Big Orange Sunday

Former University of Tennessee coordinator Doug Mathews brings you the latest news and analysis every weekend on 104-5 The Zone. Find the show LIVE every Sunday morning at 8 AM and check out the full podcast right here every weekend.

  1. 6 HR AGO

    Big Orange Sunday 05/24/26

    This episode of Big Orange Sunday Coach  delivers a comprehensive post-spring look-in at the 2026 Tennessee Volunteers football program, emphasizing the critical need to re-establish a dominant home-field advantage at Neyland Stadium. The host provides an in-depth analysis of the team's massive defensive overhaul under new Defensive Coordinator Jim Knowles, who has hand-picked a mature, athletic staff and heavily utilized the transfer portal to build exceptional depth across the linebacking core, safeties, and cornerbacks. Conversely, the offensive preview highlights stability and staff continuity under Head Coach Josh Heupel. With a highly experienced returning starting core up front and on the perimeter, the offensive strategy relies on internal player development and a remarkably quiet transfer portal cycle, leaving the team’s ultimate success heavily invested in a talented but young quarterback room. Beyond current roster breakdowns, the broadcast features a deeply personal historical segment reflecting on the combined 32-year legacies of legendary Tennessee coaches Johnny Majors and Phillip Fulmer. Drawing from a decade of firsthand experience on the coaching staff under both men, the host dispels long-standing program myths regarding Majors' personal habits and the controversial nature of Fulmer's transition into the head coaching role. The episode concludes with a forward-looking evaluation of the modern college football landscape, discussing how Tennessee effectively manages its estimated $35 million to $40 million NIL and revenue-sharing resources. By balancing a traditional foundation of high school recruiting with calculated transfer portal additions, the program continues to navigate an evolving era of roster construction. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    46 min
  2. 6 HR AGO

    Coach Final Thoughts :Navigating the New Era of College Football Building: Revenue Sharing, NIL, and the Transfer Portal Balance

    In the final segment of Big Orange Sunday, Coach reflects on the shifting landscape of college football, focusing on the evolving strategies programs must adopt to remain competitive. He highlights the critical roles of revenue sharing and Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) funding, estimating that top-tier programs like the University of Tennessee command between $35 million and $40 million in combined resources. The central challenge for modern coaches, specifically pointing to Tennessee's Josh Heupel, is finding the right balance between recruiting high school talent and leveraging the transfer portal. While some programs, such as Lane Kiffin's at Ole Miss, heavily rely on the portal, Tennessee has maintained a more balanced approach, roughly splitting its roster composition 50/50 between high school signees and transfer players. The host details what has effectively become the standard blueprint for contemporary roster management: recruiting and financially compensating high school players, enrolling them early, and heavily utilizing them during their freshman and sophomore years. Following this initial period, coaching staffs must continuously evaluate each player's performance to adjust their NIL valuation and revenue share accordingly. This system ultimately leads to a natural roster turnover, where underperforming athletes enter the portal, and programs actively recruit experienced transfers—including short-term seniors for specific depth needs—to round out their squads. Looking ahead, the host notes that roughly half of Tennessee's current starters and nearly half of its rotational players are transfers, signaling a clear, permanent shift in how the Volunteers and other major college programs operate. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    5 min
  3. 6 HR AGO

    In Heupel We Trust: The Invaluable Hidden Weapon Behind Tennessee’s 2026 Offense

    Coach  highlights significant optimism for the University of Tennessee's upcoming 2026 football season, focusing heavily on the stability and experience of the offensive coaching staff. A major asset for the team is the complete return of the offensive staff, led by head coach Josh Heupel. Key position coaches—including the offensive coordinator/quarterback coach, the offensive line coach, and the tight ends coach—boast long-standing relationships with Heupel dating back to their tenures at Oklahoma, UCF, and Missouri. This multi-year continuity within the system at Tennessee is viewed as a massive, invaluable advantage that provides a strong foundation for the team. In contrast to the defense, which relies heavily on incoming transfers, the offense features a highly experienced group of returning starters, with the potential to start nine out of eleven positions with players who have prior starting experience. The offensive line stands out as a particular area of strength, featuring eight dependable, quality players with significant snap counts, such as Sam Pendleton, Wendell Moe, and the highly athletic David Sanders. While the team boasts excellent depth at running back and tight end, the wide receiver corps is noted as young but talented. The quarterback position is identified as the most inexperienced, with Coach Heupel placing full trust in young talents like redshirt freshman George MacIntyre and early enrollee Faizon Brandon rather than bringing in a top transfer portal quarterback. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    10 min
  4. 6 HR AGO

    Coach gives Tennessee Volunteers Post-Spring Practice and Defensive Overhaul Analysis

    The Tennessee Volunteers football program is facing a crucial turning point as it enters the 2026 season, with a desperate need to reclaim their home-field advantage at Neyland Stadium. Reflecting on a disappointing 2025 campaign where the Vols dropped three of their four conference home games to Georgia, Oklahoma, Vanderbilt, and Arkansas, the broadcast emphasized that defending home turf is the absolute key to success for Coach Josh Heupel’s squad. A massive culprit for these struggles was a porous defense that allowed over 38 points per game in conference play, completely undermining an explosive offense that consistently produced over 31 points per game. To rectify these defensive woes, the program has undergone a complete system overhaul under new defensive coordinator Jim Knowles, who has hand-picked his staff to instill a fundamentally sound culture focused on tackling, leverage, and disciplined play. While the Vols only return six experienced starters on defense, a heavy influx of 14 transfer portal players—including several seniors from high-profile programs like Penn State, Michigan, and Auburn—has injected vital depth and experience into the roster. The breakdown of the defensive unit highlighted exceptional depth and talent at the linebacker and safety positions, a mature defensive line rotation, and an upgraded cornerback group, all positioning the Volunteers for significant defensive improvement in the upcoming fall season. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    20 min
  5. 10 MAY

    BIG ORANGE SUNDAY 05-10-26

    Welcome to another episode of Big Orange Sunday! Happy Mother's Day, Vol Nation. In this special holiday edition, host and former Tennessee defensive coordinator Doug Mathews takes a deep dive into the wild, ever-changing world of Vols football recruiting. A huge focus of the show is how head coach Josh Heupel is juggling an estimated $40 million personnel budget, especially when it comes to landing elite quarterbacks. Doug breaks down the tough financial decisions the staff has to make: do you invest heavily in unproven high school prospects, or do you shell out top dollar—potentially up to $5 million—for proven veterans in the transfer portal? He also maps out the three critical recruiting battlegrounds Tennessee absolutely has to dominate to stay competitive in the SEC: locking down their home state, hitting Georgia hard, and grabbing top talent out of North Carolina. Moving beyond the recruiting trail, the guys take some time to celebrate the massive improvements on the defensive side of the ball, giving major props to the disciplined, fundamentally sound culture the coaching staff has built. Later in the show, veteran sports reporter Jimmy Hyams dials in—even while recovering from rotator cuff surgery!—to shift the conversation from the gridiron to the diamond. Doug and Jimmy give a full rundown of Tennessee's baseball season, break down the recent series against Texas, and look ahead at where the team sits for the NCAA tournament. To round out this jam-packed weekend review of Vols athletics, they also touch on the softball team's early, unexpected exit from the SEC tournament. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    1 hr

About

Former University of Tennessee coordinator Doug Mathews brings you the latest news and analysis every weekend on 104-5 The Zone. Find the show LIVE every Sunday morning at 8 AM and check out the full podcast right here every weekend.

More From Cumulus Sports

You Might Also Like