logo
Projecting Tennessee football depth chart for 2025 season after spring transfer portal

Projecting Tennessee football depth chart for 2025 season after spring transfer portal

Yahoo07-05-2025

The 2025 Tennessee football roster appears to be set or very close to completion.
UT can still add players from the spring transfer portal, and it may snag one more. But there are few quality players available, and the portal is closed to new ones entering it.
Advertisement
The Vols have lost six players during the spring portal and added three.
There are 79 scholarship players projected for the 2025 roster, including only nine scholarship seniors. The 2024 team had 15 scholarship seniors, not including walk-on starters Will Brooks and Matthew Salansky.
That means there's plenty of young, inexperienced players on the 2025 roster, which makes position competitions interesting.
Here is a projected depth chart as the spring portal activity slows.
Tennessee football 2025 projected depth chart
Quarterbacks
Joey Aguilar or Jake Merklinger | George MacIntyre
This is a legitimate competition. Merklinger has steadily progressed to be a quality backup, which was supposed to be his role until Nico Iamaleava bolted to UCLA. His readiness to start is uncertain, which is why UT sought established starters in the portal.
Advertisement
Aguilar, a UCLA transfer, was a star player at Appalachian State. But he was sometimes too careless in terms of interceptions. He could be effective at the SEC level or over his head. Time will tell. First, he must learn the offense quickly.
MacIntyre has a bright future. But if he's needed as a 2025 starter, things have gone south for Aguilar and Merklinger.
JOEY AGUILAR Inside 100-day crash course to become Tennessee QB
Running backs
Peyton Lewis or DeSean Bishop | Star Thomas
Neither Lewis nor Bishop can fill the shoes of Dylan Sampson, the 2024 SEC Offensive Player of the Year. But coach Josh Heupel's offense always produces in the ground game, and this duo could be up to the task.
Advertisement
However, a third running back must pan out – either Thomas, a Duke transfer, or a freshman – for this backfield to be a strength rather than a weakness.
Wide receivers
Mike Matthews | Travis Smith
Braylon Staley | Amari Jefferson | Joakim Dodson
Chris Brazzell | Radarious Jackson
UT wasn't aggressive enough in the winter transfer portal, and it has struck out so far in trying to land a receiver in the spring portal. The Vols are still looking.
There are reasons for optimism. Matthews has five-star talent. Staley has flashed in practice. Brazzell should improve in his second year in the system. But only orange-colored glasses can hide the concerns in this thin, inexperienced group.
Tight ends
Miles Kitselman (injured) | Ethan Davis | Cole Harrison or DaSaahn Brame or Jack Van Dorselaer
Kitselman is among the SEC's best returning tight ends, but he must recover from a pectoral injury in spring.
Advertisement
Davis is an athletic pass-catcher who hasn't mastered in-line blocking yet. UT must accentuate what he does best, or Davis must expand his skillset. Either way, it looks like a make-or-break season for him.
Don't be shocked if Brame or Van Dorselaer get into the mix as freshmen.
Offensive line
LT – Lance Heard | Bennett Warren
LG – Wendell Moe | Jesse Perry
C – William Satterwhite | Max Anderson
RG – Sam Pendleton | Shamurad Umarov
RT – David Sanders | Jesse Perry
Heard is the only returning starter, but things aren't that bleak up front. Moe (Arizona) and Pendleton (Notre Dame) were strong portal pickups. Sanders was the No. 1 tackle in the 2025 class, and he must learn on the job as a freshman.
Advertisement
Center is a critical position, whether redshirt freshman Satterwhite can fill it or Pendleton must slide there. Perry steps into Dayne Davis' former utility role. Perry could start at guard or be the primary backup at either guard or tackle spot.
Defensive line
DE – Dominic Bailey | Tyre West | Tyree Weathersby
DT – Jaxson Moi | Daevin Hobbs | Josh Schell
DT – Bryson Eason | Nathan Robinson or Jamal Wallace (injured)
EDGE – Joshua Josephs | Caleb Herring | Jordan Ross
There are only concerns about this group when compared to the 2024 unit, the deepest defensive line rotation in college football.
But Eason and Josephs are potential All-SEC players. Bailey is a returning starter. And some talented young players have waited their turn.
Advertisement
Injuries could be an issue after numerous interior linemen missed spring. Defensive ends may need to slide inside, or freshmen could be called upon.
Tennessee defensive lineman Dominic Bailey (90) and Tennessee defensive lineman Bryson Eason (20) celebrate a fumble recovery during a college football game between Tennessee and UTEP at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, Tenn., Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024.
Linebackers
MLB – Jeremiah Telander | Edwin Spillman
WLB – Arion Carter | Jordan Burns | Freshman TBD
Carter must stay healthy and play consistently. Telander must improve his play outside the tackle box. Spillman must step forward after missing most of the 2024 season due to injury. If all that happens, this is a strong group.
But depth is still a big question. At least five linebackers will probably be needed by season's end, which means a freshman or walk-on gets into the mix.
Advertisement
ADAMS Tennessee lost ground in SEC due to transfer portal shortfall
Secondary
CB – Jermod McCoy (injured) or Jalen McMurray | Marcus Goree
CB – Rickey Gibson | Colton Hood
STAR – Boo Carter | Dylan Lewis or TBD
S – Andre Turrentine | Jackson Mathews
S – Edrees Farooq or Kaleb Beasley
McCoy was a 2024 All-American. But he's rehabbing a torn ACL that could sideline him for at least an early portion of the season. Carter is a potential All-SEC player. Gibson and Turrentine are returning starters.
But the spring portal poached UT's defensive secondary of depth. Veteran Jalen McMurray could be among the defense's key players because he may start in McCoy's cornerback spot or spell Carter at nickelback.
Advertisement
Hood, a Colorado transfer, could calm concerns if he can contribute at cornerback. But coaches hope any of five freshmen are ready to play immediately.
Specialists
P – Jackson Ross
PK – Max Gilbert
LS – Bennett Brady
KO – Josh Turbyville
KR – Peyton Lewis or TBD
PR – Boo Carter
This is the strongest returning unit on the team. Ross, Gilbert and Carter will be preseason All-SEC candidates. Brady takes over for Salansky at long snapper.
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.
Advertisement
Get the latest news and insight on SEC football by subscribing to the SEC Unfiltered newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox.
This article originally appeared on Knoxville News Sentinel: Tennessee football 2025 depth chart after spring transfer portal

