University of Tennessee Athletics
Media Monday: Jones Previews UGA Game
September 22, 2014 | Football
Butch Jones addressed the media and previewed the Vols' game at Georgia on Monday.
Head Coach Butch Jones
(Opening Statement)
"It is good to see everyone after a bye week, back to game week preparations. Just one announcement before we get started on the University of Georgia and the great challenged that lines ahead of this football team. Today we have dismissed Treyvon Paulk from our football program based on a personal conduct issue. As you are all aware, we hold our players to have very high standard and expectation with being a member of our football family. So in moving forward that is what will occur, I will not answer any more questions regarding the situation.
"Now we are on to the great challenge of going on the road in Sanford Stadium, our young football team is going to find out what life is in the SEC with the grind that we are about to embark on. I think there is no secret, when you think of the University of Georgia, you think of their stable at running backs and it is a stable. Very talented, very physical. [Todd] Gurley, [Sony] Michel, [Nick] Chubb, [Keith] Marshall, they all bring a different element to their back field. A very physical and imposing offensive line. Hutson Mason, very familiar with him, we went through the recruiting process with him when we were at Cincinnati. He is managing the game exceptionally well and playing winning football for them at the quarterback position. When you look at their stable at running backs, the first thing that sticks out to you is the yards after contact. It is really incredible. So obviously, make no mistake about it, we have to be a great tackling football team. They are a team that doesn't beat themselves and very talented at the receiver position as well. There is a reason why some people picked them to win the SEC East this year.
"Then when you look at them defensively, it all starts with [Ramik] Wilson the linebacker, he is extremely active, he will be one of the best linebackers we face all year. They have an inordinate amount of depth on the defensive front and even entirely on their defense. They have different starting lineups which I think is a byproduct of them trying to create a competitive nature which we talk about, which we are trying to develop here. Whoever has the best practice probably plays for them, starts. They play a number of guys in the backend, up front, very, very explosive. It starts with [Jordan] Jenkins. The thing I have been very impressed with their defense is their turnover conscious, ball disruptions, they do a great job of creating turnovers and playing with a hard edge. Again, it is going to be a great challenge for this football team going on the road, in a hostile environment. A noon game versus a great, great opponent. As we all know that is life in the SEC. So I will answer any questions that you have at this time.
(On changes to special teams)
"Well, going into the Oklahoma game, probably the monumental change that really changed the dynamic of our kickoff team was Evan Berry. Evan Berry was the first one down the field, he was disruptive. So you could really feel his presence, he impacted the game. That is everything we talk about, as a player, when you get that opportunity to perform, how will you impact the game. He made impactful plays, everything else is pretty much the same in terms of special teams."
(On handling disciplinary actions)
"Every circumstance is different. I am a father figure. Unfortunately some incidents are out of my control and some incidents you try to control. We do a tremendous job in the overall growth and development of every individual in our football program, with our Vol For Life program, a personal development and growth program. We spend an inordinate amount of time, as you all are well aware of, with outside speakers, using real life illustrations, we are constantly having dialogue and talking about it. We always talk about the one second rule, it is split second decisions. You try to educate them and move on just like they are your own kids."
(On Derrell Scott)
"It is still ongoing. It is very good to have him back on the football field and he brings another element to the back field. Also competition. Not quite game ready yet but we will make a determination on his status if he will be on the travel squad or not going on the road. When you go on the road in the SEC you have travel restrictions so a lot of it is special teams value as well."
(On Josh Smith's status)
"Ongoing, we'll know a little bit more later in the week of his status for the Georgia game. Von Pearson will be out. Daniel Helm practiced yesterday, looked great, so we'll have him back for the game. Ethan Wolf is back full speed, so it's been great to have the tight ends back in our offense."
(On the receiving core without Smith and Pearson)
"Well, Josh Malone will be an individual who has gained valuable repetitions, but his role will continue to expand and very rightfully so. He's worked exceptionally hard. He's starting to understand the small details of what it takes to play championship football at the receiver position: the work ethic, the practice habits. I thought he had a very good work week last week. So, he's an individual. We'll move Alton Howard around outside to the slot, which is like riding a bike to him. I'm excited. We have capable players. It's going to come down again, football is a game of one-on-one matchups whether it's up front or out on the perimeter. Again, we're going to have some one-on-one matchups Saturday, but Josh Smith and Von Pearson are very good football players. It's all about working to create depth through recruiting. It's just another opportunity for another individual. Like I said, we'll know more about Josh as the week continues to progress."
