OneManGang
Senior Member
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2004
- Messages
- 2,045
- Likes
- 9,730
Tennessee vs The Maxims vs Tennessee Tech
Shameless Self-promotion Part I: Your humble scribe will be giving a talk on Tennesseans who earned the Medal of Honor in World War I as part of the Veterans Day weekend commemorations at Alvin C. York State Park in Pall Mall on Saturday. There will be living history demonstrations and a fly-in of period aircraft.
The Vols needed this. After three losses and the departure of star running back Jalen Hurd last week, the team needed to get its collective feet back under it and did so. Granted, the opponent was hapless Tennessee Tech but it still felt good. Tennessee started strong and was able to play virtually everyone who dressed as most of the starters were on the sidelines by the start of the second canto.
[FONT=Times New Roman, serif]The next three games are against SEC opponents and they will be the tale of the tape for Team 120.
[/FONT]
In the aftermath, everyone seemed to forget just what we were told before the balloon went up on Operation Desert Storm back in 1991.
According to media experts the Americans were in for a rude awakening fighting against a combat-proven Iraqi Army in the trackless deserts of the Middle East. There were near-gleeful ruminations postulating 10,000 or so American dead.
After a month-long air campaign that featured the first mass use of precision weapons with devastating effects on Iraqi command and control and communication infrastructure, the US Army pulled off it's biggest surprise of all.
Everyone thought the US and its Coalition allies would stage a frontal attack on the Kuwaiti border. In addition there was a Marine Amphibious Group sitting off the coast making a lot of noise.
While the media and the Iraqis were thus distracted, American VII Corps moved about 100 miles west and jumped off into empty space. VII Corps had come to the show complete from USAREUR, the US Army in Europe. It consisted of the 1st and 3rd Armored Divisions, one brigade from the 2nd Armored Division, British 1st Armoured division and the Big Red One US 1st Infantry Division. Moving against spotty opposition, VII Corps moved about one hundred miles into Iraq and then turned right, attacking eastward to cut off the retreat of Iraqi units in Kuwait.
The tip of the mighty VII Corps spear was the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment. The tip of 2nd ACR was Echo Troop, call sign Eagle commanded by Captain H.R. McMaster. A cavalry troop consists of 120 troops, 12 M-3 Bradley Scout tracks and nine M-1A1 main battle tanks. Eagle Troop was operating in concert with Golf and India Troops. Kilo Troop would later contribute its M-1s to the fight giving 2nd ACR 36 M-1s.
They kept track of where they were using GPS and Universal Transverse Mercator
lines, also called Eastings.
As Eagle Troop approached line 70 Easting they began to detect Iraqi units. These were part of a larger Republican Guard armored force. The Republican Guard were supposedly the best the Iraqis had to offer. In fact 2nd ACR was facing Tawakalna Division's 18th Brigade and, later in the day, the 9th Armored Brigade.
McMaster engaged what he could see and kept moving. Finally, his troop topped a rise to find an Iraqi tank force in waiting. In a 23-minute fight, Eagle troop destroyed 28 Iraqi tanks and a number of trucks and other armored vehicles.
Not satisfied with that, McMaster spotted dug-in Iraqi tanks along line 73 Easting and charged in. Clearing the line by destroying a further 13 tanks, Eagle troop topped another rise to find well over 100 Iraqi tanks moving toward them. The other troops joined him on the rise and engaged the Iraqis.
At the end of the fighting 160 Iraqi tanks had been knocked out. It was an overwhelming victory.
The media ignored it, of course, preferring to hand-wring over the road of death leading out of Kuwait City where Coalition aircraft caught Iraqi vehicles in the open and blew them away. The media whining directly influenced President George H.W. Bush's decision to halt the American advance before completely cutting off the Iraqi retreat.
Many American soldiers complained that by calling off the dogs, Bush had virtually guaranteed the Army would have to go back in to finish the job.
Be that as it may, the decisive and overwhelming victory in Desert Storm was a shock However, they quickly recovered and assured the American people that they'd known how it would turn out all along.
One thing did come out of Desert Storm and that was that the American military finally put the ghosts of Vietnam to fly.
What Tennessee needed Saturday was to get the bad taste out of their mouths.
