KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee’s assistant coaches met with the media following practice on Thursday. One of the major themes the coaches spoke about after the Vols’ eighth practice was developing leadership on both sides of the ball. Read what they had to say about the emergence of several leaders as Team 119 works towards building its identity with the DISH Orange & White Game just 16 days away on Saturday, April 25 (4 p.m./SEC Network Alternate Channel). TRIO BUILDING LEADERSHIP ON O-LINEDespite having a young offensive line, both Offensive Line Coach Don Mahoney and Offensive Coordinator Mike DeBord have seen improvement since last season. “The experience of guys of playing together, understanding things the way they do. It’s allowed us to play at a higher level earlier,” said Mahoney. Coach Mahoney also noted that the offensive line has begun to look up to three of their teammates as leaders. “Leadership is really starting to emerge. Jashon Robertson, Kyler Kerbyson, Mack Crowder are doing a nice job of leading,” said Mahoney. “Today was a challenging day with the point and time in which we are in spring. They had to be that leader today to keep the group going and playing at the level we expect them to.” Though many of Tennessee’s offensive linemen are still learning the ins and outs of the position at the SEC level, Coach Mahoney believes they’ve come a long way since last season. “Last year at this time some guys were working at establishing and winning a position,” said Mahoney. “Now guys have played at the point where they’ve earned their stripes so to speak, just a few of them, and now they’re leading and they’re pushing other guys to step up like they need to.” Freshman Jack Jones and Chance Hall have also impressed Coach DeBord since they arrived on campus this semester. “What I like right now is they’re working on leverage, getting lower. They’ve really done a nice job of footwork.” Though the offensive line has made progress since spring football began, Coach DeBord and Coach Mahoney are still working to find the five linemen that stand out from the crowd. “What we have to do as coach is find the five best players and make sure the five best players are in that unit,” DeBord said. ​ GENERAL BYNUM TAKING COMMANDRedshirt junior Kenny Bynum has stepped up this spring, showing improvement and commitment to learning the details of the linebacker position. As a standout in the position so far, linebackers coach Tommy Thigpen has seen his developments both on and off the field. “I’ve seen a lot of leadership so far from him,” Thigpen said. “He’s been in the program with us going on the third year, so he knows how to communicate and speak the language. He’s finally starting to make a lot of plays. A lot of guys are starting to trust him on the field as far as getting all 11 guys lined up. I see a lot of maturity in him now and the guy who takes a whole bunch of pride in being the smartest guy in the room.” The linebacker position is one that the Vols have heavily relied on for a high number of tackles. Team 119 is no different and the expectations are high for Bynum. “That position in the last couple years has had over a couple hundred tackles,” Thigpen said. “The system is set up for a guy to make a lot of tackles. We expect a lot from him and looking for other guys to keep challenging him. “Ninety percent of it is knowing where to go and who’s going to block you, anticipating the play that is coming. He’s doing a really good job trying to recognize formation and getting guys lined up and really learning how to protect himself. I’m pleased with him.” MALONE DOING THE LITTLE THINGS FOR #WRUHaving only five wide receivers on scholarship available to play, Tennessee’s WRU isn’t quite where it wants to be, but is demanding mental toughness out of its players. “I can sit here and say we only have five receivers playing right now and say that’s tough,” wide receiver coach Zach Azzanni said. Only five scholarship guys are healthy right now. But I’ve been using this as a positive. We get banged up. We took a couple of shots out there today. Guys were limping around and just the normal things, and I said `Hey, you know you can do it now.’ I’m using it as a good thing. We need to grind through it. It’s good, mental toughness.” With that in mind, Azzanni is pleased with how the receivers are coming along this spring. They’re learning to live up to the expectations of Team 119, Coach Jones and the entire coaching staff. “We’re a little beat up right now, short on numbers, but it’s good,” Azzanni said. “It’s forcing these guys to really fight through and have some mental toughness. We need these days. The expectations are there. They know what to expect. I don’t have to say much. They know what I want. If I’m standing there with something to critique, they know why. The difference is the expectations.” Also with big expectations is sophomore Josh Malone. During his freshman campaign, Malone played in all 13 games and tallied 23 catches for 231 yards. Azzanni understands that Malone is still young and has all the capability to learn what is required to make the big plays. “Josh is doing well,” Azzanni said. He’s getting a lot of reps right now. He’s still a young pup, up and down. I’m not looking at the bottom line stuff. The average fan would come out here and say `He didn’t have many catches today.’ I look at all the same little stuff, habits, getting out on the field early, how he’s communicating, how he’s lining up his screen after someone else has the ball, playing without the ball. Those type of things are going to translate, eventually, into the big plays. That’s what I look at. I have to coach the little things. The big things will come.” D-LINE BUILDING TOUGHNESS IN THE SPRINGToughness isn’t built overnight. It’s also not built in the fall. Rather, it’s a process that defensive line coach Steve Stripling says starts now. “It was a grinding day,” Stripling said. “With our situation we have limited number, so it was a good day to practice mental toughness which is a staple of our program. There wasn’t a lot of rotation. There was just a lot of getting reps. It was a great day.” Although the number of defensive players that he has physically on the field is at a low, there’s not much that changes for him as a coach when it comes to teaching Team 119 what they need to know. “It’s all the same for me. I’m coaching hard and having fun,” he said. “It’s a little harder on them. It’s mental toughness every day because there’s not rotation. Everybody is taking every rep. We’re trying to fight through that and become more mentally tough. You build your toughness for a football team in the spring. You don’t build it in the fall, so I think it’s great.” The added number of reps that the defensive line receives is invaluable, especially for the underclassmen, but it isn’t necessarily easy. “It’s been up and down,” Stripling said. “Our young players, that’s part of that grind, learning to be consistent to try to get past the point of surviving the down but actually look at the sideline and know what the down of distance is, those type of things we call football intelligence. We’re striving to get more consistent.” “It’s invaluable. If I had everybody out there, Shy Tuttle and Charles Mosley wouldn’t be getting these reps. It is invaluable for those guys. For the techniques, for the one-on-one execution that they’re getting and the coaching that they’re getting.” |
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SOUND BITESHere are sound bites from #Team119: OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR MIKE DeBORD»(On how the players have responded to his coaching)
»(On the pace of the offense in Saturday’s first scrimmage) “I thought we needed to pick it up. That was one thing we talked about afterwards and that’s one thing we worked on today. I thought we played faster today but we’re still not there. We’ve got to continue to play faster and talking about tempo on and off the field all the time.” DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR JOHN JANCEK»(On the defensive line)
»(On the positives of freshman defensive lineman Shy Tuttle)
»(On redshirt junior linebacker Kenny Bynum)
DEFENSIVE LINE COACH STEVE STRIPLING»(On redshirt sophomore defensive lineman Kendal Vickers)
»(On senior linebacker Chris Weatherd)
DEFENSIVE BACKS COACH WILLIE MARTINEZ»(On the defensive backs group as a whole)
PASSING GAME COORDINATOR / WIDE RECEIVERS COACH ZACH AZZANNI»(On the passing game)
»(On the differences in the wide receiver corps this year)
RUNNING BACKS COACH ROBERT GILLESPIE»(On running backs Jalen Hurd and Alvin Kamara taking mental reps)
»(On Jalen Hurd embracing the competition at running back with Alvin Kamara)
TIGHT ENDS COACH / SPECIAL TEAMS COORDINATOR MARK ELDER»(On sophomore kicker Aaron Medley’s improvement)
OFFENSIVE LINE COACH DON MAHONEY»(On how the offensive line is further ahead this spring compared to last)
LINEBACKERS COACH TOMMY THIGPEN» (On redshirt freshman linebacker Dillon Bates)
» (On how lack of communication may fall back on linebackers)
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