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tennessee offers 2027 four-star in-state running back prospect
Tennessee offers 2027 four-star in-state running back prospect

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Tennessee offers 2027 four-star in-state running back prospect

Tennessee is already recruiting toward its 2027 football signing class. The Vols offered a scholarship to four-star running back Asa Barnes. "I'm blessed to receive an offer from the University of Tennessee," Barnes announced. Advertisement The 6-foot, 190-pound prospect is an in-state prospect from Westview High School in Martin, Tennessee. Some notable Westview alumni include former Tennessee offensive lineman Chad Clifton and Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson. 247Sports ranks Barnes as the No. 22 running back in 2027 and No. 9 player in Tennessee. He is a four-star in 247Sports Composite rankings. Florida State was the first program to offer Barnes a scholarship on Jan. 19. Additional programs to offer him a scholarship include Ohio State, Alabama, Ole Miss, Purdue and Maryland. Tennessee does not have any commitments in its 2027 football recruiting class. The Vols have eight commitments in their 2026 recruiting class: quarterback Faizon Brandon, wide receiver Tyreek King, tight end Carson Sneed, offensive lineman Gabriel Osenda, wide receiver Tyran Evans, linebacker Braylon Outlaw, defensive lineman C.J. Edwards and defensive lineman Zach Groves. Follow Vols Wire on Facebook and X (formerly Twitter). This article originally appeared on Vols Wire: Vols offer scholarship to in-state 2027 football prospect

Tennessee offers 2027 four-star in-state running back prospect
Tennessee offers 2027 four-star in-state running back prospect

USA Today

time8 hours ago

  • USA Today

Tennessee offers 2027 four-star in-state running back prospect

Tennessee offers 2027 four-star in-state running back prospect Tennessee is already recruiting toward its 2027 football signing class. The Vols offered a scholarship to four-star running back Asa Barnes. "I'm blessed to receive an offer from the University of Tennessee," Barnes announced. The 6-foot, 190-pound prospect is an in-state prospect from Westview High School in Martin, Tennessee. Some notable Westview alumni include former Tennessee offensive lineman Chad Clifton and Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson. 247Sports ranks Barnes as the No. 22 running back in 2027 and No. 9 player in Tennessee. He is a four-star in 247Sports Composite rankings. Florida State was the first program to offer Barnes a scholarship on Jan. 19. Additional programs to offer him a scholarship include Ohio State, Alabama, Ole Miss, Purdue and Maryland. Tennessee does not have any commitments in its 2027 football recruiting class. The Vols have eight commitments in their 2026 recruiting class: quarterback Faizon Brandon, wide receiver Tyreek King, tight end Carson Sneed, offensive lineman Gabriel Osenda, wide receiver Tyran Evans, linebacker Braylon Outlaw, defensive lineman C.J. Edwards and defensive lineman Zach Groves. Follow Vols Wire on Facebook and X (formerly Twitter).