(On long term impact of last year's game against Georgia)
"Well, it's a new season. It's a new football team. Half of our football team didn't even participate in that football game. Now, probably a third of the newcomers were actually at that game on a recruiting visit, but again they didn't perform in it. I think it adds confidence for everyone, but just like Georgia, they're a new football team. Now, you're not playing in Neyland Stadium. You're playing in Sanford Stadium. You have to go on the road just like we did at Oklahoma. You have to be able to block out the clutter, the distractions, and the crowd noise. I think it's a whole different dynamic just because the team is half new, they didn't go through it."
(On addressing the tackling at Oklahoma)
"Again, I think sometimes the quality of the opponent dictates that as well. We work that every single day. Every individual drill we work on tackling. We need to start generating more hits on the quarterback, more of a pass rush, and more ball disruptions. That's the thing that I want to see improvement defensively. It's like you can't get to the quarterback, so you mirror the offhand, you get your hand in the throwing lane. Georgia does a very good job of that. It's getting the population to the ball. See, there's a new one for you John. You get the population to the ball, where we're running to the football, that's when good things happen. That's when you can create turnovers. There are a lot of things that we need to do to take the next step defensively. Not just tackling, but the small details. You look at the SEC, the margin of winning is very very small. Everyone talks about inches; it really is an inches game. You're searching for those inches. It may be a defensive lineman and his offhand stab is six inches too wide, that's the difference in winning and losing that rep. It's six inches of the offensive lineman getting his hands inside. It may be a yard in terms of the receiver running the proper depth. That's what makes this conference so relentless, so unyielding, so challenging. You see it, inches really do make the difference in everything you do."
(On rush defense)
"It has been a strength of ours, but now we'll really find out heading into the Georgia game obviously, with their stable of backs and their mentality that they want to play football their style of play. They also do a great job in terms of their personnel groupings with their big packages and the different personnel. Again, it'll be a great challenge for us moving forward. Our safeties have to do a great job, but this is a game that challenges your overall discipline because they do a very good job in terms of their play-action pass game. It gets back to the eye discipline. Just doing your job and follow the fundamentals and follow the job description of every call."
(On the offensive line's cohesion)
"Well, I felt that cohesiveness occurring all the way throughout training camp and the next individual in. Even though you have a starting five, your depth is critical. The team's that consistently win in this football conference have tremendous depth, whether it's in the offensive front, whether it's in the defensive front. It's really program depth more than anything. That's a luxury we don't have right now, but we'll get there. We'll get there through recruiting and we'll get there through development. You look at Georgia, they have four great great running backs, really five, the other individual who played against us last year that I didn't even mention. So, they have a full stable and they do a great job of playing to the strengths of those running backs and even their wide receivers. Our offensive line has done a great job every day with a workman like approach and having that mentality of just getting better no matter who is in there."
(On Josh Malone)
"Practice habits. Work capacity. The volume of repetitions, mental toughness, all of that. And that's a byproduct of enrolling early, and that's attributed to him, but also, it's Zach Azzani. I continue to say it, and I mean it, but I'm a receiver coach by nature, and he has a knack for developing receivers, and Josh holds on every word that he says, and he's working exceptionally hard now, and he's really worked his practice habits, and you have to be able to take the practice field to the game field, and he's been able to do that. And he's played consistently, every time he's gone in there, he's caught the football, he's advanced the football, he's blocked, he's done everything that we've asked of him. He's been a quiet, consistent performer for us."
(On Austin Sanders and Ryan Jenkins)
"Ryan continues to develop. You know, again, it's just a level of consistency, day-in and day-out with the mental part of it, in terms of understanding schemes. There isn't anyone who works any harder in our program than Ryan Jenkins, and he'll continue to develop because it's important to him, he's very high character. It's just an overall of consistency and performance every day. It's the same thing with Austin Sanders. You know, Austin is playing in the offensive front, that's a developmental position, and we still forget, he's a redshirt freshman, and after this year, he still has three years left. Again, it's just the overall level of consistency each and every day that's associated with getting on the football field for us. And Ryan will be an individual that we're going to rely heavily on on special teams as well, and he's earned that role, he's earned that right, we'll see how he performs on Saturday afternoon."
