


The tide had turned, and the Tide wouldn't survive. When Alabama's late field-goal try sailed wide right, what remained among the nearly 102,000 in attendance was not resignation but hope.īryce Young returned from injury and was dazzling, throwing 455 yards, but when Hendon Hooker delivered a dagger to Bru McCoy with 2 seconds left on the clock, the game-winning field goal was little more than deus ex machina. Instead, he hauled in second-half scores of 60, 78 and 13 yards in a remarkable show of resilience. When Alabama roared back in the second half and took a 35-34 lead following a controversial pass interference call, there would've been every reason for Tennessee to assume this would be yet another kick in the face, and yet Jalin Hyatt refused to roll over. When Tennessee jumped out to a 28-10 lead, it was an emphatic show of strength, serving notice that Alabama was hardly invincible, and Nick Saban wanted to speak to the manager. To see that sea of orange pour onto the field after Tennessee's 52-49 win on Saturday, razing the goal post and hoisting it in the air in a moment of mass catharsis was part celebration and part exorcism, a shedding of the demons that have made this program one of the most consistent punchlines in college football for the past 16 years. Who, faced with such horror, could still have hope?Īnd yet, on the 16th try, the story had a new ending. Think of what it must be like to slip into a pair of orange overalls and chug cheap beer on a flotilla and sing "Rocky Top" for the 200th time, only to stare down a scoreboard that shows another blowout loss at the hands of the mighty Tide. Think of what it must've felt like to see Lane Kiffin's surreal exit and Derek Dooley's tenure and Butch Jones' sideline trash can and Jeremy Pruitt's bags of cash (and also those three days when Greg Schiano was going to be the coach before Twitter nixed the deal) and know that the man on the other side of the field on Saturday had never lost on the Third Saturday of October. Just think what life has been like for Tennessee fans who, through 15 years of futility against Alabama, have seen their SEC brethren win 11 national titles, including six by these Crimson Tide, while the only bit of hardware they've scored for themselves was a lone championship of life. For all of the twists and turns and surprises and upsets the college football season invariably delivers, it's easy to still assume the final chapters have been prewritten, and in the end, the same heroes will emerge victorious.