Who is Tony Vitello? Meet Tennessee baseball coach ahead of NCAA super regional
Who is Tony Vitello? Meet Tennessee baseball coach ahead of NCAA super regional

USA Today

time9 hours ago

  • USA Today

Who is Tony Vitello? Meet Tennessee baseball coach ahead of NCAA super regional

Who is Tony Vitello? Meet Tennessee baseball coach ahead of NCAA super regional Show Caption Hide Caption 5 men's NCAA baseball tournament players to watch The Mongomery Advertiser's Adam Cole and The Tennesseean's Aria Gerson break down the top players to watch in the men's NCAA baseball tournament. Tony Vitello has Tennessee baseball two wins away from returning to the College World Series for the second consecutive season, as the Vols look to defend last year's national championship. To get back to Omaha, Vitello will need to lead his program to a super regional win against a program that he once served as an assistant coach for: Arkansas. No. 14 Tennessee and No. 3 Arkansas are set to open up the Fayetteville Super Regional on June 7 at 5 p.m. ET at Baum–Walker Stadium in Fayetteville, Arkansas. REQUIRED READING: NCAA baseball tournament bracket: Super regional matchups, schedule, pairings for CWS Vitello enters the Fayetteville Super Regional against Arkansas holding a 341-129 overall record during his tenure at Tennessee. Tennessee, the lower seed in the Fayetteville Super Regional, is 106-72 overall against ranked teams under Vitello. Here's what to know about Vitello ahead of the Fayetteville Super Regional: Who is Tony Vitello? Tony Vitello is the skipper of Tennessee baseball, a position that he has held since 2018. He's also one of the top coaches in college baseball. He is the lone coach to have led Tennessee to a College World Series national title, which the Vols earned last season with a 2-1 series win against Texas A&M. The Vols' win over the Aggies ended a 25-year-long curse of the No. 1 overall seed not winning the NCAA baseball tournament. "Kids are tough these days. They will do what you ask them to do," Vitello said after the Vols' CWS title win. "I know our fans got us through that tough inning. That was a group effort on the mound. If you're in the SEC, you're going to be a superstar player, but you need to be a good teammate, and that's what these guys were." Since taking over on Rocky Top, Vitello has transformed the Tennessee baseball program into one of the top programs in the country, and a consistent one at that. Vitello made Tennessee history during the Vols' 5-1 win over Samford back in February, as he became the fastest coach in program history to reach 300 wins. The Fayetteville Super Regional marks the fifth consecutive super regional that the Vols have appeared in under Vitello, who has led Tennessee to six straight NCAA Tournaments. To put into perspective the impact Vitello has had on the program in the postseason, the Vols had a postseason drought that dated back to 2005 before he took over in 2017. As noted by Tennessee's game notes for the Fayetteville Super Regional, the 257 victories that Vitello has led the Vols to since 2021 are the most of any team in the country and 29 wins ahead of Arkansas. He's led the Vols to the SEC regular season and SEC tournament championships twice in his tenure, first in 2022 and then in 2024. Did Tony Vitello coach at Arkansas? Yes, Vitello spent four years on the bench at Arkansas as one of Dave Van Horn's assistant coaches. Vitello held his spot on Van Horn's staff from 2014-17 and served as the Razorbacks' hitting coach and recruiting coordinator. Noted in Vitello's Tennessee profile, Arkansas averaged nearly 38 wins in the four seasons he was with the Razorbacks. He helped Arkansas to three seasons of at least 40 wins and a 2015 College World Series appearance. "(Vitello's) a really a big-time competitor. He likes to compete at everything he does, whether it's shooting baskets, free throws, it doesn't matter," Van Horn told reporters of Vitello on June 6. "He grew up that way. His dad's a high school coach. He was always, as a young kid, always with his dad's teams and all the way to JUCO to Missouri, playing. In his coaching career, he's very competitive on the recruiting trail and everything else. So that's what it takes to have success at this level." Tony Vitello coaching history, record Vitello got his start in coaching at the Power 4 conference level at his alma mater, Missouri from 2003 through 2010. He then joined now-Texas coach Jim Schlossnagle's staff at TCU ahead of the 2011 college baseball season. He'd spend three seasons with the Horned Frogs as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator before joining Van Horn's staff at Arkansas. He was hired as Tennessee's coach, his first head coaching stint, on June 7, 2017. Here's a year-by-year breakdown of how Tennessee has fared under Vitello:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store