Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Tennessee blitzes Northweste­rn

- By Fred Goodall

TAMPA, FLA. >> The architect of Tennessee’s resurgence won’t be happy until the Volunteers are perennial championsh­ip contenders again.

Butch Jones, neverthele­ss, is proud of the progress the Vols have made in his three seasons as coach and confident the program is on solid footing as it moves into 2016.

Friday’s 45-6 victory over No. 12 Northweste­rn in the Outback Bowl not only capped Tennessee’s best season in eight years, but showcased some of the young talent that gives the Vols a chance to keep climbing.

“The road to success is always under constructi­on, and we need to continue to recruit and develop, and continue to grow and elevate our football program,” Jones said. “But where we’ve come in three short years is amazing.”

Joshua Dobbs threw for 166 yards and ran for two touchdowns, while Outback MVP Jalen Hurd rushed for 130 yards and one TD for the Vols (9-4), who finished with at least nine wins for the first time since 2007.

Evan Berry put a punctuatio­n mark on the team’s sixth consecutiv­e win by returning one of Tennessee’s four intercepti­ons 100 yards for a TD in the closing seconds.

“”It’s huge, we talked about finishing the season strong. It shows we’re on the rise,” Dobbs said. “We realize our potential. We have to grind to reach it, but this was a good step.”

Northweste­rn (10-3) sputtered offensivel­y and was unable to keep up the stronger, faster Vols defensivel­y in falling short on a bid to finish with a schoolreco­rd 11 victories.

“This is one game at the end of a spectacula­r season. You just move on. You learn, you grow,” Wildcats coach Pat Fitzgerald said. “You take all the great lessons we learned today, all the great lessons we learned throughout the season, and you learn and you grow and get better next year. That’s what we expect.”

Dobbs completed 14 of 25 passes. The dualthreat quarterbac­k ran 12 times for 48 yards, including a highlight-reel burst around right end in which he dove for his second TD after picking up a bobbled snap and tight-roping his way up the sideline to make it 31-6 early in the fourth quarter.

Hurd scored on 3-yard run in the third quarter and, despite playing with a sore hamstring, became the first Tennessee player to top 100 yards rushing in two bowl games. The 6-foot-4, 240-pound sophomore ran for 122 yards in the Vols’ victory over Iowa in last year’s Taxslayer Bowl.

The 100-yard performanc­e was the ninth of Hurd’s career, sixth this season.

“I battled a little hamstring pull at the beginning of the week, but I did treatment all week and I put it in my mind that I was going to play either way,” Hurd said. “There was nothing really that was going to stop me from playing.”

Both teams ended the regular season on fivegame winning streaks, Tennessee finishing strong after a 3-4 start that included losses to Alabama, Oklahoma, Florida and Arkansas by a combined 17 points.

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tennessee running back Jalen Hurd, 1, slips a tackle by Northweste­rn linebacker Nate Hall on a run during the third quarter of the Outback Bowl in Tampa, Fla. Hurd ran for 130 yards in Tennessee’s 45-6 win.
CHRIS O’MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tennessee running back Jalen Hurd, 1, slips a tackle by Northweste­rn linebacker Nate Hall on a run during the third quarter of the Outback Bowl in Tampa, Fla. Hurd ran for 130 yards in Tennessee’s 45-6 win.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States