University of Tennessee Athletics
#VolReport: Football Family Attracts New Vols
January 14, 2015 | Football
By Brian Rice
UTSports.com
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -- When Tennessee's 2015 mid-term enrollees had to make a decision on where to attend school, there was one thing that stuck out about Tennessee.
Sure, the fans, the system, the facilities, the opportunity to wear the orange and white, all of that played a part in their choice. But the biggest thing that stuck out was family, one of the foundations on which Butch Jones has built the program at UT.
Jones and his staff got to know the players and their families on a personal level, building a relationship early that was about more than just football.
"The coaches, Coach Jones and Coach Stripling talked to me more as a person than a recruit," defensive lineman Shy Tuttle said.
The message held a similar appeal for fellow defensive lineman Kyle Phillips. But for the Nashville product, the staff's actions spoke louder than its words.
"It was so exciting just to see how the coaches take care of the players and how much they care about the players just not on the field, but off the field as well," Phillips said. "They want you to succeed in every aspect of life."
The football family is built on the idea that coming to Tennessee is about more than just football, because the game is only a part of being a student-athlete. The jersey may come off one day, but the Power T never will.
"Football is going to end even if you do play in the NFL," Phillips said. "Everybody doesn't have a long career, maybe the average is three years. Knowing that football is going to end one day, so you have to work hard in school and to be a better person overall, not just on the football field."
The connection extends beyond the players to their families. Everyone becomes a part of the larger Tennessee football family.
"They are genuine guys, personable," linebacker Darrin Kirkland Jr. said. "They didn't just build relationships with me but with my family as well. So that was really important to me and I am sure as well for all the other commits that we have."
Defensive back Stephen Griffin grew up in Knoxville before moving to Charlotte, North Carolina. He went to preschool with current Vol Todd Kelly, Jr., who was one of the players that wanted him in the Tennessee family and was able to give him a personal look at what being a Volunteer was all about.
"They're building a program and the players have all bought into the system and I really liked that," Griffin said. "I wanted to be a part of that. The coaches do a lot of recruiting, but the players do a lot of recruiting as well."
All of the freshmen are glad to now formally be a part of that family.
"It is a great place," Kirkland said. "Coach Jones has made it an incredible atmosphere here, a very family environment. I am just happy to be here."