Your love for Tennessee

#1

TennVols423

FOREVER a VOL!
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Aug 29, 2006
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#1
Having grown up in East Tennessee, I learned "Rocky Top" before I learned "God Bless America", Orange was my favorite color and I had the opportunity to play collegiate baseball at the D-2 and Juco Levels, but turned them down just so I could attend UTK.

Last year I took my fiance(from Ohio, family all HUGE ND fans) to her first game in Neyland, it has been sometime since I have had the chance to come back, as the team ran through the "T" a chill ran down my spine and a tear down my cheek. I realized at that moment that I loved my University to a fault. I reside in Ohio now, and wear my Power T with pride, lately I have taken a ton of ****(Ohio State fans are by far the worst, even after all the things they are going through) . Long story short, my Fiance asked me today as I was reading recruiting updates why I love Tennessee so much? My answer:You'll never understand, and I could never explain it.

I know we have some of the most dedicated and loyal fans, so why is it that you love Tennessee?
 
#3
#3
Having grown up in East Tennessee, I learned "Rocky Top" before I learned "God Bless America", Orange was my favorite color and I had the opportunity to play collegiate baseball at the D-2 and Juco Levels, but turned them down just so I could attend UTK.

Last year I took my fiance(from Ohio, family all HUGE ND fans) to her first game in Neyland, it has been sometime since I have had the chance to come back, as the team ran through the "T" a chill ran down my spine and a tear down my cheek. I realized at that moment that I loved my University to a fault. I reside in Ohio now, and wear my Power T with pride, lately I have taken a ton of ****(Ohio State fans are by far the worst, even after all the things they are going through) . Long story short, my Fiance asked me today as I was reading recruiting updates why I love Tennessee so much? My answer:You'll never understand, and I could never explain it.

I know we have some of the most dedicated and loyal fans, so why is it that you love Tennessee?


Dude, I live in ohio too. I know where you're coming from w/some osu fans...i've grown up here my whole life, and my whole family loves osu. Which I can't help but like osu as well...it's in the blood to be a buckeye, however tennessee just...attracted me I guess...there was just something so special that I saw in the university. I have never been to any UT athletic events, but watching them on tv, w/the team running through the T, hearing rocky top on tv and all this stuff is so amazing. I love the state of tennessee and the vols and would love to live in tennessee. So for those of you living in tennessee, be thankful lol. Like you said, I can't explain why I love tennessee so much, but I can assure you, I have such a passion for tennessee. It's indescribable. I don't like what's happening at osu, but i'm not devastated, UT will always be something special to me. And I have a 100% love, passion for UT WAYY more than I ever will for osu. GO VOLS!
 
#4
#4
Having grown up in East Tennessee, I learned "Rocky Top" before I learned "God Bless America", Orange was my favorite color and I had the opportunity to play collegiate baseball at the D-2 and Juco Levels, but turned them down just so I could attend UTK.

Last year I took my fiance(from Ohio, family all HUGE ND fans) to her first game in Neyland, it has been sometime since I have had the chance to come back, as the team ran through the "T" a chill ran down my spine and a tear down my cheek. I realized at that moment that I loved my University to a fault. I reside in Ohio now, and wear my Power T with pride, lately I have taken a ton of ****(Ohio State fans are by far the worst, even after all the things they are going through) . Long story short, my Fiance asked me today as I was reading recruiting updates why I love Tennessee so much? My answer:You'll never understand, and I could never explain it.

I know we have some of the most dedicated and loyal fans, so why is it that you love Tennessee?

I could never explain either.One of the things i love though,is our uniqueness.
There are no other volunteers
unlike others...tigers,bulldogs,ect.
There is actual history that goes with volunteers.
Could there be a more unique fight song than Rocky Top?
No one else wears our color orange.
its loud,its proud,and its in your face.I love the fact that other fans hate it.

The power T on the helmet. unlike ugas green bay helmet or bamas boring numbers.

Lastly,is there anything more original than Neyland,the vol navy,running through the T and the checkerboard endzones.The answer is no,not in college football.
Go Vols!
 
#6
#6
Doing justice to this question is almost as difficult as explaining why you fell in love with a particular woman. Personally, my brother and I began following the Big Orange on a game-by-game basis during 1967, the year when Doug Dickey firmly reestablished Tennessee as having returned to the nation’s elite. Of course, that was only the proverbial “hook” to a lifelong love affair. Part of the fervor, although not specific to the Vols, was captured in remarks by a sociologist who compared the relative importance of college football in different geographical areas. Decades ago you could find T-shirts for sale at Neyland Stadium which quoted his remarks. I do not remember his statement verbatim but he concluded essentially that college football is a cultural pastime in the Northeast and a leisure activity on the West Coast. It is played with an almost cannibalistic passion in the Midwest but, in the South, college football is a religion and Saturday is High Holy Day. Admittedly, hardcore college football fans are passionate anywhere you go. However, when you combine that almost religious fervor with a strong tradition of excellence, one with deep historical roots, and liberally sprinkle in the many features which give Tennessee football its distinctive flavor, you have something truly special.
 
