šŸˆ This is it. "I Hate Tennessee Week."

Mine too without a doubt. I’ve never been back. Another reason I hate those bastards.
Went to one game at Neyland "garbage truck convention" stadium during the Franchione years. UT was favored but I think it was in the 3rd quarter and Bama scored and went up 12-10. Place got really quiet but then Peerless Price ran the kickoff back for a TD. On the way out of the Stadium moron UT fans were talking all kinds of crap. Never been back. My wife's family is from the east Tn area but they have been silent for a long time. I also have a sister-in-law that is a vile fan. She makes no bones about it that she hates bama and pulls for any team playing bama.

One of the last Butch Jones years the family was on vacation in Gatlinburg and one of the shop vendors saw my bama cap and struck up a conversation. He honestly believed UT was going to beat Bama that year and win the SEC. Delusional fans to the core.
 
UcheaT's program fading into obscurity and becoming a national laughingstock has been absolutely wonderful to witness.
Let's remember they were front page center a year ago when the beat Auburn down on the Plains.

On your note I take a special note of joy on what you're pointing to here

You remember Fulmer recruiting Beard with the line "they'll be out of business in a few years?" This is in the middle of that mess Fulmer was neck deep in with the NCAA, remember? @alabama mike this is one, of many, reasons it'll always be a rival game. And especially so with Fulmer being a major part of that program today.

In spite of his secret witness role, his involvement with Culpepper, and other little "piddlings" the phat one got into ... there is no doubt his goal was to facilitate damage to the Alabama program as much as he possibly could.

The note of joy I mentioned earlier?

Through that probation, at its worst point, I'd argue the Alabama program was stronger than what we've seen at Tennessee of late.
 
Let's remember they were front page center a year ago when the beat Auburn down on the Plains.

On your note I take a special note of joy on what you're pointing to here

You remember Fulmer recruiting Beard with the line "they'll be out of business in a few years?" This is in the middle of that mess Fulmer was neck deep in with the NCAA, remember? @alabama mike this is one, of many, reasons it'll always be a rival game. And especially so with Fulmer being a major part of that program today.

In spite of his secret witness role, his involvement with Culpepper, and other little "piddlings" the phat one got into ... there is no doubt his goal was to facilitate damage to the Alabama program as much as he possibly could.

The note of joy I mentioned earlier?

Through that probation, at its worst point, I'd argue the Alabama program was stronger than what we've seen at Tennessee of late.

His hate of Bama was incredible. He and the sec commis Kramer were in it together I will always believe. I hope Kramer today... sits in his box at Neyland and enjoys the view. Being the vol fan he is.
 
Is there any shot at Pruitt coming back to Tuscaloosa to coach the defense if he is let go at Tennessee? I loved his passion and ability to forge relationships with players. Mack Wilson absolutely loved Pruitt, as did many others.

Given the merry go round coaching profession, anything's possible. I recall some friction between Pruitt/Kirby and I presume Saban regarding Pruitt's penchant for pushing the blitz (the LB's do love that) over Kirby/Saban's read & react. That contributed to his jump to FSU. @TerryP , correct me if I'm wrong but wasn't Pruitt in the pressbox at Bama before he left for FSU, he was the one really good at recognizing formations and calling adjustments down to Kirby? Also, I still maintain that his two years at Georgia was a key to Kirby's quick rise the following year - he started implementing a Saban defense during that year and it gave Kirby a jumping off point. I heard nothing to believe his departure to Tennessee was anything but amicable with Saban, so yes he could come back.

RTR,

Tim
 
Is there any shot at Pruitt coming back to Tuscaloosa to coach the defense if he is let go at Tennessee? I loved his passion and ability to forge relationships with players. Mack Wilson absolutely loved Pruitt, as did many others.

On the other hand, he tossed in this zinger as he was praising Bama this week:


It was a subtle and sneaky jab, like a shot to the rib cage that stings more after the adrenaline is gone.

Not the biggest blow, but enough to hurt.

Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt, fresh off his first victory in the SEC this season, questioned on Monday the effectiveness of Alabama’s new high-wire offense to win championships. Heck of a way to kick off Alabama hate week.

Nothing lingers longer than a cheap shot from the mouth. Does anything burn hotter with time more than words?

Pruitt’s came during his weekly news conference before the Volunteers’ biggest rivalry game of the season. Monday is a long time until 8 p.m. on Saturday under the new LED lights of Bryant-Denny Stadium.

ā€œThere was a certain mindset of how they wanted to play the game, and win the football game, and they had success,ā€ Pruitt said of Alabama’s old ā€˜run the darn ball’ ethos. ā€œYou can probably look, I don’t know, when it kind of changed there in Tuscaloosa. I don’t know, are they having any more success winning national championships now as opposed to then? I don’t know.

ā€œBut they definitely have a lot of skill players, and it has given them a chance to recruit some of the best skill players in the country based on how they play.ā€

More shine than substance, in other words. I don’t know, but is Pruitt insane?


