Farewell Address (From RTI):
Opening statement Tony Vitello
āBy now, you all know I officially accepted a position to babysit Drew Gilbert. Normally I donāt read to yāall, but hopefully I can just get through some notes without any tears. Thereās been a lot. Had to watch some Leanne Morgan to stop here and there a few different times. But here we are. I just wanted to kind of get some things out there and not have any regrets, so thatās why I wrote some notes down.
First off, just people saying bye and everything like that, Iām not going anywhere. So real estate people quit texting me. Iāll figure out what I want to do. But whether itās football games, basketball games, supporting these guys in some form or fashion, Iām not going anywhere. I donāt know if this will get me in trouble, but in my mind, a goal is to come back to Tennessee in some capacity. Whether itās part-time living or some other job way down the road or maybe I go back to Nashville and become a country singer or something like that. But thatās something that stuck out in my head because obviously I feel like this was a great place for me.
One big response to you all and other media members, Iāve tried to always be sensitive to the fact you guys have a job to do and answer you. But whatever went down Saturday, I did not have anything to do with that and it put everyone in a whirlwind. Now that we look back on it, I think (it) was unfair. Hopefully, people donāt think Iām a diva because thatās kind of how it seemed to play out. But I got into a position where I couldnāt respond to anybody just because I didnāt know. So itās not just you all. Itās other people too. I apologize for that, but it truly was a thing that went all the way up until (Wednesday). I did not fully decide what I wanted to do. I didnāt want to make it like a decision where you got the three hats and youāre making your football commitment and anything like that. But in order to get across the finish line of what was right for me, I had to get the support from the coaches and the players. I got it in a couple different meetings, and quite frankly, was blown away. I donāt really have anything written down or intelligent to say about how mindblowingly awesome the guys that are now representing Tennessee baseball were to me, and Iām forever appreciative of that. Hopefully, I can give back in one way or another.
Then certainly, hard to respond to all the texts, too. Especially when some of them are, ācongratsā or ādonāt do thatā and āif the timing was different.ā I hope to get back to everybody via text and then social media ā I just donāt get involved in that a lot. There are some messages that Iād like to respond to. I donāt even see a lot of them. So, sorry for that.
Again, insane how positive everybody is. I did get one that I accidentally read. A guy said, āpack your thingsā and āuse them to do something to yourself,ā but I donāt even own one of those. I just kind of deleted that, but that was a good one, in my opinion. And hey, I donāt think itās mentally healthy for our guys to get too invested in what people throw out there, but I do appreciate people sending positive stuff and I guess negative stuff, too. Thatās the nature of the beast when youāre involved in athletics these days.
A big one for me is just the last practice. If thereās anything valuable out of this or, hopefully, heartfelt ā if that is the last time I ever stepped foot on this campus or this field as an employee or as a Vol wearing our orange, Iām just so thankful for the people that showed up. It mattered. It made a difference. I wasnāt sure what I was going to do at the moment, but the bottom line is ā if they feel like it was a waste of time because they were here to sway me or something like that, itās not because it will forever be ingrained in my memory. It made what was the last day on the job technically, very, very special. I say this humbly. At one point they started chanting my name and I wanted to go up and address the crowd and Iāll just do it now. The fans, the people who were here, the people that were in the stadium ā they donāt need me. They need the players.The players donāt need me. They need the fans. I think weāve got great players here. Weāve got great players signed up and we have incredible fans. They filled the porches because of the construction, thatās all it would allow. They need to fill the stadium and bring the same energy they brought (to) the last game of the year last year. Our kids need to play to their full potential because itās pretty dangerous. But thatās one thing I definitely want to get off my chest.
Going to another page here of sloppy notes, just to throw out decision stuff. I canāt be more sincere in saying my decision, if it mattered to people ā which blows my mind as a scrub walk-on at the University of Missouri ā I appreciate that. If youāre wondering what this or that, what it has to do with the team or anything ā there was a lot of factors. Like that is a brand new stadium Iām going to miss out on. Anything to do with San Francisco, anything to do with Tennessee, at the end of the day, it was not relevant to the decision. It was selfish. It was personal reasons. Again, Iāve always tried to be a good teammate, but I feel like I made a selfish decision that was one I needed to make. Itās the right decision and I just hope it doesnāt give me Lane Kiffin status around here, because I feel like Iām a VFL. I think if someone truly invests in being a VFL for any amount of time, theyāre just that ā a Vol For Life. Thatās what I am in my mind.