#7
#7
Nice thread. I went to my first game in '88 and instantly fell in love. Then came the '90s and how could anyone not love those teams? I spend way too much time thinking, reading and talking Volunteers but, hey, it's my thing. It's nice to know we have this huge fraternity out there and can bump into a bro anywhere in the world. I always wear my colors when on vacation or traveling.
 
#8
#8
Im 17 and I've been to several games before this one but this one rings a bell the most often, it was 04 vs Florida and my dad just got season tickets in XX11, where Freshman Erik Ainge made his mark, and Wilhoit missed an extra point to tie the game at 28-27 with just over 3 minutes left, Then Tennessee makes a 3rd and 3 stop with 1 minute left and a running clock and it looks like all hope is gone, but we draw a personal foul, and stop the clock and get a 15 yard penalty, drive down to the 33 yard line and send out the field goal unit with 13 seconds left and..... ITS GOOD!!!! the kick barely gets straightened out and the desperate silence that filled the air when it left the foot seemed liked distant memories lost in the sharp roar of 110,000 fans that were their, that is the game where I started loving the orange and white...
 
#9
#9
I guess i always took it for granted growing up right outside of Knoxville, but now i live in Texas going to school at A&M and now i miss it soooooooooo much. I like the aggies, they are ok, but they will never be MY team. They have some nice things going on here, and it will be my alma mater, so i support them. I have to explain to these fellers that the REAL UT, is in Knoxville, and that if it werent for Tennessee, Texas would still be Mexico :rock: Ive got 1 more year left and then im going to try to make my way back to East Tennessee......Hope i see you guys soon up there.

Edit: Half my wardrobe has the power T on it. You should see the looks i get. Its not as bad as wearing a Oklahoma shirt though. Thats like wearing a Bama shirt on UT's campus.
 
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#10
#10
You can't really describe it with words. No matter what problems you have in life, when you walk into Neyland they seem to fade away for a while. The pride swarms your body when the T opens up, the chills roll up your back when 100,000 belt out rocky top, the sharp pain in your stomach after a tough loss, the adrenaline after a victory, there is truly nothing like it. Not many people understand this passion, but its just a way of life for us.
Posted via VolNation Mobile
 
#11
#11
Being from Memphis with parents from Wisconsin and New York, I had absolutely no tie to the University of Tennessee. Then I watched the 1998 National Championship and I watched the band.

Ever since then, I knew that's what I wanted to do.
 
#12
#12
I grew up between Illinois and Wisconsin. I moved down to Tennessee when I was in 8th grade. I have never loved a place so much. I first lived in Knoxville. I never seen a fanbase so passionate about their team. I instantly fell in love with Tennessee football. I followed the team religiously. I left for the Army straight out of high school and spent the next 7 years gone from the place I loved. I proudly claimed Tennessee as my home without a second thought as that is where I wanted to be and where I felt I belonged. While living there I picked up an accent and married a beautiful gal whose whole family has always been from Tennessee. After my 7 yr tour of active duty that included mostly time overseas in many different countries, I returned for 3 yrs. I loved my time there. As I was unable to find a job to sustain my family I was forced to move to Arizona to work for the military again. It completely broke my heart to leave for a second time. My wife attended UTK while we lived there the second time. Now I am a walking encyclopedia of Volunteers football and proudly wear my appearl every gameday around town (that and my handgun since Arizona has loose gun laws). All of this time I have never accomplished my long sought after dream of going to Neyland Stadium to watch my beloved Vols play. I know the story ends sadly but I do intend on spending my hard earned defense contractor money to fly back, if only for a weekend, and go to Neyland.
 
#13
#13
I grew up between Illinois and Wisconsin. I moved down to Tennessee when I was in 8th grade. I have never loved a place so much. I first lived in Knoxville. I never seen a fanbase so passionate about their team. I instantly fell in love with Tennessee football. I followed the team religiously. I left for the Army straight out of high school and spent the next 7 years gone from the place I loved. I proudly claimed Tennessee as my home without a second thought as that is where I wanted to be and where I felt I belonged. While living there I picked up an accent and married a beautiful gal whose whole family has always been from Tennessee. After my 7 yr tour of active duty that included mostly time overseas in many different countries, I returned for 3 yrs. I loved my time there. As I was unable to find a job to sustain my family I was forced to move to Arizona to work for the military again. It completely broke my heart to leave for a second time. My wife attended UTK while we lived there the second time. Now I am a walking encyclopedia of Volunteers football and proudly wear my appearl every gameday around town (that and my handgun since Arizona has loose gun laws). All of this time I have never accomplished my long sought after dream of going to Neyland Stadium to watch my beloved Vols play. I know the story ends sadly but I do intend on spending my hard earned defense contractor money to fly back, if only for a weekend, and go to Neyland.

It wont disappoint.....I didnt for me.
 
#14
#14
My first game of American football was the 2004 Fla game.... in Neyland.... I never understood the game before..... Whenever I saw this game on the TV, I was like , I just can't spot the player who has the damn ball......
I Will never forget my first Neyland experience..... It was like love at first sight !!!
 