That is precisely what they did.
So how did the team do compared to the Maxims?
1. The team that makes the fewest mistakes will win.
The Vols made virtually no mistakes Saturday, committing no turnovers and just six penalties. It could be argued Tennessee Tech's major error was signing the contract to play this game in the first place.
2. Play for and make the breaks. When one comes your way SCORE!
Tennessee seemed to score at will. Things will be more difficult next Saturday.
3. If at first the game or the breaks go against you, dont let up PUT ON MORE STEAM!
It wasn't so much the game as it was the last three weeks that Tennessee had to overcome. They did so. Now the task is to maintain this intensity and win the next game.
4. Protect our kickers, our quarterback, our lead and our ballgame.
One of the Vols' linemen remarked that it was fun blocking for a back like John Kelly. Implied was the rest of the sentence: unlike that other guy.
5. Ball! Oskie! Cover, block, cut and slice, pursue and gang tackle THIS IS THE WINNING EDGE.
Again, this Maxim speaks to intensity. We long-suffering Vol fans can only hope it stays this way.
6. Press the kicking game. Here is where the breaks are made.
Tennessee's first score was set up by a nifty kickoff return and it just got better from there, capped by Marquez Callaway's 62-yard punt return for a touchdown.
7. Carry the fight to Tennessee Tech and keep it there for sixty minutes.
This writer was pleased that Tennessee kept the offensive playbook open for backup quarterbacks Dormady and Sheriron Jones.
Sometimes, the departure of a star player indicates a team in deep trouble. The results from Saturday indicate that Hurd's leaving may have actually healed a rift in the Vols and left them in a far better position going into the stretch run than had he remained. The team certainly appeared more focused than at any time since Bama week.
Brick by Brick, Baby!
MAXOMG
Suggested Reading:
Rick Atkinson, Crusade
Mike Guardia, The Fires of Babylon: Eagle Troop and the Battle of 73 Easting
Douglas MacGregor, Warriors Rage: The Great Tank Battle of 73 Easting
© 2016
Keeping Your Stories Alive
Shameless self-promotion Part II: I am soon to receive the proof copy of my first book, It Was a Two Egg Mission this week. The book will be available in December.
Shameless Self-promotion Part I: Your humble scribe will be giving a talk on Tennesseans who earned the Medal of Honor in World War I as part of the Veterans Day weekend commemorations at Alvin C. York State Park in Pall Mall on Saturday. There will be living history demonstrations and a fly-in of period aircraft.
The Vols needed this. After three losses and the departure of star running back Jalen Hurd last week, the team needed to get its collective feet back under it and did so. Granted, the opponent was hapless Tennessee Tech but it still felt good. Tennessee started strong and was able to play virtually everyone who dressed as most of the starters were on the sidelines by the start of the second canto.
[FONT=Times New Roman, serif]The next three games are against SEC opponents and they will be the tale of the tape for Team 120.
[/FONT]
******
In the aftermath, everyone seemed to forget just what we were told before the balloon went up on Operation Desert Storm back in 1991.
According to media experts the Americans were in for a rude awakening fighting against a combat-proven Iraqi Army in the trackless deserts of the Middle East. There were near-gleeful ruminations postulating 10,000 or so American dead.
After a month-long air campaign that featured the first mass use of precision weapons with devastating effects on Iraqi command and control and communication infrastructure, the US Army pulled off it's biggest surprise of all.
Everyone thought the US and its Coalition allies would stage a frontal attack on the Kuwaiti border. In addition there was a Marine Amphibious Group sitting off the coast making a lot of noise.
While the media and the Iraqis were thus distracted, American VII Corps moved about 100 miles west and jumped off into empty space. VII Corps had come to the show complete from USAREUR, the US Army in Europe. It consisted of the 1st and 3rd Armored Divisions, one brigade from the 2nd Armored Division, British 1st Armoured division and the Big Red One US 1st Infantry Division. Moving against spotty opposition, VII Corps moved about one hundred miles into Iraq and then turned right, attacking eastward to cut off the retreat of Iraqi units in Kuwait.
