The Dark Ages date to 2008. Fulmer's last year. That was the start of it.
Die-hard Fulmer defenders will claim it didn't start until after he left, but he has to own up to contributing to its beginning.
Meanwhile, die-hard Fulmer haters will try to stretch it back to '05 or even '01. Heck, I saw one guy a couple of years ago saying things went off the rails in '99, months after the national title. That's all hogwash too, of course.
No, it began in '08. The 5-7 season that got Phillip fired. It has, so far, lasted 12 years, give or take.
Really hoping we can look back at the 6-game winning streak in '19 as the beginning of the end of it.
As for whether our stretch has been worse than any other blue blood's, maybe so. Nebraska fans might argue with us. Maybe a couple of others. We've certainly had at least our share of misery.
Bright times ahead.
Go Vols!
EDIT: researched a bit to answer that question for you. And found out, no--our Dark Ages aren't the worst any blue blood has ever suffered.
So to set up a yardstick for comparison: we went 75-75, exactly .500, between '08 and '19. That's the measure of our pain. That's how we'll know if others had it as bad.
First, I checked Michigan. And yep, they had a significant dark period, too. 11 seasons, from '57 to '67 inclusive, where the Wolverines went 50-49-4 under two coaches, a fellow named Bennie Oosterbaan (2 seasons) and another guy named Bump Elliott for most of the time. I think Bump only stayed on as long as he did because in his 6th year, he led a 9-1 campaign capped by a Rose Bowl victory. Other than that one season, he was entirely mediocre in his results. Anyway, their .505 mark over 11 years is a very close match to our .500 over 12. Call it even.
But here's the kicker: Nebraska. Big time pain. They went 21 years, from '41 to '61, with only three winning seasons. And two of those were mediocre 5-4-1 and 6-5 outings. Their mark over those two decades, as they shuffled through coach after coach after coach, was a truly miserable 72-125-4. A .368 rating.
I could keep researching other blue bloods, but that Nebraska find was enough to convince me: we maybe have the most RECENT dark ages, but we definitely have not had the worst.
Bad enough for us, of course. Let's end them, now, fingers crossed.
Go Vols!