
Each Monday, Tennessee head coach Josh Heupel shows his team a compilation of clips from the football weekend that just ended. Sometimes those are clips from Tennessee’s game or unique situations in other games that Heupel uses to prepare his team for different peculiar situations that could emerge each week.
But following Tennessee football’s 41-34 overtime win over Mississippi State, Heupel used two Tennessee freshmen as an example to his team. The first was freshman offensive tackle David Sanders.
The Vols’ doctors cleared Sanders ahead of the Mississippi State game, but the former five-star recruit did not start and did not play until midway through the fourth quarter when Jesse Perry suffered an injury. Sanders came in the game and was on the field during Tennessee’s game-tying touchdown drive.
“Thought he went in and handled himself extremely well,” Heupel said earlier this week. “First action of the season, seven minutes and change in the ball game on a drive where you got to go score and tie it up. It was something I pointed out that everybody in our team room. I just used the word prepared, right? He was prepared for that moment when he went in and executed and handled himself the way he needed to to go score on a drive.”
Freshman tight end Jack Van Dorselaer was in a somewhat similar spot. A third string tight end, Van Dorselaer was the Vols’ second tight end against Mississippi State as Ethan Davis dealt with an injury. Tennessee did not play as much 12-personnel with David out, but went to it twice late in the game.
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First, Van Dorselaer provided a key block on Joey Aguilar’s game tying touchdown run. He provided another significant block as DeSean Bishop rushed 25 yards for a touchdown on the first play of the overtime period.
“Another guy I pointed out being prepared for his opportunities, played great on special teams,” Heupel said of Van Dorselaer. “His reps on offense did a great job in the core. He was a big part of the overtime play where we were spring a run. Played with violence, speed and technique and created space there for DeSean. Score at the end of the game, outside quarterback zone, does a great job. He’s a young guy that he’s handled himself with great maturity and continues to get better, but he’s prepared and love the growth that we’ve seen from him.”
Heupel oft spoke this preseason and early this season about how young players do not have time to be young. Tennessee needs its underclassmen to develop quickly and provide depth this season. The Vols’ win in Starkville was a great example of that.
Sanders played just 11 snaps and Van Dorselaer played only six snaps against Mississippi State. But both were ready when their number was called upon.