I think one thing we coach our players up on is peace of mind and you make your own decisions. You create your own definition of success. For me, Iām a VFL. Which made me think, driving around last night, why would somebody want to be a VFL? Why do people love being a VFL? Iāve got a few reasons listed that may or may not be of interest to you all, but helps me get off my chest.
Just the people are friendly and welcoming here. Itās different. When I first got hired people asked me from all over the world that I got to meet through baseball, āWhatās it like there? Whatās your first impression?ā That was my immediate, first instinct answer. People in the state of Tennessee are different. Theyāre friendly, theyāre welcoming and itās an environment that anybody would want to be in a workplace or social setting or to raise a family or just be.
The other thing is the growth. Itās not as long as I wish it was, but thereās a lot of time Iāve been here and around the beautiful mountains and the rivers and the lakes. The growth is tremendous in Knoxville. Also, Chattanooga and Nashville, but I think East Tennessee is unique unto itself. The growth is something I enjoyed seeing. Itās going to keep going. Maybe thatās why the real estate comment I made earlier.
Loyalty. Itās an important word in my family. Italian background. I think everybody likes loyalty, but itās just different here. People have your back in so many different capacities, and as I read that word loyaltyā Zakai (Zeigler), look at what happened with his house and the reaction there. Itās just one of many examples of how people take care of you here as long as you are representing the Vols the way that you should. Zakai is a star.
Speaking of stars, the stars are in Tennessee. Youāve got the biggest male and female performer in the world in Tennessee. Of course Morgan (Wallen) and then the gal (Taylor Swift) that dates the tight end (Travis Kelce). West of the stateā the shape of the state is unique. In the west youāve got Ja Morant doing his thing. In the middle, you have Theo Von that the whole world loves. You come east and our damn mayor is Kane. Heās a superstar at his job he does now, but he was a superstar in the ring where I know I was one guy that was a fan back in the day, too. I donāt think people realize how unique it is until you give it some perspective.
The other reason is the SEC. Blessed to be in it. Not everybody is and all due respect to people that arenāt, but it is so different. It starts with the most unique group of hooligans in the world. Forget the European soccer hooligans. The SEC fans are the rowdiest, the loudest, the meanest, the best cookers, the most involved, the most invested and they are at the core of what makes this conference. But also the reason theyāre so invested is the competition on the athletic fields ā whether itās a baseball field or others ā is literally the best amateur competition in the world and it prepares you for anything and everything. I hope a couple years from now, Iām looking at it in personal circumstances, but the competition literally prepares you for anything and everything.
The other thing here ā why would you want to be a VFL and why itās easy to have success? The athletic department. It truly is a sorority and fraternity amongst us as coaches. Danny Whiteās leadership, not just on the financial end with the buildings and the other things that have gone on here ā just (the) direction of hiring the right people at all these specific sports sites on our campus. It goes up to (Chancellor) Donde (Plowman), who is so energetic and the same person you see every day. Of course, (University President) Randy Boyd is probably, I donāt know the other university presidents, but itās pretty unique. How all that falls in line makes it easier onā where itās never easy in our league, or now across the nation to have success. They put all of us in a position to have success.
I got one last sheet, I think, for you.
Advancement. People elevate their game and their lives when theyāre at Tennessee. Thereās so many different examples. Of course, my favorite ā and probably everybody elseās ā is Peyton Manning. We literally have the most successful on-field, off-field athlete in the world, in my opinion. Maybe (Lionel) Messi or somebody like that (if anyone) wants to argue. But itās Peyton. Itās advancement and, sometimes, itās just a guy plays here and people in Nashville take care of them. Or people around the state take care of them or her because they were a VFL.
The stadiums, the facilities are monstrous. Now, Iām so happy that baseball can be included in that group of one of the biggest and probably the loudest football stadiums in the country. Goes the same for the arena. Thereās construction all over campus to make these facilities truly first-class and also some of the best in the country to house the fans that weāre blessed to play in front of here. I could go on and on with other stuff, the campus, the weather, the restaurants in town.
