| | KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -- Tee Martin hadn't even made it home from
the Fiesta Bowl last January when he was asked The Question: Can
the Volunteers repeat as national champions?
"I said, 'Man, just let me enjoy this one first,"' the
quarterback said.
| |  | | Raynoch Thompson must fill the leadership void at linebacker left by Al Wilson. |
Coach Phillip Fulmer barely had his headset off after Tennessee
won the title when he was asked the same question.
"Everyone wants to know if we're going to do it again," he
said. "It was almost like I didn't have time to enjoy winning a
national championship."
Yep, time's up.
With the new season upon them, the Vols face the pressure of
trying to defend the crown.
"It was hard last year and it'll be even harder this year,"
said Martin, entering his senior season. "They'll know what to
prepare for. They'll have a whole year of film on us."
Tennessee's quest for a repeat begins when Wyoming comes to
Knoxville on Sept. 4. Two weeks later they travel to Gainesville --
where they last won in 1971 -- for the annual showdown with Florida.
To defend their two consecutive Southeastern Conference titles
the Vols must get by the Gators and up-and-coming Georgia in the
SEC Eastern Division.
Tennessee, ranked No. 2 in The Associated Press preseason poll,
also has to go to Alabama and Arkansas, and will be home against
Auburn, Georgia and Notre Dame.
"It's awful hard to go undefeated if you play a reasonable
schedule," said Fulmer, whose team was 13-0 last season.
The most glaring graduation losses from last year's team are
big-play receiver Peerless Price; middle linebacker Al Wilson, the
heart and soul of the defense; and reliable placekicker Jeff Hall.
But if games are won and lost in the trenches, as most coaches
insist they are, the Vols start the season in good shape.
"I believe this could be the best offensive line I've seen at
Tennessee, and without question it should be the best defensive
line," said Fulmer, an offensive lineman in his playing days and
former offensive line coach.
On offense, guard Cosey Coleman, tackle Chad Clifton and center
Spencer Riley are returning starters. Coleman, a 6-foot-5,
315-pound junior and third-year starter, is widely considered one
of the best Tennessee has ever had.
Josh Tucker played a lot last year and is penciled in at the
tackle opposite Clifton. Toby Champion and converted defensive
lineman Fred Weary are expected to battle it out for the other
guard spot.
On defense the Vols return starters Shaun Ellis at end and
tackles Billy Ratliff and Darwin Walker. Will Overstreet
contributed at the other end last year and also is back.
A player everyone is watching is big (6-7, 280 pounds) tackle
John Henderson, who couldn't play last year as a partial academic
qualifier but made his presence felt in practice.
Fulmer has always stressed speed, and the Vols have plenty of
it, plus experience, at the skill positions.
Martin matured tremendously in his first season as a starter. He
was brought along slowly but still put up respectable numbers: 153
completions in 267 attempts (57 percent) for 2,164 yards, with 19
touchdowns and six interceptions, including an NCAA-record
23-for-24 performance against South Carolina.
Martin said he realizes there's a long season ahead and the
success of last year will only make the Vols everybody's No. 1
target.
"We can't be satisfied with what we won last year. We
understand what it took to win 13 games and we're ready to do it
again," he said. "It's time to show what we can do, not talk
about what we did last year."
Jamal Lewis, who had the sixth-highest freshman rushing total in
NCAA history two seasons ago (1,367 yards), returns at tailback
after missing all but four games last year with a knee injury. He
was averaging 124 yards a game until he got hurt against Auburn on
Oct. 3, and by all accounts his rehabilitation has gone well.
"I feel great," Lewis said. "My speed is great, my agility is
there. I'm ready to go win some football games."
Lewis' replacements developed into reliable players. Travis
Henry finished the season with 970 yards rushing and Travis
Stephens added 477.
Phillip Crosby and Will Bartholomew are both good blockers at
fullback, although neither has anywhere near the speed of the
departed Shawn Bryson.
Replacing Price is a major concern. His big-play ability was
critical to the Vols' success in '98, as demonstrated by his MVP
performance in the 23-16 Fiesta Bowl victory over Florida State.
The only returning receiver with significant experience is
Cedrick Wilson, who is neither as big (5-10, 175) nor as fast as
Price. But he is tough and averaged 17 yards on 33 catches last
year, nearly 2 yards a catch better than Price.
Sophomore Erik Parker has shown promise when he's been healthy.
Freshman Leonard Scott is one of the fastest players in the country
-- he's the NCAA 60-meter track champion -- and junior David Martin
has the size (6-4, 210) to make himself an inviting target.
Replacing Wilson's vocal leadership at middle linebacker is as
much a priority as replacing his talent. Dominique Stevenson and
Bernard Jackson are good athletes, but neither has significant
experience in the middle.
At outside linebacker, Raynoch Thompson is one of the best in
the country and Eric Westmoreland is solid, especially in pass
coverage.
The defensive backfield returns three starters: Dwayne Goodrich
at cornerback and safeties Deon Grant and Fred White. Junior Andre
Lott will be at the other corner.
David Leverton returns as the punter.
Finding a reliable replacement for Hall is key. His clutch late
field goals beat Syracuse and Florida to get the Vols off to a 2-0
start.
Senior walk-on Robert Loudermilk is the presumptive starter, but
freshman Stephen Lee could work his way into the job if he's as
good as advertised.
Fulmer, who was rewarded with a six-year, $6 million contract
before the Fiesta Bowl, realizes talent alone won't win another
national title. It takes a lot of work and a little luck, which the
Vols got their share of a year ago.
Still, he's happy to be where he is.
"I like the expectations and I like to rise to those
expectations," Fulmer said.
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