Tennessee will be looking to snap a two-game losing streak, and is coming off a one-sided loss to the nation’s top team, Georgia. The Bulldogs beat the Vols by four touchdowns last week.
Tennessee has won the last five head-to-hear meetings between the SEC schools.
Meanwhile, Vanderbilt has yet to a conference games this year and has lost its last nine straight after starting the year with two wins in non-conference tilts.
Fans looking to watch this college football game can do so for free on fuboTV, which offers a free trial (as well as RedZone, for you NFL fans) or on DirecTV Stream, which also offers a free trial. SlingTV has promotional offers available, as well. Through the end of 2023, fuboTV is also offering $20 off the first two months of subscription (in addition to the 7-day free trial).
Who: Vanderbilt at Tennessee
When: Saturday, Nov. 25, 3:30 p.m. ET
Where: Neyland Stadium, Knoxville, TN
Stream: fuboTV (free trial + $20 off your first 2 months); or Sling; or DirecTV Stream
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The No. 25 Tennessee Volunteers have some business to finish in their regular-season finale against Vanderbilt.
First, they want to avoid losing three straight for the first time under coach Josh Heupel. Second, they can extend their winning streak to five straight in this in-state rivalry after losing three consecutive games to Vanderbilt.
“This is a big game for (Vanderbilt) and a big game for us,” Heupel said. “We need to go finish it.”
The Volunteers (7-4, 3-4 Southeastern Conference) also need to score more than the 17 points combined the managed in losses to Missouri and top-ranked Georgia. It’s their lowest production in back-to-back games since 2017 when Georgia and South Carolina limited Tennessee to nine.
Vanderbilt (2-9, 0-7) is coming off an open date, so the Commodores should be a bit healthier as they try to snap a nine-game skid in their season finale. This is their last chance to avoid going winless in SEC play in a game that matters to Clark Lea, a Nashville native coaching his alma mater.
“We just haven’t experienced that breakthrough moment this year, but we’re going to see if we can’t do that in Knoxville,” Lea said.
NICO TIME?
Tennessee coaches have monitored closely the playing time of freshman quarterback Nico Iamaleava. If he plays against Vandy, it will be the fourth game this season, keeping him eligible for this to count as a redshirt year. If starter Joe Milton III opts not to play in the bowl game, Iamaleava would be the starter. Bowl games don’t count against that eligibility.
TAKE A GUESS
Lea wouldn’t say who will start at quarterback for Vanderbilt, whose last game was a 47-6 loss at South Carolina. A depth chart handed out Tuesday listed Ken Seals or sophomore Walter Taylor, and Lea said they haven’t been happy at the production from that position.
Seals has taken better care of the ball than AJ Swann, who began the season as Vandy’s starting quarterback. Seals is averaging 124.7 yards passing per game with 10 TD passes and only four interceptions. Taylor has attempted only 15 passes. Swann has been dealing with an injured elbow.
HURTING LINEMEN
Tennessee starting offensive tackles John Campbell, Jr., and Gerald Mincey were both banged up against Georgia, but are expected to be ready for Vandy. That’s not the case for right guard Javontez Spraggins. Heupel said Spraggins will miss this game and the bowl with a lower-body injury.
“He’s a guy that pours into his teammates,” Heupel said. “(He) has great energy … and plays really hard.”
POWER T
Tennessee has the nation’s 11th-best rushing offense. Led by Jaylen Wright, the Vols are averaging 205.7 yards per game, and Wright needs 62 yards to reach 1,000 yards. That would make him the Vols’ first 1,000-yard rusher since Jalen Hurd in 2015.
Wright is averaging 7.44 yards per carry, second at the FBS level trailing only LSU quarterback Jayden Daniels. Making that more impressive is Wright shares time with Jabari Small and Dylan Sampson. Vanderbilt ranks 108th nationally giving up 176 yards rushing per game.
“When we got here, he was a fast kid that just tried to run around everybody,” Heupel said. “Now, he has great patience, great vision and still has home-run speed.”
HATING TENNESSEE
Vanderbilt linebacker Langston Patterson is a Nashville native who grew up hating Tennessee. Not because he preferred the Commodores over the Volunteers. No, his dislike is a family tradition.
“My dad actually played football at Alabama, so we’ve always kind of not liked the Vols around our house,” Patterson said.
The Associated Press contributed to this article