Connect with us

Published

on

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Nobody has stopped Tennessee‘s record-setting offense all season, and now, heading into a potential top-three showdown with Georgia, the Vols’ defense is showing all the signs of peaking at just the right time.

The No. 3 Vols smothered No. 19 Kentucky in a 44-6 victory on Saturday night at Neyland Stadium, a game that saw Tennessee hold Kentucky scoreless for the final three quarters of the game. The Vols hounded projected first-round draft pick Will Levis into three interceptions and sacked him four times.

Tennessee quarterback Hendon Hooker, who is making a strong case for the Heisman Trophy and threw three more touchdown passes against the Wildcats, said he is not the least bit surprised to see the defense playing at an elevated level.

“I see the defensive guys putting in extra work, whether it’s getting on the Jugs [gun], which you can see these guys making great plays on the ball and coming out and playing with their hair on fire,” Hooker said. “I’m extremely proud of them, and to compete against them every day, it’s a heated battle on that practice field.”

One of the best signs for the Vols entering the Georgia game is that they are beginning to sort out things in their secondary, which took some lumps earlier in the season. Junior Doneiko Slaughter started at cornerback against Kentucky after lining up at safety earlier this season and made two huge plays.

In other words, he might not be going back to safety anytime soon. The 6-foot, 190-pound Slaughter delivered a crushing hit on Kentucky receiver Dane Key in the second quarter, forcing a deflection that linebacker Juwan Mitchell intercepted and returned 48 yards. Then in the third quarter, Slaughter produced Tennessee’s third interception of the game when he had excellent coverage and made a leaping play on the sideline.

“I just like hitting people, obviously,” Slaughter said. “That’s why I play defense, but my guys are there helping make that play, too, hustling to the ball. That’s what’s going to happen.”

The Vols were without three of their top cornerbacks Saturday, including Warren Burrell, who is out for the season after undergoing shoulder surgery. Kamal Hadden and Christian Charles were also out with injuries.

Redshirt junior Brandon Turnage was pressed into more action and responded with an interception. Asked if he liked to hit as much as Slaughter, Turnage joked, “Yeah, I like to hit, probably not as much as Doneiko. He’s a Slaughter.”

Tennessee also got back senior safety Jaylen McCollough, who returned to the lineup Saturday after missing the past two games. McCollough was charged with felony aggravated assault on Oct. 9 after a man mistakenly entered his apartment, and McCollough injured his right hand after punching the man.

A major difference with this Tennessee defense is that the Vols are playing more people on that side of the ball. Coach Josh Heupel said during the offseason that creating more depth on defense would be critical. The Vols wore down at times a year ago on defense.

“One of the strengths for us defensively is the ability to rotate and play a lot of guys. It’s next man up,” Heupel said. “That allows you to go out and play as hard as you possibly can. It allows you to get into the second half and be fresh and go out and compete hard on every play.”

The Vols are also able to play more complementary football than they have in the past and don’t have to lean quite as heavily on the offense to score 40-plus points every game.

“That’s what good teams do. You start playing off each other, and when one’s struggling, the other one picks them up,” Heupel said. “There have been times throughout the course of the year where that’s happened, whether it’s the offense holding it together, the defense holding it together. They just like competing together. They care about each other. They love each other. They have fun. It’s a fun locker room to be in every day.”

Earlier this season, Tennessee struggled on third-and-long in certain situations. But the Vols held the Wildcats to 2-of-13 on third-down conversions. Heupel said it was a combination of pressuring Levis and matching things up better in the secondary.

“We’ve continued to grow, and that’s what good defenses and good teams do,” Heupel said. “They continue to get better.”

The Vols (8-0) will likely need a similar defensive effort against the Bulldogs if they’re going to win next weekend at Sanford Stadium. It will be the first time in the history of the series that the two rivals will meet as AP top-five teams.

Tennessee receiver Jalin Hyatt caught two more touchdown passes Saturday to break the single-season school record. He now has 14, including 11 in the past four games, and said the Vols will go into the Georgia game as healthy as they’ve been.

“We’ve got all our guys back,” said Hyatt, who was rejoined in the Tennessee wide receiver corps by Cedric Tillman, who caught four passes for 22 yards after missing the past four games due to ankle surgery. “This is what you live for. You live for games like [Georgia].”

Hooker said the consistency that has defined Tennessee’s preparation to this point won’t change just because it’s Georgia and just because the stakes will be so high.

Asked what the Vols were chasing, Hooker said, “We want to win an SEC championship. That’s our goal, to be playing in Atlanta at the end of the season. Every day we come in, it’s another day at the office, the same way the mailman goes and delivers the mail.”

