The Commercial Appeal

Vols fire Pruitt for cause amid internal investigat­ion

- Blake Toppmeyer Knoxville News Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

Jeremy Pruitt is out as Tennessee's football coach, ending one of the worst tenures in program history.

UT announced Monday it has fired Pruitt for cause amid an ongoing investigat­ion that Chancellor Donde Plowman said has revealed evidence of sweeping NCAA violations that occurred under Pruitt's watch.

Athletics director Phillip Fulmer also is on his way out, but Plowman said that it's Fulmer's decision to step down and that he is not tied to the investigat­ion.

Fulmer hired Pruitt in December 2017 in his first move as AD, and he awarded him a contract extension in September.

Tennessee will begin an AD search with the help of Parker Executive Search, and Fulmer will remain on the job until his replacemen­t is hired. The next AD will hire Pruitt's replacemen­t.

Tennessee also fired assistant coaches Brian Niedermeye­r and Shelton Felton for cause on Monday, along with seven members of the football program's recruiting and support staff.

“Based on what we know and the counsel we've gotten, it is clear that Coach Pruitt did not adequately promote an atmosphere of compliance or monitor it,” Plowman said in an exclusive interview with Knox News.

As a for-cause firing, the university will not pay Pruitt any of his $12.6 million buyout or buyouts to Niedermeye­r or Felton. The other staffers were at-will employees not entitled to severance.

“I'm unflinching about integrity,” Plowman said, “and we're going to run our football program with integrity.”

Kevin Steele will serve as Tennessee's acting head coach, according to UT sources with direct knowledge of the situation. The Vols hired Steele, a UT alumnus and former Vols assistant who

played two seasons under Johnny Majors, on Tuesday as a defensive assistant. Steele coached Baylor from 19992002 and has been a defensive coordinato­r at four SEC schools, most recently Auburn.

Plowman plans for Tennessee's next AD to hire a coach before the 2021 season.

Plowman said Fulmer is stepping down because he wanted the next athletics director to have the opportunit­y to hire the football coach. Fulmer is under contact through 2023 after receiving a two-year contract extension in May.

“Phillip, again, I think he's demonstrat­ing why he's a legend at UT,” Plowman said. “He loves this university, and he will serve this university in whatever way we ask him to. I'm grateful to him and his family — just the way they've embraced UT forever.

“I really, really, really want to underscore that there's nothing about this that indicated Phillip knew about anything. None of this had anything to do with him.”

Pruitt, 46, compiled a record of 16-19, including a 3-7 mark in 2020 against a conference-only schedule.

W.H. Britton and Derek Dooley are the only Tennessee coaches since World War I who compiled a worse overall winning percentage than Pruitt. Britton went 4-5 in 1935, his lone season, and Dooley went 15-21 from 2010-12.

Pruitt becomes the first Tennessee football head coach to be fired for cause.

“None of us wanted this for our program,” said Plowman, who became chancellor in July 2019. “The scope of the actions should indicate to you that the number of violations is significant, and the number of people involved (is significant) – and deliberate efforts to conceal these activities from our compliance office.”

Niedermeye­r worked three seasons as an assistant under Pruitt, and Felton joined the staff before this season.

The investigat­ion is specific to Tennessee's football program, and the alleged violations are related to recruiting.

“There were very deliberate efforts to conceal, falsify what was happening out of that recruiting office,” Plowman said. “We don't have these problems in any other sport.”

Pruitt's contract includes more than 30 fire-for-cause provisions. Among them, he can be fired for cause if he engaged in conduct likely to result in an NCAA finding of a Level I or Level II rules violation, or if someone who reports to Pruitt engaged in conduct that constitute­s a Level I or II violation or is likely to result in such a violation and the university determines Pruitt was negligent in his oversight or lacked reasonable preventati­ve compliance measures.

Additional­ly, he can be fired for cause for a failure to promote and maintain an atmosphere of compliance or a failure to monitor employees who report to him.

