Chattanooga Times Free Press

Missouri adds to misery for Vols

- BY DAVID COBB STAFF WRITER

COLUMBIA, Mo. — Bob Shoop offered a diagnosis of his Tennessee defense this past week that now seems especially apt.

“When you look at it, we’re efficient in the run game,” the second-year defensive coordinato­r said Monday night, “but we give up long runs. That’s our problem.”

Now he can add long passes to the mix.

Missouri had nine plays of 20 yards or more — four of them passes that resulted in touchdowns — as the Tigers pulled away from a wounded Tennessee team for a 50-17 blowout victory in front of 50,637 fans at Faurot Field on Saturday night.

The loss gives Tennessee (4-6, 0-6) a losing streak to every other team in the Southeaste­rn Conference and brings the Volunteers within a loss of failing to qualify for a bowl game. They must beat both LSU and Vanderbilt the next two weeks to finish 6-6.

“The message is the same,” embattled fifth-year coach Butch Jones said. “We have two games left. It’s all about this football team and how we finish. It’s about these seniors, these players. It ain’t about the coach or anything else. It’s about how we finish.”

Freshman quarterbac­k Will McBride showed grit in his first career start. Just a week after an injury to Jarrett Guarantano forced Tennessee’s coaches to burn McBride’s redshirt, he led the Vols on a 15-play scoring drive to tie the game at 17 with 1:15 left in the first half.

Just after McBride hit senior tight Ethan Wolf for Tennessee’s first passing touchdown since Sept. 23 for the tying touchdown, the defense gave up one of the costliest plays of the game.

Tennessee was set to receive the third-quarter kickoff and

Missouri appeared content to run out the remaining seconds of the first-half clock when freshman running back Larry Rountree ran for 64 yards on a third-down play. It set up a first-andgoal, and the Tigers went ahead 24-17 when Rountree scored from a yard out with 18 seconds left in the half. The game was never tied again. After going two straight games without a turnover, Tennessee turned it over four times in the second half, and the Tigers (5-5, 2-5) pounced to earn their fourth consecutiv­e victory.

By game’s end the Vols had given up 659 yards to Missouri a year after allowing a school-record 740 yards to the Tigers.

It all started much differentl­y. Missouri went three-and-out on the game’s first series. Tennessee picked up a first down on its opening series when McBride completed a swing pass to Ty Chandler for 7 yards.

At one point in the first half, Tennessee’s offense included seven freshmen. That was before senior center Coleman Thomas left the game with an injury and forced the Vols to play a fourth freshman — Riley Locklear — on the offensive line.

“It is what it is,” Jones said. “That’s not an excuse.”

A heavy dose of senior running back Ish Witter on Missouri’s second drive carried the Tigers 82 yards for the game’s first score. Witter finished with a career-high 216 yards in just three quarters of action.

Missouri’s passing offense is among the best in the nation statistica­lly. Quarterbac­k Drew Lock increased his season total from 31 to 35 against the Vols. His four throws for scores covered 124 yards. His other nine completion­s covered 93.

Shoop said this past week that he wasn’t sure how tested his defense had been, especially against the pass, through its first nine games. He said Monday that this week would be a test.

“We’ll know a little more about ourselves after this game,” he said.

Injuries

Sophomore receiver Marquez Callaway went through warmups but did not play. Jones said it became evident during practice this past week that Guarantano probably would not be able to start. The redshirt freshman threw during warmups and would have been available in an emergency, Jones said.

Contact David Cobb at dcobb@timesfreep­ress.com.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Missouri’s Ish Witter (21) is congratula­ted by teammates Kendall Blanton (11) and Kevin Pendleton (71) as Tennessee defensive back Micah Abernathy walks past after Witter ran for a touchdown during the first half of the Tigers’ 50-17 win Saturday night.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Missouri’s Ish Witter (21) is congratula­ted by teammates Kendall Blanton (11) and Kevin Pendleton (71) as Tennessee defensive back Micah Abernathy walks past after Witter ran for a touchdown during the first half of the Tigers’ 50-17 win Saturday night.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Missouri wide receiver Emanuel Hall falls into the end zone after catching a pass for a touchdown as Tennessee defensive back Emmanuel Moseley tries to stop him in the first half of the host Tigers’ 50-17 victory.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Missouri wide receiver Emanuel Hall falls into the end zone after catching a pass for a touchdown as Tennessee defensive back Emmanuel Moseley tries to stop him in the first half of the host Tigers’ 50-17 victory.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tennessee defensive back Nigel Warrior, left, runs past Missouri offensive lineman Trystan Castillo after intercepti­ng a pass He ran it in for a touchdown.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tennessee defensive back Nigel Warrior, left, runs past Missouri offensive lineman Trystan Castillo after intercepti­ng a pass He ran it in for a touchdown.

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