Tennessee's new facility is impressive





Nice! This surpassed Oregon's locker room and football facility. They have everything there. Might as well add dorms to the facility also.
 
and some people expect a kid to see that and turn it down. Man, that weight room would have me signed dang near.
 
Nice! This surpassed Oregon's locker room and football facility. They have everything there. Might as well add dorms to the facility also.

Eventually, Athletic Departments will soon become a branch campus of some college system, such as, the University of Tennessee Athletic School Campus. The Athletic Director will become the Chancellor of the Athletic School Campus. It would be totally separate and self-sufficient.
 
Typical in the SEC. Not impressive at all.

I was on another website and they had a thread with videos of the facilities at every SEC school. Tennessee's facilities will be newer, but not particularly impressive. In five years, they will be old news.

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Mississippi State is building a facility right now that is the equivalent of the Tennessee building with the exception of the indoor practice facility which MSU already has and I guess they didn't see the need to build a new one. Mississippi State's building will be 88,000 square feet. 60,000 square feet of the 145,000 square feet Tennessee's building will be indoor practice facility. That means the rest of the building will be 85,000 square feet. Roughly the same as Mississippi State's.


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I won't even go into the facilities at Bama, Auburn, Georgia ... on and on.

This place will be new ... for a while ..., but nothing special.
 
Well we all know they are going to try to out do each other. The Facilities will just keep getting bigger and bigger and more elaborate.
 
and some people expect a kid to see that and turn it down. Man, that weight room would have me signed dang near.

I have seen stories on scout.com where a kid would take 4 visits and decommit and recommit after each visit. (and lawd please don't let them bring the "hostess" out to "greet" them...)
 
http://espn.go.com/blog/ncfnation/post/_/id/62093/ranking-the-secs-football-facilities

Just last week ESPN ranked the SEC football facilities...
The more a school has, the higher it ranked. We also took into account the overall presentation of the facilities -- how nice they were, how new they were and whether or not they were all self-contained to make life easier for the players.

Here goes:

1. Alabama: It was a tough call between Alabama and LSU for the top spot, but all the renovations to Bryant-Denny Stadium over the past few years gave Alabama the nod. Everything you need is right there at the Mal Moore Athletic Facility, including a full indoor practice complex. Nick Saban also said recently that a new weight room is in the works.

2. LSU: LSU’s Football Operations Center is an all-in-one complex that includes the locker room, weight room, training room, video operations center and the coaches’ offices. Built in 2006, it also has a full indoor practice field and is conveniently located right across the street from Tiger Stadium. LSU spared no expense in building this crown jewel, and the practice fields are all right there behind the center.

3. Tennessee: Not only has Neyland Stadium gotten a multi-million dollar facelift over the past few years, but the Vols are set to move into a new $45 million football facility this fall. The Vols already had an indoor practice facility, and their new digs will include everything from a mixed martial arts fighting cage, to a restaurant, to cell phone recharging stations in the players’ dressing cubicles in the locker room.

4. Georgia: A $40 million expansion and renovation of Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall was completed last year, and the new facilities are as plush as any in the country. There’s not a full indoor practice facility, but a 30-yard field that allows the Bulldogs to warm up. The locker room has a commons area that features televisions, massage centers, computer stations and video game stations.

5. Auburn: The Tigers opened a new $16.5 million, 92,000-square foot indoor practice facility last fall that includes a 100-yard field. Auburn previously had a smaller building that housed a 40-yard field and could only be used for smaller workouts. The facility connects to the main athletic building and student academic center with everything centrally located for the players.

6. Florida: The Gators’ football facilities were spruced up considerably a few years ago under Urban Meyer, and everything is right there at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium (The Swamp). The entrance to the football offices, complete with trophies and memorabilia, is gorgeous. There is no indoor practice facility, and the practice fields aren’t very close to the stadium.

7. Arkansas: The Hogs, who already had some of the best facilities in the league, are scheduled to move into their new $35 million football operations center prior to the 2013 season. They already have a full indoor practice facility, and Razorback Stadium has been touched up nicely over the years.

8. Ole Miss: The Rebels' all-in-one indoor practice facility is one of the more underrated ones in the country. Everything is right there, from the weight room, to the locker room, to the coaches’ offices overlooking the indoor practice field. There’s also a tunnel that takes the players into Vaught-Hemingway Stadium.

9. Mississippi State: The Bulldogs are breaking ground on a new $25 million football complex sometime this year, and there are also plans to expand Scott Field. The $10 million Templeton Athletic Academic Center was built in 2008 and is a huge draw for recruits.

10. Missouri: A $16 million expansion and renovation project opens this summer. The new facility will measure more than 100,000 square feet, almost doubling the space in the Tigers’ old facility. The locker room will have eight 30-inch plasma high-definition televisions throughout the room.

11. Texas A&M: What the Aggies have now is first-rate, and they’re in the process of doing some renovations. When those renovations are complete, they could easily move into the top half of the league in terms of overall facilities. It’s hard to beat Kyle Field on a Saturday afternoon.

12. South Carolina: Williams-Brice Stadium is the epicenter for the Gamecocks’ facilities. The weight room is new and spacious, and the Gamecocks have also recently redone the locker room. They only have a smaller indoor practice facility, 50 yards long, and the coaches’ offices are badly in need of renovation.

13. Kentucky: The Nutter Training Facility has been Kentucky’s football home since 1987. New practice fields were added in 2005, and the complex is highlighted by a 9,000-square foot weight room. The Nutter Center also has 11 meeting rooms, a state-of-the-art video and editing room for coaches’ film, equipment and training rooms, staff and player lounges, a sprint track, sauna and Jacuzzi, an aerobics room and three racquetball courts.