(On being more disruptive on defense)
"Well, it's the overall effort to the football, and it's creating habits and it's creating instincts. You know, you're training so it becomes instinctual. Like ball disruptions, you know, secure the tackle, work what we call the `lawn-mower,' those are all practice habits, those are things that need to be developed each and every day, which we do, we have a period in practice that's for that, but I'm not quite seeing the fruits of our labor. I'm not seeing the investment in time really manufacture itself on gameday, and that's what we need to see. We need to see the inordinate of time we talk about we practice ball disruptions, we have to do a better job of that. And a lot of times, that's getting 9, 10, 11 hats to the football and playing with a high level of physicality. So when I talk about ball disruptions, tipped footballs, you know, you look at a lot of interceptions, they're generated off of tipped footballs. And you may not even tip the football, but what you do is you impede the vision of the quarterback and he has to reset more in the pocket, so there's so much that goes in to it, we have to practice it and we have to live it every snap. It has to be in our DNA of our defense."
(On the focus of stripping the ball causing missed tackles)
"Absolutely. Yes. That was a topic of conversation that we had in our coaches' meetings prior to the season. You're exactly right. I thought last year, we became so conscientious of trying to strip the football, that we never secured the tackle, and there's a process you go through. You always, the first man secures the tackle, there's a technique involved. But to answer your question, yes there is. That can play a role in it."
(On quarterbacks parachuting into programs)
"What's your definition of parachuting?"
(On quarterbacks leaving a program for "greener grass")
"Every situation is different in and of itself. Every player has a different circumstance regarding their decision to do that. I think they feel it's an opportunity to perform and get on the field. We haven't really had any experience with that to date since we've been here, so I really can't comment on that, because again, I don't want to comment not knowing each individual's particular situation. It's not just quarterbacks when it happens around the country, in terms of different position groups, it's probably more heightened awareness just because it's at the quarterback position."
(On quarterbacks transferring into program affecting chemistry)
"I think you have different examples. Russell Wilson--I thought it affected Wisconsin's chemistry tremendously. I know Bret (Bielema), when I speak to him, talks about it. So, I really think it affected that football team in a positive light. I think, again, it's all based on the individual. I think it's based on the competitive character of the individual and the overall character of the individual. Any program you go in to, you have to earn the respect of your peers. That's first and foremost, especially at the quarterback position. So, I think you look around. There are probably great illustrations to where it's been positive, and there are probably been some illustrations where it's been negative as well."
(On reasons for increased scoring in SEC)
"I think there are a number of things. First of all, we have some very, very explosive football players in this conference. This conference is made up of veteran offensive lines, so they are able to control the line of scrimmage. I think some has to do with schematics-creating one-on-one matchups, creating space. Even though Arkansas runs the football, they still create space in their own way. Again, I think it's a number of things. I think it's creating space, creating one-on-one matchups. I think you see the flavor of college football around the country is bubble screens, quick smoke screens, getting the ball in the hands of your playmakers and letting them make plays. Also, again, even though we may have some quarterbacks that don't have the game experience that we've had in the past, they're very good football players. I think it's a combination of a lot of factors."
(On reason Jones has a high winning percentage off of bye week)
"I think it's a combination. In a bye week, every team is different. You try to make your bye week schedule relative to the team that you have and what that particular team needs at that particular moment of time. For us, it's getting back some health issues, getting healthy and, also, just overall fundamental improvement. We really focus on the small details. You brought up tackling--going back to the basics. A lot of times, when you're limited time wise, a lot of time is spent preparing for your opponent, lining up and preparing for their schemes. In a bye week, you can go back and revisit and really work on yourself, work on the fine details of winning football. I think it's a combination of that. Our coaches have done a great job of really going back to the fundamentals. It's also time to go back and reevaluate all your schemes, quality control yourself, quality control your personnel and give other individuals opportunities as well. It's a combination of a lot of things." ​
(On getting other defensive linemen playing time)
"They continue to be a work in progress and we're going to continue to need them as we venture into SEC play now. So again, the bye week was critical to get them valuable reps, get them live reps but we're going to need them to step up because you can't play that amount of offensive linemen in the SEC. We're going to need depth and we're going to need to play more people. They're working exceptionally hard to put themselves in that position but we're going to demand and expect more of them because we need those reps."
(On Georgia's young secondary)
"They're very skilled, very long with great length, speed, quickness and athleticism. They have it all but when you look at them, they all kind of look the same. They have great length and they have great range."









