Why we're Vols

#1

AF_VOL

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#1
I haven't posted this story in a few years. I used to always post it at the beginning of the season. It was written almost 25 years ago by Jake Vest (a UT alumni) of the Orlando Sentinel. I think it embodies what makes Volunteer fans so passionate. All of us have stories on why/how we became UT fans. Not everyone has attended the University, but for many, UT football has always been a part of life. It's the memories we share with family and friends that makes us fans. I hope you all enjoy the story and GO VOLS!

Afternoons With Pappaw, 'Rocky Top' Nurture A Vol

"I grew up just down the river from Knoxville's Neyland Stadium in the poor direction-out toward the rock quarries, dairy farms and tobacco patches. On a crisp mid-October Saturday you could climb a hill, and if the wind was just right, you could hear the rich people booing Bear Bryant and the Tide. I spent a lot of time climbing those hills and listening. Football was the second favorite sport out in the greater Forks of the River metropolitan area, right behind squirrel hunting- which you didn't need a ticket to do.

Sometimes the squirrel hunters would carry transistor radios so they could listen in on John Ward, the Voice of the Vols, calling the shots for that other sport. If Tennessee was driving for a score, there would be a general, temporary cease-fire. Now that is devotion. Anything that gets a Tennesseans mind off hunting is something special. If it was a particularly big game, even the dogs would stop barking. They knew Ward's voice, and they could tell when he was getting serious, a fact that may seem like a stretch to some but you've got to remember we had some mighty good dogs. Out in my part of the woods, an affection for the Big Orange was something you took up early in life and held onto.

One of my first memories is of sitting on the front porch in a swing with my grandfather, that's Pappaw in East Tennessean, listening on the radio to Tennessee play Ole Miss. That was back in the days when the forward pass was considered an alternative lifestyle, something you did if you weren't man enough to play real football, and both teams rushed about 300 times for a total of about 150 yards. Every time Ole Miss would gain a step, Pappaw would cuss and spit tobacco juice. By halftime, the side yard looked like an oil spill.

What's most remarkable about this is that I don't think Papaw had any notion of what a football game was. It wasn't mentioned in the Bible, so he had no reason to have ever read about it; and he sure had never attended a game. He had no idea what those Mississippians were doing. .But he knew they were doing it to "us." And he was against it. He never set foot in the University of Tennessee campus in his life, but he was a Vol and a mighty good one if I say so myself. If you can understand my Pappaw, you can probably understand the relationship between Tennessee football and Tennessee football fans. If you can't, there's not much reason to try to explain it. It's an "us" vs. "them" proposition. If you're one of us, you know how we feel; if you're not, I'm not sure you want to know.

Some people make the mistake of separating the game from all the stuff that surrounds the game and therefore can't see what's the big deal. College football in general, Southern college football in particular and Tennessee Volunteer Go Big Orange college football, to be precise, is much, much more than that. It's crisp autumn afternoons with chicken barbecuing, bands playing and trees trying to out-pretty each other. It's riding down the river as part of the Vol Navy and singing "Rocky Top" 400 or 500 times in an afternoon. It's a cold beer and a turkey sandwich at Sam & Andy's down on Cumberland Avenue before the game. It's tailgating around Kent Boy Rose's orange and white motor home-one of the hundreds of that color that line Neyland Drive on game day, right outside Neyland Stadium where Neyland used to coach.

It's memories of Tennessee Walking Horses strutting the sidelines and of cannons in the end zone. It's Ole Smokey howling for a touchdown. It's John Ward hollering "GIVE HIM SIX" when the good guys score and hollering "STOPPED BY A HOST OF VOLUNTEERS" when the bad guys get stuffed. It's Bobby Denton calling the play by play and telling a fired-up crowd "It's fooootball time in TENN-E-SSEEEEE!" It's old women and little babies decked out in orange. It's African-Americans and redneck farmers high-fiving, hugging and saying "How 'bout them Vols?" after a touchdown. It's touchdowns. It's road trips to Birmingham, radio talk shows, shakers, and flags flapping in the wind.

It's dancing to the Tennessee Waltz after the game and sipping illicit Tennessee whiskey during it.

It's memories: The time we beat the unbeatable Auburn and the unstoppable Bo Jackson couldn't go anywhere but backward; the undertalented Daryl Dickey shutting the overactive mouths of a Miami team in the Sugar Bowl we were supposed to lose by 22 but won by 28; holding Larry Csonka and Floyd Little out of the end zone to preserve a bowl victory over Syracuse; reminding Ken Stabler that left-handers can lose football games too; Condredge Holloway hopping out of an ambulance to return to the UCLA game and rally the troops to a tying touchdown; Jack Reynolds cutting his car in half after a loss and earning the Nickname "Hacksaw."