Continue Reading

Sports

NASCAR asks judge to dismiss antitrust lawsuit

Published

on

By

NASCAR asks judge to dismiss antitrust lawsuit

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR went before a federal judge Wednesday and asked for the antitrust suit filed against the stock car series to be dismissed. Should it proceed, NASCAR asked that the two teams suing be ordered to post a bond to cover fees they would not be legally owed if they lose the case.

NASCAR also asked U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell of the Western District of North Carolina to dismiss chairman Jim France as a defendant in the suit filed by 23XI Racing, a team co-owned by NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan, and Front Row Motorsports, which is owned by entrepreneur Bob Jenkins.

Bell promised a fast ruling but indicated he was unlikely to dismiss the suit when he closed the 90-minute hearing. The calendar he set when he received the case last month calls for a December trial.

“This case is going to be tried this year, and deserves to be tried this year,” Bell said.

Bell replaced Judge Frank Whitney, who heard the first round of arguments in early November. The teams went before Whitney and asked to be recognized as chartered teams this year as the suit progresses, but Whitney denied the motion.

The teams appealed and the case was transferred to Bell, who overruled Whitney and granted an injunction that allow 23XI and Front Row to compete with charter recognition throughout the 2025 season. That led NASCAR to request the teams post a bond to cover all the payouts they will receive as chartered teams as collateral should the teams lose the case.

NASCAR and the teams that compete in the top Cup Series operate with a franchise system that was implemented in 2016 in which 36 cars have “charters” that guarantee them a spot in the field at every race and financial incentives. There are four “open” spots earmarked for the field each week.

The teams banded together in negotiations on an improved charter system in a contentious battle with NASCAR for nearly two years. NASCAR in September finally had enough and presented the teams with a take-it-or-leave-it offer that had to be signed same day — just 48 hours before the start of the playoffs.

23XI and Front Row were the only two teams out of 15 who refused to sign the new charter agreement. They then teamed together to sue NASCAR and France, arguing as the only stock car entity in the United States, NASCAR has a monopoly and the teams are not getting their fair share of the pie.

Both organizations maintained they would still compete as open cars, but convinced Bell last month to give them chartered status by arguing they would suffer irreparable harm as open cars. Among the claims was that 23XI driver Tyler Reddick, last year’s regular season champion, would contractually become an immediate free agent if the team did not have him in a guaranteed chartered car.

Bell peppered both sides with questions regarding payout structures, what harm NASCAR would suffer if the teams were open cars and other issues.

“Why give a charter to anyone?” he at one point asked NASCAR.

Replied NASCAR attorney Christopher Yates, of Latham & Watkins: “NASCAR would be perfectly fine going back to that (pre-charter) model.”

Bell admitted he doesn’t normally hear motions to dismiss but did Wednesday because “we’ve got to get this case moving.” He later said he felt the hearing was beneficial as he was able to “size up” the attorneys and they could do the same with him.

Bell also warned both sides to work together to avoid disputes and promised the losing side will pay the fees for the discovery portion of the case.

With all indications that Bell is not going to dismiss the suit, it appears the only suspense will be if he orders the teams to post bond before the season begins next month. NASCAR argued Wednesday that it needs that money earmarked because it would be redistributed to the chartered teams if 23XI and Front Row lose.

Jeffery Kessler, considered the top antitrust lawyer in the country, argued that NASCAR has made no such promise to redistribute the funds to other teams. Kessler said NASCAR told teams it was up to NASCAR’s discretion how it would use the money and didn’t rule out spending some on its own legal fees.

Jordan and Jenkins attended the first hearing but were not present Wednesday. Only 23XI co-owner Denny Hamlin was present, along with his fiancee and mother. France and vice chairman Mike Helton were in the gallery with NASCAR’s in-house legal counsel and members of the communications team.

Continue Reading

Sports

Portal QB Van Dyke picks SMU for his third stop

Published

on

By

Portal QB Van Dyke picks SMU for his third stop

Former Wisconsin/Miami quarterback Tyler Van Dyke has committed to SMU, agent Shawn O’Dare of Rosenhaus Sports announced Wednesday.

The fifth-year quarterback entered the transfer portal after appearing in three games this fall during his debut season with the Badgers before sustaining a season-ending injury against Alabama on Sept. 14.

Van Dyke, a three-year starter at Miami from 2021 to 2023, has 7,891 career passing yards and 55 career touchdown passes and has one year of eligibility remaining. He was ranked by ESPN as the 25th best quarterback in the transfer portal.

With 33 career games played, the 6-foot-4, 225-pound passer was one of the most experienced quarterbacks available in the 2024 portal cycle.

