Fingers
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After not being spotted yesterday, Squirrel White was seen today. Didn't see him during warmup but he appeared later.
TEs were doing work on the sleds. Okoye is a beast for his age. It'll take a bit for him to be ready for an SEC football game but he's got the tools.
r.sylviaNo notable players missing.
The only injury/absence was freshman Ethan Davis. He was there fully dressed out to start practice but ended up running into the bowls of the Anderson Training Center and did not return for the remaining periods open to the media. I didn’t see what happened and he was running off the field looking fine so I doubt it’s an injury— at least one of significant nature— but he was not going through routes on air with his teammates.
The first four throws through for Milton included an inaccurate pass to Jacob Warren and Ramel Keyton running his route too deep and catching the ball out of the back of the end zone.
Milton and the Vols’ starters bounced back the second time through with four completions though Keyton received instruction after a slightly sloppy route. Keyton, Dont’e Thornton, Warren and Bru McCoy represented the first group. Kaleb Webb, White, McCallen Castles and Chas Nimrod represented the second group.
While freshman Khalifa Keith is massive, he doesn’t have the quick feet and elusiveness of the rest of Tennessee’s running backs— at least at this point.
We noted yesterday how Tyre West and Daevin Hobbs are both working with strong side defensive ends right now and you can add freshman Tyree Weathersby to that list.
r.schumpertIt leaves the defensive tackle spot relatively thin right now. Kurrott Garland, Omari Thomas, Elijah Simmons, Bryson Eason and Omarr-Norman Lott are at least somewhat reliable guys in that spot. But after them, Tennessee is relying on the likes of Nathan Robinson, Trevor Duncan and Isaac Green.
Gerald Mincey continues to work on the left side behind John Campbell while Jeremiah Crawford and Dayne Davis are on the right side.
The quarterbacks and wide receivers were doing routes on air from the 10-yard line going into the end zone. We thought the first group looked pretty good, crisp and efficient with Joe Milton working his way down the line (left-to-right) connecting with Bru McCoy on a hitch, Jacob Warren on a drag, Dont’e Thornton on an in and Ramel Keyton on a fade. When the second group got up, Nico Iamaleava missed on two of his throws – one going behind Ethan Davis in the back of the end zone. He still looked good connecting on other throws throughout the period.
Cam Seldon looked good catching the ball out of the backfield and that’s no surprise given his background. Jaylen Wright and Jabari Small also made it look routine.
The LEO position was split up with older and younger guys. Mike Ekeler took Roman Harrison, Joshua Josephs and James Pearce while Chop handled Caleb Herring, Chandavian Bradley and Trevor Duncan. Bradley was one young guy that was getting some special attention by Chop. A lot of technique displays and then explosions off the line of scrimmage.
At linebacker, the group was split in two. Aaron Beasley and Keenan Pili led the way with run-reads and then blitzing from the second level while the other side was hitting the one-man sled, focusing on extension with a violent rip through and up the field. Elijah Herring has come along way in this drill since last year and even the spring. It’s basic but goes to show you what a year in the program can do.
e.cainI know we have said this countless times this week, but Arion Carter and Jeremiah Telander just don’t look like freshmen. Those two guys will absolutely play on every single special teams unit they can and will push for snaps in the middle of the defense.
Once the offensive line broke into position work, who worked where remained unchanged. John Campbell Jr. continues to work at left tackle ahead of Gerald Mincey with Brian Grant and Shamurad Umarov repping behind them. This is just the order through individual periods, but Campbell looks considerably more comfortable compared to the spring when he was still learning Tennessee’s offense and how the Vols do things – it looks like he is determined to make the starting left tackle job his.
With Campbell and Mincey on the left side, Jeremiah Crawford continues to lead the line at right tackle followed by Dayne Davis and Larry Johnson III.
At center, Addison Nichols continues to go third through the line behind Cooper Mays and Parker Ball. Left guard is the most crowded position from a scholarship-player standpoint as there are five of them there: Ollie Lane, Andrej Karic, Mo Clipper Jr., Vysen Lang and Ayden Bussell. Spraggins is first up at right guard, of course, and is followed by Jackson Lampley and Masai Reddick.
Saw a few moments of routes-on-air at the goal as Tennessee worked on its red-zone passing game. The accuracy from the quarterbacks appeared to be pretty good overall as the wideouts and tight ends ran a variety of routes – this session was off-limits for photo and video as the Vols try to keep their plans under wraps. I thought Kaleb Webb and Nathan Leacock each had good routes and grabs on one rep and Dont’e Thornton Jr. gets out of his breaks really smoothly for a guy with his long, lanky frame.
p.brownElijah Herring and Jeremiah Telander worked at the front of the group otherwise consisting of walk-ons as the linebackers got acquainted with the one-man sled. Telander is a candidate to become Tennessee’s next ace freshman on special teams.
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