The tip of the mighty VII Corps spear was the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment. The tip of 2nd ACR was Echo Troop, call sign Eagle commanded by Captain H.R. McMaster. A cavalry troop consists of 120 troops, 12 M-3 Bradley Scout tracks and nine M-1A1 main battle tanks. Eagle Troop was operating in concert with Golf and India Troops. Kilo Troop would later contribute its M-1s to the fight giving 2nd ACR 36 M-1s.
They kept track of where they were using GPS and Universal Transverse Mercator
lines, also called Eastings.
As Eagle Troop approached line 70 Easting they began to detect Iraqi units. These were part of a larger Republican Guard armored force. The Republican Guard were supposedly the best the Iraqis had to offer. In fact 2nd ACR was facing Tawakalna Division's 18th Brigade and, later in the day, the 9th Armored Brigade.
McMaster engaged what he could see and kept moving. Finally, his troop topped a rise to find an Iraqi tank force in waiting. In a 23-minute fight, Eagle troop destroyed 28 Iraqi tanks and a number of trucks and other armored vehicles.
Not satisfied with that, McMaster spotted dug-in Iraqi tanks along line 73 Easting and charged in. Clearing the line by destroying a further 13 tanks, Eagle troop topped another rise to find well over 100 Iraqi tanks moving toward them. The other troops joined him on the rise and engaged the Iraqis.
At the end of the fighting 160 Iraqi tanks had been knocked out. It was an overwhelming victory.
The media ignored it, of course, preferring to hand-wring over the road of death leading out of Kuwait City where Coalition aircraft caught Iraqi vehicles in the open and blew them away. The media whining directly influenced President George H.W. Bush's decision to halt the American advance before completely cutting off the Iraqi retreat.
Many American soldiers complained that by calling off the dogs, Bush had virtually guaranteed the Army would have to go back in to finish the job.
Be that as it may, the decisive and overwhelming victory in Desert Storm was a shock However, they quickly recovered and assured the American people that they'd known how it would turn out all along.
One thing did come out of Desert Storm and that was that the American military finally put the ghosts of Vietnam to fly.
******
What Tennessee needed Saturday was to get the bad taste out of their mouths.
That is precisely what they did.
So how did the team do compared to the Maxims?
1. The team that makes the fewest mistakes will win.
The Vols made virtually no mistakes Saturday, committing no turnovers and just six penalties. It could be argued Tennessee Tech's major error was signing the contract to play this game in the first place.
2. Play for and make the breaks. When one comes your way SCORE!
Tennessee seemed to score at will. Things will be more difficult next Saturday.
3. If at first the game or the breaks go against you, dont let up PUT ON MORE STEAM!
It wasn't so much the game as it was the last three weeks that Tennessee had to overcome. They did so. Now the task is to maintain this intensity and win the next game.
4. Protect our kickers, our quarterback, our lead and our ballgame.
One of the Vols' linemen remarked that it was fun blocking for a back like John Kelly. Implied was the rest of the sentence: unlike that other guy.
5. Ball! Oskie! Cover, block, cut and slice, pursue and gang tackle THIS IS THE WINNING EDGE.
Again, this Maxim speaks to intensity. We long-suffering Vol fans can only hope it stays this way.
6. Press the kicking game. Here is where the breaks are made.
Tennessee's first score was set up by a nifty kickoff return and it just got better from there, capped by Marquez Callaway's 62-yard punt return for a touchdown.
7. Carry the fight to Tennessee Tech and keep it there for sixty minutes.
This writer was pleased that Tennessee kept the offensive playbook open for backup quarterbacks Dormady and Sheriron Jones.
Sometimes, the departure of a star player indicates a team in deep trouble. The results from Saturday indicate that Hurd's leaving may have actually healed a rift in the Vols and left them in a far better position going into the stretch run than had he remained. The team certainly appeared more focused than at any time since Bama week.
Brick by Brick, Baby!
MAXOMG
Suggested Reading:
Rick Atkinson, Crusade
Mike Guardia, The Fires of Babylon: Eagle Troop and the Battle of 73 Easting
Douglas MacGregor, Warriors Rage: The Great Tank Battle of 73 Easting
© 2016
Keeping Your Stories Alive
Shameless self-promotion Part II: I am soon to receive the proof copy of my first book, It Was a Two Egg Mission this week. The book will be available in December.