Hey SJT, I think we found one of the *******s. ^
Heh, you didn't "find" me, I walked right into the thread and pointed out you're not wearing any clothes.
So here's the challenge: get a list of the injuries for either the '16 or '17 season (or both, that'd be awesome).
Start with the first injury. Gather any reports you can find telling what happened. All the Ws:
where (practice field? locker room? weight room? dorm room?) ...
when (spring camp? off-season? fall camp? in season practice? during a game?) ...
what (twisted ankle? knee? shoulder? concussion?) ...
why and how?
That last part, that's the most important, though all the other Ws help to isolate on it. How did it happen, and why? Was it lack of fitness? poor execution of a football move the player should have known how to do better? impact with another player? if so, under what conditions? freak accident, like planting your foot and your knee trying to bend backwards from the way it should (think of Chubb)?
And on, and on.
Once you've figured out THE proximate cause of that injury, once you have it categorized, good job. Now start on the second one on the list.
Go all the way through the season's injuries. Once you've done that, find the patterns. Was there any one factor that popped up frequently? Two or more common themes?
Only after you've done that analysis will you know (not guess, know) why the Vols suffered so much more than our "fair share" those two years.
Until then, you have no clothes on. Pardon me for letting you know. You have no clothes on.
p.s. The "how and why" part will go MUCH better if you have training in medicine or sports physiology. Getting down to the proximate cause is tough enough with in-depth training; sometimes near impossible for us laymen.