The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Volunteers QB Guarantano has lofty goals

Getting coordinato­r Chaney from UGA adds some hope.

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Tennessee’s back-to-back losing seasons have done nothing to limit quarterbac­k Jarrett Guarantano’s ambition.

“I literally went into the offseason and said I want to be the best in the country,” Guarantano said last week. “I want to do things that I haven’t done yet. I just want to be the best. Going into this season, I want to win a lot of games and I want the team to know that I’m the best in the country. That’s really about it.”

Guarantano’s bid to become the best has involved studying guys who currently hold that title. He watched NFL quarterbac­ks such as Deshaun Watson, Aaron Rodgers and Drew Brees and also analyzed some of the college quarterbac­ks who have enjoyed much more success than him thus far.

“I looked at Tua,” Guarantano said, referring to 2018 Heisman Trophy runner-up Tua Tagovailoa of Alabama. “I looked at (Georgia’s Jake) Fromm. I looked at (Clemson’s) Trevor (Lawrence) a little bit. I studied a lot of guys.”

Guarantano wants to lead Tennessee back to relevance after consecutiv­e last-place finishes in the Southeaste­rn Conference’s Eastern Division.

Although Guarantano has thrown for 16 touchdowns with only five intercepti­ons in 385 career passes, Tennessee has gone 6-12 in the games he has started.

After Tennessee went 5-7 last season, coach Jeremy Pruitt responded with a staff overhaul that included luring offensive coordinato­r Jim Chaney away from Georgia and moving 2000 Heisman Trophy winner Chris Weinke from running backs coach to quarterbac­ks coach.

Chaney is Guarantano’s fourth offensive coordinato­r in as many seasons. Chaney’s credential­s help explain Guarantano’s confidence.

“Everybody has immense trust and immense respect for him,” Guarantano said. “Whenever we signed him, everybody was excited because we knew his track record and knew the types of things he’s done in the past. The past two days, everybody’s whooping and hollering. Everybody’s very excited, just having that guy around. He exerts confidence in himself and us. I think our offense is much more confident, and we know our jobs better.”

Chaney was Purdue’s offensive coordinato­r during Brees’ college career. Former Vols quarterbac­ks Jonathan Crompton and Tyler Bray had productive seasons during Chaney’s last stint at Tennessee. Nathan Peterman developed into an NFL quarterbac­k prospect while playing for Chaney’s offense at Pittsburgh.

Fromm vouched for Chaney last month at the SEC media days event. Chaney spent the past three years as Georgia’s offensive coordinato­r.

“Coach Chaney was awesome — very, very, very intelligen­t,” Fromm said.

Chaney and Guarantano say they’ve developed a mutual respect already. Chaney said he wants Guarantano to concentrat­e on “playing clean football, distributi­ng it around to our playmakers and not letting him think everything rides on his shoulders.”

“I’ve enjoyed Jarrett,” Chaney said.

Guarantano says some of the work he has done this offseason has involved fixing his footwork to become more elusive. Guarantano was sacked 26 times last season. He was sacked 22 times in 2017 despite starting just six games.

When he’s had time to throw, Guarantano has shown star potential at times, most notably while passing for 328 yards in a road upset of Auburn last season. He wouldn’t give his 2018 performanc­e a letter grade but said he’s learned from the setbacks he’s endured.

“I think I’m a lot better football player than last year,” Guarantano said.

He’s eager for the chance to prove it.

By Steve Megargee Associated Press

KNOXVILLE, TENN. —

 ?? GETTY IMAGES 2018 ?? Vols QB Jarrett Guarantano was sacked 26 times last season and 22 times in 2017 despite starting just six games.
GETTY IMAGES 2018 Vols QB Jarrett Guarantano was sacked 26 times last season and 22 times in 2017 despite starting just six games.

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