1996 Tennessee Volunteers football team

1996 Tennessee Volunteers football
Florida Citrus Bowl champion
Conference Southeastern Conference
Division Eastern Division
Ranking
Coaches No. 9
AP No. 9
1996 record 10–2 (7–1 SEC)
Head coach Phillip Fulmer
Offensive coordinator David Cutcliffe
Defensive coordinator John Chavis
Captain Raymond Austin
Captain Jay Graham
Home stadium Neyland Stadium
(Capacity: 102,544)[1]
1996 SEC football standings
Conf  Overall
Team W L    W L 
Eastern Division
No. 1 Florida x$  8 0     12 1  
No. 9 Tennessee  7 1     10 2  
South Carolina  4 4     6 5  
Kentucky  3 5     4 7  
Georgia  3 5     5 6  
Vanderbilt  0 8     2 9  
Western Division
No. 11 Alabama xy  6 2     10 3  
No. 12 LSU x  6 2     10 2  
No. 24 Auburn  4 4     8 4  
Mississippi State  3 5     5 6  
Ole Miss  2 6     5 6  
Arkansas  2 6     4 7  
Championship: Florida 45, Alabama 30
  • $ Conference champion
  • x Division champion/co-champions
  • y Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1996 Tennessee Volunteers football team represented the University of Tennessee in the 1996 NCAA Division I-A football season. The offense scored 437 points and the defense allowed only 185 points. Quarterback Peyton Manning was in his junior year and head coach Phillip Fulmer was in his fifth year.

Schedule

Date Time Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
August 31 7:00 PM UNLV* No. 2 Neyland StadiumKnoxville, Tennessee PPV W 62–3   106,212
September 7 3:30 PM UCLA* No. 2 Neyland Stadium • Knoxville, Tennessee CBS W 35–20   106,297
September 21 3:30 PM No. 4 Florida No. 2 Neyland Stadium • Knoxville, Tennessee (Third Saturday in September) CBS L 29–35   107,608
October 3 7:30 PM vs. Ole Miss No. 8 Liberty BowlMemphis, Tennessee ESPN W 41–3   62,640
October 12 7:00 PM at Georgia No. 7 Sanford StadiumAthens, Georgia (Rivalry) ESPN W 29–17   86,117
October 26 3:30 PM No. 7 Alabama No. 6 Neyland Stadium • Knoxville, Tennessee (Third Saturday in October) CBS W 20–13   106,700
November 2 12:30 PM at South Carolina No. 6 Williams-Brice StadiumColumbia, South Carolina JPS W 31–14   82,808
November 9 3:30 PM at Memphis* No. 6 Liberty BowlMemphis, Tennessee CBS L 17–21   65,685
November 16 12:30 PM Arkansas No. 12 Neyland Stadium • Knoxville, Tennessee JPS W 55–14   103,158
November 23 3:30 PM Kentucky No. 9 Neyland Stadium • Knoxville, Tennessee (Battle for the Barrel) CBS W 56–10   102,534
November 30 7:00 PM at Vanderbilt No. 9 Vanderbilt StadiumNashville, Tennessee (Rivalry) ESPN W 14–7   40,289
January 1 1:00 PM vs. No. 11 Northwestern* No. 9 Citrus BowlOrlando, Florida (Florida Citrus Bowl) ABC W 48–28   63,467
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming. #Rankings from Coaches Poll. All times are in Eastern Time.

Team players drafted into the NFL

PlayerPositionRoundPickNFL club
Joey KentWide receiver246Tennessee Oilers
Jay GrahamRunning back364Baltimore Ravens
Ray AustinCornerback5145New York Jets

[2]

References

  1. "Neyland Stadium". utsports.com. Retrieved November 14, 2012.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-10-05. Retrieved 2016-12-07.
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