14. Vanderbilt: One of second-year Vanderbilt coach James Franklin’s priorities was to upgrade the Commodores’ facilities, and he’s going to get his wish. Vanderbilt Stadium is getting a new field this season. A new locker room and team meeting room are being built at the McGugin Center, and an indoor practice facility is also on the way and will be in place by 2014.
 
and some people expect a kid to see that and turn it down. Man, that weight room would have me signed dang near.

Just wait til a kid see the STATE OF THE ART dirt holes on JSU practice field, the half a mile walk to the JSU Athletics Community weight room....they will have no choice but to attend JSU! :smh:
 



Those rankings of the SEC facilities was pretty funny. The writer said Florida's practice fields aren't close to the stadium. Who cares about how close the practice field is to the stadium? Who cares about how big South Carolina's coach offices are? I don't think a recruit is going to make a decision based on a 3-minute walk to a stadium or the look of the coach's office. It appears indoor practice fields are the new fad right now.

Also, I am sure Dooley has to know that he is going to be let go after this upcoming season. Tennessee didn't spend all of that money for him to go 5-7 and watch Vanderbilt pass him up. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised to see Tennessee get Vanderbilt's coach.
 
Those rankings of the SEC facilities was pretty funny. The writer said Florida's practice fields aren't close to the stadium. Who cares about how close the practice field is to the stadium? Who cares about how big South Carolina's coach offices are? I don't think a recruit is going to make a decision based on a 3-minute walk to a stadium or the look of the coach's office. It appears indoor practice fields are the new fad right now.

Also, I am sure Dooley has to know that he is going to be let go after this upcoming season. Tennessee didn't spend all of that money for him to go 5-7 and watch Vanderbilt pass him up. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised to see Tennessee get Vanderbilt's coach.

Probably not. I think the SEC has an agreement that they won't take each others head coach. They want to go outside the conference and get the best coach thereby keeping the best collection of coaches in their conference. You rarely see them swap head coaches. That's one of the ways they keep their conference strong.
 
Probably not. I think the SEC has an agreement that they won't take each others head coach. They want to go outside the conference and get the best coach thereby keeping the best collection of coaches in their conference. You rarely see them swap head coaches. That's one of the ways they keep their conference strong.
Did Houston Nutt leave or get fired from Ark?
 
Did Houston Nutt leave or get fired from Ark?

Forced out is a nice way of putting it. He was not going to be back at Arkansas that season. Period. And that deal had been done before the Ole Miss position came open. Ole Miss, being the bottom-feeders they are, took the best coach they thought available.

So, that situation is not the same as leaving one team in good standing and going to another.
 
Probably not. I think the SEC has an agreement that they won't take each others head coach. They want to go outside the conference and get the best coach thereby keeping the best collection of coaches in their conference. You rarely see them swap head coaches. That's one of the ways they keep their conference strong.

That agreement has to be a myth, because I have seen that several times, especially in the non-football sports. Kentucky was ready to spend a fortune to snatch Billy Donovan away from Florida.

Tommy Tuberville Ole Miss- Auburn
Houston Nutt Arkansas- Ole Miss
Steve Spurrier Florida----Washington Redskins------South Carolina (when the Florida job was open)
Nick Saban LSU------Miami Dolphins-------Alabama
 
That agreement has to be a myth, because I have seen that several times, especially in the non-football sports. Kentucky was ready to spend a fortune to snatch Billy Donovan away from Florida.

Tommy Tuberville Ole Miss- Auburn
Houston Nutt Arkansas- Ole Miss
Steve Spurrier Florida----Washington Redskins------South Carolina (when the Florida job was open)
Nick Saban LSU------Miami Dolphins-------Alabama

I know it seems like it, but the Washington Redskins and Miami Dolphins are not SEC teams. That takes care of Spurrier and Saban.

The Houston Nutt situation has been explained. Houston Nutt no longer had a job when he was picked up by Ole Miss. He did not go from Arkansas to Ole Miss. He went from Jobless to Ole Miss.

From what I understand, the Tommy Tuberville situation is why the agreement was made. Tuberville lied and then bailed leaving Ole Miss on probation. Roy Kramer, who was the SEC commissioner then, saw that and addressed the issue.

Since then, can you name one SEC head coach in good standing to leave one SEC school and go directly to another SEC school to be their head coach?
 
I know it seems like it, but the Washington Redskins and Miami Dolphins are not SEC teams. That takes care of Spurrier and Saban.

The Houston Nutt situation has been explained. Houston Nutt no longer had a job when he was picked up by Ole Miss. He did not go from Arkansas to Ole Miss. He went from Jobless to Ole Miss.

From what I understand, the Tommy Tuberville situation is why the agreement was made. Tuberville lied and then bailed leaving Ole Miss on probation. Roy Kramer, who was the SEC commissioner then, saw that and addressed the issue.

Since then, can you name one SEC head coach in good standing to leave one SEC school and go directly to another SEC school to be their head coach?

It has happened in the non-football sports, but not in football. However, I don't recall any of the lesser programs in the SEC having a hot coach when one of the big jobs came open. I am pretty sure if Dan Mullen(Miss. State) or James Franklin (Vanderbilt) are having good seasons and the job at Florida, Georgia, or Tennessee come open, you can best bet they would give them a good look. James Franklin's PR may make him harder to hire.
 
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