Pruitt knows Alabama better than most, but this is probably the wrong season for him to critically analyze his former employer before playing them. Since losing to Clemson by 28, Alabama’s average margin of victory has been 34 points. This is the place in the column where we review the spread for this year’s installment of the Third Saturday in October: Alabama by 35.5 points.

To be clear, the question that prompted that response from Pruitt was about the shift to RPO-based offenses by Alabama and LSU. RPO, which stands for run-pass option, is just three letters, but it’s like a four-letter word to Alabama folks still cuss’n about that blowout loss to Clemson in the national championship game.

Believe it or not, there are still doubts.

The big question for Alabama’s offense this season — OK, the only question — is if it’s the right stuff for postseason football. Given time to prep for it, Clemson made Alabama look silly in Silicon Valley. It’s a touchy subject, and if anyone knows the soft spots for Alabama, then it’s Pruitt.


Pruitt grew up watching Alabama and Tennessee from both sides of the border, and then played for Alabama and coached for Alabama through the years before landing his big gig in Knoxville, Tennessee. It must be slightly annoying to Tennessee faithful that the complete destruction of Rocky Top (and the rest of the SEC) by Alabama is the main reason Pruitt, an Alabama man, is coaching the Volunteers.

Pruitt has smoked plenty of cigars after this rivalry, per Alabama tradition, and Nick Saban is now 12-0 against the Volunteers, and 18-0 against his former assistants. (Alabama’s blowout of Texas A&M was the latest installment of that most revealing streak.)

ā€œWhether you’re on the Tennessee side or the Alabama side, all the old heads, this is the rivalry, right? This is the game, so to speak,ā€ Pruitt said. ā€œSo, this week does get you going a little bit, so to speak.ā€

He was born in Alabama, and that’s where Pruitt is going to be buried alive under a war-torn pile of concrete and rebar, so to speak, by Tua and his Jets, the Merchants of Flying Death.

He knows it, too. Pruitt couldn’t resist the editorial critique of Alabama for losing to Clemson in two of the last three seasons, but he knows what’s coming in Alabama’s first night game of the season at home.

For the better part of 20 minutes on Monday, Pruitt tried his best to feed Tua and his receivers heaping mouthfuls of rat poison. He said Alabama has better offensive skill players than most NFL teams (maybe true), and that the offense has to ā€œreally work hard not to score 100 points a gameā€ (also maybe true).

Pruitt said the same thing last season before Alabama scored 58 points in its first three quarters against Tennessee.

ā€œAnd Coach Saban has been kind,ā€ Pruitt said. ā€œHe was kind to us last year. He was kind to a lot of teams last year. You know, almost to the point, does it hurt their football team down the road because they don’t get an opportunity to play four quarters?ā€

Nervous talking is the worst, you know, so to speak, but it’s not nearly as bad as reminding Alabama’s offense that it might not be the best fit for winning in January.

Joseph Goodman is a columnist for the Alabama Media Group. He’s on Twitter @JoeGoodmanJr.
 
Let's remember they were front page center a year ago when the beat Auburn down on the Plains.

On your note I take a special note of joy on what you're pointing to here

You remember Fulmer recruiting Beard with the line "they'll be out of business in a few years?" This is in the middle of that mess Fulmer was neck deep in with the NCAA, remember? @alabama mike this is one, of many, reasons it'll always be a rival game. And especially so with Fulmer being a major part of that program today.

In spite of his secret witness role, his involvement with Culpepper, and other little "piddlings" the phat one got into ... there is no doubt his goal was to facilitate damage to the Alabama program as much as he possibly could.

The note of joy I mentioned earlier?

Through that probation, at its worst point, I'd argue the Alabama program was stronger than what we've seen at Tennessee of late.
That win by UcheaT over the barn last season was one of the best things I have ever seen happen in college football. I liked it because one, the barn lost, and two them having to live with the embarrassment of being the team that ended UcheaT's LONG SEC losing streak. The auburn fambly was turning on one another after the game. The ones who wanted Gus fired and the Gus lovers were going at it, tooth and nail. I think back to our dark years, 1997-2007. (I don't put 2007 on Saban, as he had just arrived and he had inherited a team from the previous era). Never, at any point during that time, were we as bad as UcheaT has been from 2008 to present. Our 2003 team would mop the field with any team that the viles have had since their program has been in the toilet. Shoot, I'd even go out on a limb and say that our 2003 team would even beat their 9 win teams from 2015 and 2016. I do not see them returning to their 1990's and early to mid 2000's form anytime in the near future, if at all. That is a bygone era for them. I can remember vividly how miserable they were from 1986-1994, going 0-8-1 against us. The 1993 tie being the only high point for them in this rivalry. As miserable as they were then, I can only imagine what it must feel like knowing that consecutive loss number 13 is coming. :laugh:
 

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