It's Doug Atkins, the Majors boys, Bob Johnson, Charlie Rosenfelder, Karl Kremser, Richmond Flowers, Herman "Thunderfoot" Weaver, Dewey "Swamp Rat" Warren, Tony Robinson, Curt Watson, Steve Kiner, Willie Gault, Carl Pickens and Reggie White and all our other heroes running through that big "T" while the Pride of the Southland band plays and over 100,000 of us holler and carry on like free-will Baptists having a spell.

I could go on, but you probably get the picture. If you don't, you won't ever so there's no reason to go further. It's also memories of my daddy sitting on the front porch during the last autumn Saturdays of his life listening to the game on the radio and cussing and spitting tobacco juice every time an opponent gained a step on us. He would understand what I'm talking about. So would Pappaw. I guess it's the kind of feeling that just runs in the family."

December 30, 1995|By Jake Vest of The Sentinel Staff
 
#3
#3
I haven't posted this story in a few years. I used to always post it at the beginning of the season. It was written almost 25 years ago by Jake Vest (a UT alumni) of the Orlando Sentinel. I think it embodies what makes Volunteer fans so passionate. All of us have stories on why/how we became UT fans. Not everyone has attended the University, but for many, UT football has always been a part of life. It's the memories we share with family and friends that makes us fans. I hope you all enjoy the story and GO VOLS!

.....Amen.
 
#4
#4
I haven't posted this story in a few years. I used to always post it at the beginning of the season. It was written almost 25 years ago by Jake Vest (a UT alumni) of the Orlando Sentinel. I think it embodies what makes Volunteer fans so passionate. All of us have stories on why/how we became UT fans. Not everyone has attended the University, but for many, UT football has always been a part of life. It's the memories we share with family and friends that makes us fans. I hope you all enjoy the story and GO VOLS!
This is the first time I have read this. It is exactly what Tennessee Football is all about. I saw my first Tennessee football game in 1945 and I will see my next one August 31, 2019. I plan to see many more during the next 20 years. It is truly Great To Be A Tennessee VOL.
 
#5
#5
I remember reading this before...well written...hits home...thanks for posting again.
 
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#8
#8
That is exactly what it means to me. When I was a young child we lived on Hwy 58. This was before I-75. Yes I am old. Hwy 58 was the main road between Chattanooga and Knoxville. I didn't know it at the time but we were poor. My Dad never had the money to take me to a game but we cheered for the Vols. Early on game day I would take my lawn chair, my UT flag and a transistor radio out to the hwy. I would sit by the road and wave to the Vol fans headed to the game. I would sit and listen to the pregame shows. We only had 3 TV channels back then. The Vols weren't on TV every game. I would watch those that were on TV but I would turn the sound off so I could hear John Ward call the game. One home game morning this guy stops in my drive way. He comes up to me and says he has been waving at me for a couple of years now.
He asks me if I have ever been to a game. I told him no. I said heck I don't even know how to get a ticket. He reaches in his pocket and hands me two tickets. He says his buddies couldn't make it to the game today. He asks me if I have someone who could take me to the game. I said hold on. I ran in the house and asked Dad. He gets up and goes out to talk to the man. To make a long story short, that was my first game.
Turns out our seats were right beside the guy that gave me tickets. It was so loud the screams shook my bones. If I wasn't a VFL before that I was after that. It is not just a game and if you can't feel that you probably never will. To me and my family it is a way of life. We were on Vacation at the beach this year. My Grandson and I were walking down the beach. He points at this man and woman walking toward us. He says they are Vols Pops. She had on a Vol t-shirt and he was wearing a hat with a Power T on it. Just before we pass each other on the beach my Grandson says GO VOLS. The old guy stops and shakes our hands. We talk football for a little while. When we walk off my Grandson looks up at me and said that was sort of like being back at home. He gets it.
 
#9
#9
I'm a Vol due to a blood transfusion. "bout age 12 I fell out of a tree and onto a fence with an arrowhead style top. Bleeding quite a bit, my yelling brought my mom out to see what the racket was about. Horror of horrors, rushed to the hospital, I got the blood transfusion. Rather than red, the stuff had an orange tint. Now, whether it was contaminated with Tang or was diluted rust, I don't know. But since that day I've been Vol-ized.

iu
 
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#10
#10
That is exactly what it means to me. When I was a young child we lived on Hwy 58. This was before I-75. Yes I am old. Hwy 58 was the main road between Chattanooga and Knoxville. I didn't know it at the time but we were poor. My Dad never had the money to take me to a game but we cheered for the Vols. Early on game day I would take my lawn chair, my UT flag and a transistor radio out to the hwy. I would sit by the road and wave to the Vol fans headed to the game. I would sit and listen to the pregame shows. We only had 3 TV channels back then. The Vols weren't on TV every game. I would watch those that were on TV but I would turn the sound off so I could hear John Ward call the game. One home game morning this guy stops in my drive way. He comes up to me and says he has been waving at me for a couple of years now.
He asks me if I have ever been to a game. I told him no. I said heck I don't even know how to get a ticket. He reaches in his pocket and hands me two tickets. He says his buddies couldn't make it to the game today. He asks me if I have someone who could take me to the game. I said hold on. I ran in the house and asked Dad. He gets up and goes out to talk to the man. To make a long story short, that was my first game.
Turns out our seats were right beside the guy that gave me tickets. It was so loud the screams shook my bones. If I wasn't a VFL before that I was after that. It is not just a game and if you can't feel that you probably never will. To me and my family it is a way of life. We were on Vacation at the beach this year. My Grandson and I were walking down the beach. He points at this man and woman walking toward us. He says they are Vols Pops. She had on a Vol t-shirt and he was wearing a hat with a Power T on it. Just before we pass each other on the beach my Grandson says GO VOLS. The old guy stops and shakes our hands. We talk football for a little while. When we walk off my Grandson looks up at me and said that was sort of like being back at home. He gets it.

