These Three 2026 Games Could Define Josh Heupels Tennessee Future

Tennessee's 2026 football season hinges on pivotal clashes with Auburn, Alabama, and Vanderbilt, as the Vols navigate a challenging SEC landscape.

Tennessee’s 2026 schedule won’t be judged by every snap, but there are a few games that will loom larger than the rest.

Coming off an 8-4 regular season, a 4-4 mark in SEC play, and a loss to Illinois in the Music City Bowl, Josh Heupel and the Vols are trying to get back into playoff contention. With the league moving to a nine-game SEC schedule, the pressure points are easy to spot.

These aren’t necessarily the three hardest opponents on the slate. They’re the ones that could shape the whole year.

The first one comes in Week 5 against Auburn, right after Tennessee’s SEC opener against Texas. That game will bring a familiar face back to Neyland Stadium: former UT offensive coordinator Alex Golesh, now in his first year leading Auburn. He’s also bringing other former Vols assistants with him, including defensive coordinator Tim Banks.

From a pure optics standpoint, Tennessee has to handle this one. Letting a former assistant walk into Neyland and leave with an early SEC win would be a rough look in Year 6 of Heupel’s tenure.

And from a football standpoint, the timing matters just as much. If the Vols are coming off a big win over Texas, they’ll need to keep the momentum alive.

If they’re coming off a loss, this becomes a chance to steady the ship before things start to slide.

Then there’s Alabama, the game that always carries extra weight in Knoxville. Tennessee’s recent success at home against the Crimson Tide has changed the feel of this matchup a bit, and with Kalen DeBoer taking over for Nick Saban, the expectation is that the Vols should have a real shot at winning in Neyland Stadium.

The quarterback matchup adds another layer. Tennessee will have a new and young quarterback, and Alabama will be in the same boat.

For the likely winner of the Tide’s quarterback battle, Keelon Russell, this will be the first major road environment he sees, with only Mississippi State on the road before that. A win here could give Tennessee some cushion if the season doesn’t unfold perfectly.

A loss would sting.

The final game on the list is the trip to Vanderbilt. Tennessee has long controlled this rivalry, but last season the Commodores came into Neyland Stadium and pulled off a rare win in Knoxville.

Now the Vols have to answer on the road. Vanderbilt’s home-field edge is about as weak as it gets in the SEC, and Tennessee fans often make the crowd feel far more orange than black and gold even in Nashville. The Commodores will also be breaking in a freshman quarterback, Jared Curtis.

That’s why this one feels so big. It’s hard to call it anything other than a must-win for Tennessee.

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Where Tennessees New Defensive Hire Lands In The SEC Matters

Jim Knowles arrives in Knoxville with a reputation that already travels well around the SEC. Athlon Sports slotted Tennessees new defensive coordinator at No. 8 among league defensive bosses, a reminder that Josh Heupels latest staff change is being measured against some of the conferences most established names. Knowles comes over after a run at Penn State, and his background at places like Ohio State, Oklahoma State and Duke gives Tennessee a veteran play-caller with a track record of building defenses that can hold up in big games.

The more immediate challenge is less about reputation than adjustment. Tennessee is learning a new scheme and a new vocabulary under Knowles, and the transition is already being shaped by the people he has brought with him from Penn State. For a defense that needed a reset after Tim Banks was let go following the 2026 season, the question now is how quickly all those moving parts can settle in before the Volunteers have to live with the results on the field. [Read more 🡒]

Tennessee Fans Will Have Strong Opinions On This Food City Center Ranking

Brian Rauf of Basket Under Review set out to rank the toughest places to play in mens college basketball, leaning on a formula that weighed attendance, home-road splits, mystique and the quality of opponents beaten on their own floor. In that mix, Thompson-Boling Arena at Food City Center landed 21st, a placement that should at least spark a few strong opinions around Knoxville.

The ranking still reflects why the building has become such a problem for visitors under Rick Barnes. Tennessee has been consistently strong at home during his tenure, with a run that includes two undefeated home seasons and a long list of wins over ranked teams. The Volunteers also sit among a crowded SEC showing in the top 25, which only adds to the sense that the leagues best venues continue to set the standard. [Read more 🡒]