#15
#15
i have lived in east tenn my whole life and most of it in chattanooga. My parents grew up in east tenn also and where tenn fans way before i was born. My parents went to the 86 sugar bowl and i can remember growing up listening to their stories from that game and the time they spent down there. i couldnt help but love UT with my parents influence and growing up in east tenn. I always followed UT growing up. Fast forward to senior year of high school and decided to go to UT for college. While there i couldnt help but fall in love with the campus and everything that goes along with it. (Partyed a little too much and didnt get to stay). Then about five years ago I met my wife and her entire family love UT and had season tickets. We started going to games together and it just made me fall in love with UT even more. The more time i spend there the more i fall in love with place. You cant help but love it with all the traditions and rich history our school has. I now have an 18 month old and I cannot wait to start his love for the school and take him to his first game!!

GBO
 
#16
#16
Having grown up in East Tennessee, I learned "Rocky Top" before I learned "God Bless America", Orange was my favorite color and I had the opportunity to play collegiate baseball at the D-2 and Juco Levels, but turned them down just so I could attend UTK.

Last year I took my fiance(from Ohio, family all HUGE ND fans) to her first game in Neyland, it has been sometime since I have had the chance to come back, as the team ran through the "T" a chill ran down my spine and a tear down my cheek. I realized at that moment that I loved my University to a fault. I reside in Ohio now, and wear my Power T with pride, lately I have taken a ton of ****(Ohio State fans are by far the worst, even after all the things they are going through) . Long story short, my Fiance asked me today as I was reading recruiting updates why I love Tennessee so much? My answer:You'll never understand, and I could never explain it.

I know we have some of the most dedicated and loyal fans, so why is it that you love Tennessee?


Well said. I consider myself to be a pretty tough guy. But there has been several times that I have had to fight back a tear when that "T" opens up. I love my Volunteers. :good!:
 
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#17
#17
I had 3 great-grandfathers that fought in the war of northern aggression here in middle Tennessee. I live in the house my dad built in 1939. His dad was a street car conductor here in Nashville. My mom's dad was the oldest of 13. They all went to Texas but after mom was born he came back to southern middle Tennessee. (If it weren't for Tennessee there would be no Texas)So you can see it's in the blood. I am very proud of my heritage and my native state. TENNESSEE:salute:
 
#18
#18
Time to cue this I guess:

"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 Tennessean’s 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."
 
#19
#19
Time to cue this I guess:

"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 Tennessean’s 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."

Thanks for the memories larry! Hard to keep back the tearsl. VFL
 
#20
#20
Well said. I consider myself to be a pretty tough guy. But there has been several times that I have had to fight back a tear when that "T" opens up. I love my Volunteers. :good!:

I've told my friends that aren't fortunate enough to be Tennessee fans a thousand times that Tennessee home games are different from any other team.
 
#21
#21
It was while attending UTK, we beat Bama and tore down the goal posts. (My heart grew 3 sizes that day) SEE, BLEED, and CRAP ORANGE!
 
#22
#22
Time to cue this I guess:

"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 Tennessean’s 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."
Beautifully said!That sums it up.
 
#23
#23
Time to cue this I guess:

"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 Tennessean’s 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."

I just wanna say that portions of this are SO much a part of some of us older guys' experience growing up with the Vols. I know it's not cool to take anything said by your elders serious these days, but it was a really different experience from those days. When I was very tiny my uncle used to actually describe games to us (he was the season ticket holder-we didn't have money) on Sunday after we listened to the games on Sat.. It was like a diagram in person of what certain plays looked like. We would read the account in the paper after church and then walk over two houses to get the game report and share Sunday dinner. It was just great- I thought at the time. He loved to talk and he would say how it looked to him and why this guy missed a tackle, or how fast a play was....("______ buried the linebacker and ____ran through a hole big as a church pew") etc. When I first got to go to a game it was my uncle that took me. It was like a miracle for a hillbilly like me. I had no idea about spectacle, size, all the fanfare. Funny, later on when I (and my family) could go any time we wanted to, my Dad actually would rather stay home and listen to John Ward on the radio (and sometimes he had work to do, too)...partly because more than 10 people in the same place smothered him...he really, really, hated crowds. When I had season tickets much later I had to practically beg him to go with me. I think he went to three,four games in all those years I had seats but was one of the most enthusiastic Vols fans ever. The several occasions when my family-parents, brother, sisters, uncles, cousins, and everybody were together to LISTEN to a game together are priceless now. I was little, so I just listened; and all those names I heard being discussed and on the radio were my first heroes, beside Hoppy, Roy, and Gene.

I just wanted all the younger folks to know we didn't really feel deprived of being fans because we might only get to see one game a year (or, every two years) on teevee or we were too poor to go to games. I could write a book on different things that happened in all those years growing up with orange glasses....but it would be better done by someone who can actually write that had similar experiences growing up less than affluent.

Just threw this out there for a little perspective from the stone age.
 
#25
#25
Masterfully stated, LWS. When you have decades of tradition piled on top of decades of tradition, it is a fundamentally different experience, and level of devotion, than one will find at a program whose claim to fame is predicated upon the last 5, 10, or 20 years.

This is a magnificently presented thread topic which will truly evoke the heart of a Tennessee Volunteer.
 
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