That's an awesome story! I love hearing what made people fans. I still get excited when I drive to a game and see Power Ts and shakers heading in the same direction. I can only imagine what it was like to see, before I75, sitting on the side of 58.
 
#11
#11
For me, I became a fan because of my neighbors. My Dad is English and didn't know much about "American Football" and my Mom isn't a sports fan. However, my neighbors were big into the Vols and regularly had friends and family over to watch the games. I always loved how it brought people together to eat and have fun for a few hours. The feeling like you're a part of something bigger and the comradery always stuck with me.
 
#13
#13
I haven't posted this story in a few years. I used to always post it at the beginning of the season. It was written almost 25 years ago by Jake Vest (a UT alumni) of the Orlando Sentinel. I think it embodies what makes Volunteer fans so passionate. All of us have stories on why/how we became UT fans. Not everyone has attended the University, but for many, UT football has always been a part of life. It's the memories we share with family and friends that makes us fans. I hope you all enjoy the story and GO VOLS!

This was just like me growing up in East Tennessee! After I graduated from high school, I got really lucky and got to go to college at UT. I'll never forget my first game in the stadium - no big screen TV can ever duplicate what if feels like.
 
#14
#14
I began watching Tennessee replays in 1957-58 I was 11 or 12 yoRichard-UT Truck.jpg.Lived in the housing projects in Nashville and Mamma let me stay up on sunday nights to watch the vols. Bowden Wyatt was the coach ,and we were still running that old single wing.I loved that offense,and it seemed to me no one else was running it.I'm 73 now and I can't wait til our vols are respectable again.Go Vols!! That picture was at Vandy game couple yrs. ago,when Cam Sutton returned a punt and Vols won.
 
#15
#15
History used to be on the side of the Vols, then things changed and Tennessee was no longer Tennessee, go figure
 
#19
#19
Thank you, AF, man that Jake Vest dude can write.

Reminds me of a Tennessee (and that means "better") version of the story written about Jem and Scout in "To Kill a Mockingbird."

Really appreciate this post whenever it appears.

Go Vols!

I agree, overall, however, comparing with "To Kill a Mockingbird" may be a little overboard.
 
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#20
#20
I could tell my story too. It's the same as yours. I remember cutting fire wood with my older brother on the side of a hill up behind the house listening to the pregame show on the radio, and then the game. John Ward was like hearing Moses speak, and when he said, "And wherever you are, it's football time in Tennessee..." it would give me chills and bring tears to my eyes. Still does.
I've lived in Alabama for a long time now, and the worst insult anyone can say to me is, "Haven't you lived in Alabama long enough now to switch to the Tide?" and my answer is always the same, "No!"
 
#22
#22
I can remember the late 80's just waiting for Sunday and the Johnny Major's Show so I could actually watch the game!

IIRC it was on NBC, channel 4 out of Nashville back then.
 
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#23
#23
My old HS Coach was one of the "Flaming Sophomores"Listening to his stories about his playing days with the General hooked me for good!
 
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#24
#24
Tennessee football was (and still is) a way of life at my house. Both of my parents are native East Tennesseans who headed west to God's country (Sumner County), so it was something a lot more important in my house than others. It ranked up there with school, family, church, etc. in my mind. My grandfather had a couple of pairs of season tickets when I was little and he always split them between my dad and two uncles, so we normally made it to about 3 games each year. We always sat in either RR or in Y7, up until he retired and I learned the scalping game (memories in itself there too). I vividly remember watching games early in my fanhood with the TV down and John Ward on the radio. I remember fighting back tears in 2000 at my first Florida game when it was stolen from us; and my dad picking me up and twirling me in the air at the end of the Fiesta Bowl...when I was way, way too big for him to do that. Then it became getting up early to get all of the yard work done in time to get finished and watch the game with a bowl of mom's chili. Now, of course, it's much different. We haven't been relevant in 12 years, I've grown up and answered the call to ministry, and do well to make it to one game a year. But I can't imagine a time when it won't be a way of life for me. No matter how terrible we are, or how priorities in life tend to change, it is and will truly always be GREAT TO BE A TENNESSEE VOL!
 

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