Knoxville News Sentinel

UT football

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creative exception was made.

They took online courses the past few months to complete their high school credits. And Lipscomb will allow them to receive a diploma in May, when they’re well into the offseason program with the Vols.

“I think me and Ed are the first ones to do this (from private schools) from the whole region,” Beasley said. “So it’s definitely big. I was excited to get here when I figured out that I could come. It’s an advantage for sure.”

How they enrolled in the middle of Tennessee’s spring semester

That’s how Beasley and Spillman finished high school early. But they still needed a way to enroll in college midway through the spring semester, which UT offered.

UT’s fall and spring semesters follow the traditiona­l calendar, spanning almost four months each.

But those semesters are divided into two sessions, giving students the option to cram a course into a condensed timeframe during a single session.

The second session of UT’s spring semester runs from March 18 to May 7. So Beasley and Spillman started the second session on Monday, the same day the Vols kicked off spring practice.

“This was really just about getting that first spring under our belt,” Spillman, a four-star linebacker, said. “And I just felt like it would give me an upper hand to possibly get on the field early. So if you could finish high school, then finish it and move on the next stage earlier.”

How they’re making up for lost time

Beasley and Spillman are late to campus compared to the other early enrollees. But they’re early compared to the rest of the freshman class, which will arrive in June.

It put them in a unique position over the weekend. They tried to make up for lost time by learning the playbook quickly to maximize the opportunit­y they worked so feverishly to get.

New linebacker­s coach William Inge and defensive assistant Forrest Lehman worked with Spillman on Zoom video calls to catch him up. And his older brother, UT wide receiver Nate Spillman, helped him learn the defensive signals.

Beasley said he’s already learned the basic pass coverages and calls through two days of practice. He credits cornerback Rickey Gibson and two Nashville natives — safety Andre Turrentine and cornerback William Wright — with bringing him along.

“It’s definitely been hectic, just trying to get the plays down,” Beasley said. “But I’ve had some great people to help me with that.”

Adam Sparks is the Tennessee football beat reporter. Email adam.sparks@knoxnews.com . X, formerly known as Twitter @AdamSparks . Support strong local journalism by subscribin­g at knoxnews.com/ subscribe.

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