Benched in his final season at Miami in 2023, Van Dyke arrived at Wisconsin last offseason and was named the Badgers’ starting quarterback on Aug. 14 after a camp competition with sophomore Braden Locke. Van Dyke completed 43 of 68 passes for 422 yards and a touchdown in three starts to open the 2024 season, but he was sidelined for the rest of the season after sustaining a knee injury on the opening drive of Wisconsin’s 42-10 loss to Alabama in Week 3.

The 2025 season will mark Van Dyke’s sixth in college football. He first burst onto the scene at Miami in 2021, taking over for injured D’Eriq King and throwing for 2,931 yards with 25 touchdowns and six interceptions on his way to ACC Rookie of the Year honors.

But Van Dyke’s next two seasons with the Hurricanes were marred by injury and turnover struggles, headlined by a 2023 campaign in which Van Dyke threw a career-high 12 interceptions and was benched in favor of backup Emory Williams before regaining the starting role after Williams sustained a season-ending injury.

ESPN’s Eli Lederman contributed to this report.

Continue Reading

Sports

Franklin jabs at ND, says CFP needs uniformity

Published

on

By

Franklin jabs at ND, says CFP needs uniformity

DANIA BEACH, Fla. — While discussing the opportunity that awaits Penn State in the College Football Playoff, coach James Franklin said Wednesday that the showdown against Notre Dame is about “representing our schools and our conferences.”

Franklin then caught himself, realizing Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman was sitting just to his right.

“Or our conference, excuse me,” Franklin said.

Penn State will be representing the Big Ten against FBS independent Notre Dame in the College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Capital One Orange Bowl on Thursday night (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Hard Rock Stadium.

The Nittany Lions reached the Big Ten championship game before earning a No. 6 seed in the first 12-team CFP, while the Fighting Irish made the playoff as an at-large and earned the No. 7 seed despite playing in one fewer game.

Franklin said he thinks a larger CFP ultimately requires more uniformity around college football, including every team to be part of a conference and playing the same number of league games. Notre Dame, one of three remaining FBS independents, sees its status as central to the school’s identity and has resisted chances to join the Big Ten and other conferences over the years. The Fighting Irish compete in the ACC for most of their other major sports, and they have a scheduling agreement with the ACC in football.

“It should be consistent across college football,” Franklin said. “This is no knock at [Freeman] or Notre Dame, but I think everybody should be in a conference. I think everybody should play a conference championship game, or nobody should play a conference champion championship game. I think everybody should play the same number of conference games.”

Penn State reached the CFP by playing nine conference games as well as the Big Ten championship game against No. 1 Oregon, which defeated the Nittany Lions 45-37 on Dec. 7. The Big 12 also has maintained a nine-game league slate, while the SEC and ACC have stayed at eight conference games.

Franklin, who coached at Vanderbilt before Penn State, praised the SEC for remaining at eight league games, which the league’s coaches wanted. The SEC has repeatedly considered going to nine league games during Franklin’s time in the Big Ten.

“I was not a math major at East Stroudsburg, but just the numbers are going to make things more challenging if you’re playing one more conference game,” he said.

Franklin also highlighted other areas of the sport that could be made more uniform, including starting the season a week earlier to ease the strain of playing more games with an expanded playoff. He reiterated his desire to appoint a college football commissioner unaffiliated with a school or a conference, and once again mentioned longtime coach and current ESPN analyst Nick Saban as an option, along with former Washington and Boise State coach Chris Petersen, now a Fox college football analyst, and Dave Clawson, who recently stepped down as Wake Forest’s coach.

“We need somebody that is looking at it from a big-picture perspective,” Franklin said.

Freeman acknowledged that Notre Dame prides itself on its independence. He said the team uses the weekend of conference championships, when they’re guaranteed not to be playing, as another open week for recovery and other priorities.

Notre Dame ended the regular season Nov. 30 and did not play again until Dec. 20, when it hosted Indiana in a first-round CFP game. In helping craft the format for the 12-team CFP, former Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick agreed that if the Irish were selected, they would not be eligible to earn a bye into the quarterfinals.

Freeman noted that he doesn’t have a strong opinion on whether college football needs more uniformity.

“I’m a guy that just [thinks], ‘Tell us what we’re doing and let’s go, and you move forward,'” Freeman said. “I love where we’re at right now. [Athletic director] Pete Bevacqua and our Notre Dame administration will continue to make decisions that are best for our program.”

Franklin said his desire for greater consistency stems from the CFP selection process and the difficulty of committee members to sort through teams with vastly different paths and profiles, and determine strength of schedule and other factors.

“How do you put those people that are in that room to make a really important decision that impacts the landscape of college football, and they can’t compare apples to apples or oranges to oranges?” Franklin said. “I think that makes it very, very difficult.”

Continue Reading

Trending