A successful defensive coordinato­r at Florida State, Georgia and Alabama, Pruitt showed shortcomin­gs as a CEO of a program. This was his first head coaching opportunit­y at any level.

Tennessee's offense ranked among the SEC'S worst throughout his tenure, and Pruitt and his staff failed to develop quarterbac­ks.

Plowman, though, said Pruitt's firing pertains to the investigat­ion's findings, rather than his on-field performanc­e.

“That's really a decision by the athletic director,” Plowman said of a firing related to on-field performanc­e, “and, generally, if he thought that was a good idea, he would have done that prior to now. This is all about what we've uncovered in this investigat­ion.”

Plowman said that on Nov. 13 her office received a credible verbal allegation of potential NCAA violations occurring within the football program, and UT'S general counsel began an investigat­ion.

The university retained lawyers Mike Glazier and Kyle Skillman to assist with the investigat­ion. The Kansas-based lawyers from Bond, Schoeneck & King are considered experts at representi­ng universiti­es during college athletics investigat­ions.

UT'S outside counsel and the NCAA enforcemen­t staff interviewe­d Pruitt for about seven hours last Thursday, the university confirmed, presenting evidence and giving him an opportunit­y to respond. Pruitt had a lawyer present for that interview.

BSK lawyers updated Plowman and Fulmer on their findings on Friday, and Plowman said she was “taken aback by the scope of ” the investigat­ion and that the findings “indicated a significant number of serious NCAA rule violations.”

Tennessee has not announced selfimpose­d penalties, a probable next step.

“At every step, we've tried to do this the right way,” Plowman said. “While we're disappoint­ed in what we found, we're not going to hide it from anyone. Eventually this will all come out when this investigat­ion is over. You'll see all the specific issues.”

Pruitt's teams encountere­d significant issues on the field, too.

Tennessee went 0-9 against Alabama, Florida and Georgia, including eight losses to those rivals coming by more than 20 points. He came under criticism in October after he claimed following a 31-point loss to Alabama that the Vols were closing the gap with the Crimson Tide.

Just as damaging were losses in games Tennessee is expected to win.

The Vols opened the 2019 season with a 38-30 loss to Georgia State, a 26point underdog from the Sun Belt Conference that had gone 2-10 the previous season and received $950,000 to play in the game. The loss began a 2-5 start to the season.

Pruitt's woes in 2020 started in earnest with a 34-7 loss to Kentucky on Oct. 17. It marked Tennessee's first home loss to the Wildcats since 1984.

Pruitt also lost to Vanderbilt in the 2018 finale, preventing Tennessee from making a bowl game, and he lost this season to Arkansas and its first-year coach, Sam Pittman.

The Vols enjoyed a few high moments under Pruitt, too. They beat ranked foes Auburn and Kentucky during his inaugural season. Those would remain his only victories against Top 25 opponents during his tenure.

Tennessee closed the 2019 season by rallying to a 23-22 victory over Indiana in the Gator Bowl, and UT announced Pruitt's contract extension two days before the start of the 2020 season. The contract extension added two years to Pruitt's deal and included a raise set to begin this year and an increased buyout.

"I'm excited that this extension gives Jeremy the runway to continue to build on the momentum and energy we have around our football program coming out of last season," Fulmer said in a news release announcing that deal.

"He has made excellent progress entering just his third year and clearly realizes there is much work still to be done. This extension secures him to continue his efforts to return our program to a championsh­ip level and shows our commitment to him, his staff, this team and the future of the Tennessee Volunteers.”

Butch Jones remains the only Tennessee coach to last more than three seasons since Tennessee ousted Fulmer in 2008. Lane Kiffin bolted after the 2009 season for Southern California. Dooley was fired amid his third season. Jones was fired during his fifth season.

 ?? RANDY SARTIN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Jeremy Pruitt is out as coach of the Tennessee Volunteers.
RANDY SARTIN/USA TODAY SPORTS Jeremy Pruitt is out as coach of the Tennessee Volunteers.

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