Tennessee football blame pie in 38-14 loss at Florida

 Tennessee football blame pie in 38-14 loss at Florida


Typically when you lose 38-14 to a superior group, you can fault the manner in which explicit individuals and position bunches played all through the game. Notwithstanding, Tennessee football was several miscues from keeping it close with the Florida Gators heading into the final quarter. 

As we get set to pass out fault for the Vols' misfortune, those liable for the key miscues will take up a ton of it. Of course, customary way of thinking says you don't pass by a couple of plays in a game that has more than 140 from scrimmage consolidated, however this is an alternate case. 

It was self-evident, considering how outclassed they are, that the Vols would need to stay away from any miscues to be close, and they neglected. Who caused the key miscues, and which perspectives were recently overwhelmed? That will all turn out in our fault pie here for Tennessee football's misfortune to UF. 

Josh Heupel: 10% 

Leaving two breaks on the load up toward the finish of the principal half is unpardonable, particularly when he had to attempt a 47-yard field objective to end it because of time lapsing. Josh Heupel likewise got Hendon Hooker injured on a bug flash and drop-kicked on a fourth and 7 down three scores. 

These were all essential slip-ups. Nonetheless, Heupel's fault is just down at 10% in light of the fact that his hostile play-calling would have been the main thing to keep the Vols in the game late notwithstanding the miscues. 

Pursue McGrath: 15% 

Up until this game, Chase McGrath had hit each of the three of his field objective endeavors, two of which were past 40 yards. Notwithstanding, he snared that 47-yarder we raised as time terminated in the primary half. Jace Christmann hitting his 47-yarder for Florida is the reason it was 17-14 at halftime. 

That was a tremendous arrangement. On the off chance that McGrath hits that field objective, it's just a one-score game after Florida's first score in the subsequent half, and Tennessee football goes into the final quarter best case scenario somewhere near two scores. 

Cooper Mays: 20% 

A low snap by Cooper Mays killed one of the Vols' drives in the principal a large portion of, the main time they had the ball with the lead. Mays had different other terrible snaps in the game, and afterward a deferral of game in the final quarter turned fourth and 2 past midfield to fourth and 7 with UT down 31-14. 

Mays gets a pass for being corroded and getting injured by and by in this game, notwithstanding, the Vols probably would have scored on somewhere around one of those drives. With two drive-killing miscues, he must shoulder a portion of the fault for what occurred. 

Jimmy Calloway: 25% 

No play more plainly left focuses on the board than this one. Following 24-14 on their first hostile ownership of the subsequent a large portion of, the Vols had the ball fourth and 5 at the Florida 30. Josh Heupel called the ideal intersection course, and Hendon Hooker discovered Jimmy Calloway totally open over the center. 

Calloway dropped the pass. In the event that he makes the catch, it's a reasonable score. That joined with McGrath's field objective is the reason Tennessee football followed 24-14 as opposed to being tied at 24 after that point. It would've been an enormous play, and the Vols would've been inside one score all through the final quarter. 

Inside surge guard: 30% 

Alright, we should be reasonable first. The cautious line and linebackers were outclassed, and the Florida Gators will do this to everyone. Notwithstanding, toward the day's end, they actually permitted Emory Jones to scramble for more than 140 yards, and UF acquired more than 280 yards on the day.

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