But I think my next bullet would have to be, who doesnāt want to sing āRocky Top?ā Even the opposing fans. If you catch them in the right moment, or you catch them with enough beverages in them, theyāll admit that they love āRocky Topā even though theyāre a part of another SEC school.
I didnāt do it on purpose. Iām not David Letterman, but that was nine. So maybe if anyone listens to my rambling, you want to add what 10 is to you because thereās certainly more than 10 for how special of a place it is. But maybe itās special in another way for other people, but it is to me, and thatās why I wanted to at least get out in front of you guys a little bit.ā
On the meetings with players and coaches and what their support meant to him
āUnfortunately, Saturday, they donāt have their phones. The assistants and (me), we have them. One of the coaches said you are going to need to say something and I did. I just mentioned that nothing had been done. Added several other things to it pertaining to myself and the team. Then it wasnāt Saturday. Saturday was nothing. I turned my phone off to be honest with you and I watched the football game. Then things started to transpire a little bit on Monday to where I thought it was appropriate to revisit things with them and talk them through some things. Then if I have my days right, I think Tuesday or (Wednesday) was a third time we got together with the guys. There have been other comments and texts messages I got, but the encouragement to do what was in my heart was next level. I know someone made the comment that they feel for our guys. It has been tumultuous for them and things like that. I did not see one moment where a guy felt sorry for himself or put himself out in front of this thing or saw it as a detriment to what they can do as a successful athlete. I think that is a sign of things to come with this particular team.ā
On if there was a point he thought he was staying after Sunday
āSaturday, there was no decision mode whatsoever. It occurred slowly the next day. More intensely the next day and then the following day, I did not make a decision until ā I think some of yāall were at the field on an open field so that would have been Wednesday. Sorry for getting my days mixed up with all this mess. I didnāt feel I had all the boxes checked to go one way or the other until that point.ā
On what the final boxes were
āThe freedom I felt from the other coaches and the players that I didnāt know was there and didnāt expect to be there on the level that it was.ā
On who he leaned on to make this decision
āAnyone and everyone. You canāt imagine. Anyone and everyone. If that is a part that is put out there, I am very thankful to the people that got random calls or random texts. If anything, Saturdayās nonsense allowed for it to no longer be a quiet conversation because I never meant for this to play out publicly or to be a distraction for the guys. I wasnāt even sure it would become a reality. It did open up the door to have a whole bunch of conversations that I am indebted for.ā
On how he weighed MLB vs. college baseball and if that was hard
āI will say this about college verse MLB, the versus is fading and there is more of a blend going on. College baseball is getting so good and followed so closely by fans and in such big numbers that it is becoming a stepping stone or a version to Major League Baseball on a different level. I think the two are starting to cooperate and work together more and I think you are starting to see more crossover and will continue to see more. That includes players like C-Mo being ready to rock and roll right away.ā
On if he thinks the closing gap is why a college coach got an MLB job
āYou know, I canāt speak to that. That would be up to those guys.ā
On if the support he got from fans weighed on him and his decision
āThat was appreciated. Like I said, for a different reason, that meant a lot to me. That has been there from Day One. It has grown in numbers fortunately and the voices have become louder and the stands have become louder but that has literally been there since Day One.ā
On what heāll miss most about Knoxville
āWhat I will miss about Knoxville is the togetherness. We all get gameday to show it on TV or to the highest extent. But you donāt need gameday for the togetherness to be here. It could be a random Tuesday on a September at 11:30, any random time you want to throw out, and the togetherness and the community and in particular surrounding the university is at the highest possible level any human could ever experience.ā
On if he remembers the lemonade stand day
āI do remember the lemonade stand day. Probably a sign of things to come that Iām not the most well-behaved coach, but certainly wanted to earn my salary that day and if anything I am willing to put in a full dayās work based on growing up watching my dad.ā
On if it is hard to believe that he used to run downtown and do things without much attention
āAmong other things that I will talk about next week, hearing people say, āWas that your vision?ā or āLiving out your dreamā could not be more irrelevant because I couldnāt even see that. When you get to see it, itās pretty special. So that is what I got.ā