going through the motions as Wes suggests.

Three things this team never shows is, Pride, Discipline, and Improvement those 3 are sorely lacking, I want to see anyone wearing Orange jersey
succeed but we are not and its has to start with CJP SHOW ME YOU WANT TO BE HERE...…………..
 
#20
#20
What cements JG’s ineptness is when I watch :
Bentley
Tagavailoa
Fromm
Nix
Burrow

Even Trask.....
I just say wow. We Don’t have that. JG has been on campus 4 years. It’ll never happen. Pruitt is trying to swim with this boat anchor. He’s drowning with Guarantano . Mauer is a freshman making freshman mistakes. JG is a redshirt junior making freshman mistakes. Article is spot on.
 
#21
#21
Chaney isn't getting enough blame for this mess. JG has regressed and that is on the coaches. Plain and simple.

So the player themself bears no responsibility for lack of vision and timing? Missing a wide-open receiver by 15 yards is the coaches fault? You get worse, it's because of the new coaches? Did your last coach take your skill set with them when they left?

At some point, you have to wonder if maybe the reason your horse can't win a race ain't the trainers, or the jockey...it's the horse. JG has, what...9 wins in 25 races? Over 3 years? That's a lot of bad coaching...

Or maybe just a slow horse.

Go Vols.
 
#22
#22
Whether you agree or not, still an interesting read.

Rucker: Pruitt facing tough decisions for Vols' future
I think he is a dollar short and a day lat with his article. Even those of us who do not study and write about football for a living saw what the story ws before half time of Saturday's game. Rucker must have been reading this board all of last week. I did not look to see what "Florida" thinks about Tennessee because I really don't care what they think about Tennessee. Wht is really important is what does Tennessee's coaching staff and players think about Tennessee.from what I have seen so far this year, it appears that neither of them care enough to give the effort to win, Even with that lack of effort, we would have won at least 43 and likely 4 games this year with average QB play. The rest of the season depends on what happens at the QB position.
 
#23
#23
I’m coming to grips that nothing is going to change. I gave JP the benefit of doubt till now. Putting JG back in the game yesterday sealed it for me.
JP
JP should not have put Mauer in if wasn’t going to give more of a chance than he did. He gave the team some energy and moved the team. He had over half the passing yards while in than JG had in the entire first half. JG is not very good. He either over throws them, throws behind them, throws in the dirt, or waits to long to throw. He needs to be replaced, but JP won’t do it. Plays the backup for a short time and puts JG back in. Stop playing musical chairs with our players at different positions. Give Mauer a chance.
 
#24
#24
So the player themself bears no responsibility for lack of vision and timing? Missing a wide-open receiver by 15 yards is the coaches fault? You get worse, it's because of the new coaches? Did your last coach take your skill set with them when they left?

At some point, you have to wonder if maybe the reason your horse can't win a race ain't the trainers, or the jockey...it's the horse. JG has, what...9 wins in 25 races? Over 3 years? That's a lot of bad coaching...

Or maybe just a slow horse.

Go Vols.
So by that logic, the coaches shouldn't get any blame? Its always the players fault?

Good coaches get the best out of their players. If the system needs to be "dumbed down", that's what should be done. As Doug Mathews said....paralysis by analysis. JG is simply thinking too much, trying not to make mistakes, and that's stopping him from making any plays at all. Just my opinion.
 
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