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Tennessee vs. Alabama score, takeaways: No. 6 Vols exorcise demons, beat No. 3 Tide for first time since 2006

Tennessee put an end to 15 years of misery at the hands of Alabama on Saturday as the No. 6 Volunteers upset the No. 3 Crimson Tide 52-49 at Neyland Stadium for Tennessee's first win in the rivalry since 2006. Vols kicker Chase McGrath drilled a 40-yard field goal as time expired to lift his team to the rousing win. No one was more integral to UT's success than wide receiver Jalin Hyatt, who caught a school-record five touchdowns as Tennessee improved to 6-0 with the victory.

A missed 50-yard field goal attempt from Alabama kicker Will Reichard with 15 seconds left gave Tennessee a last-gasp effort, and Vols quarterback Hendon Hooker capitalized by moving the ball into field goal range with two quick completions. Hooker completed 21 of 30 passes for 386 yards with all five touchdowns to Hyatt; he also threw his first interception of the season. Hyatt totaled 207 yards with his five scores coming on six total catches in the game.

The last time Tennessee beat Alabama, Phillip Fulmer and Mike Shula respectively roamed the sidelines. Nick Saban entered Saturday's game 15-0 since taking over at Bama against six different UT coaches, but his normally stout defense could not come up with enough stops against the Vols' top-ranked offense.

Putting an end to the streak was not easy. Tennessee squandered a 28-10 second-quarter lead by allowing Alabama to score on five straight possessions at one point over the second and third quarters. Reigning Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Bryce Young put forth a valiant effort in his return from a shoulder injury for the Tide and had Alabama ahead 49-42 midway through the fourth quarter.

Young completed 35 of 52 passes for 455 yards with two touchdowns as running back Jahmyr Gibbs (103 yards, three touchdowns) carried a heavy load for the Tide on the ground. Yet, no matter how much ground Young and Gibbs covered, second-year Tennessee coach Josh Heupel was always able to dial up an offensive answer.

Hyatt's heroics

For a third straight game, Tennessee played a ranked SEC foe without star WR Cedric Tillman, who is on the mend from an ankle injury suffered against Akron on Sept. 17. But playmakers keep stepping for the Vols in Tillman's absence, and on Saturday, it was Hyatt, who doubled his season total by tying the SEC record with five touchdown receptions in a single game.

The junior cemented his place in program lore with a legendary performance. Only one of his six grabs was not for a score, and three of his six TDs came from 35 yards out or more. Over the past two games, Hyatt has seven TDs, which is equal to the number he caught during his entire career entering Tennessee's win over LSU last week.

Hooker also ran for 56 yards, while Jabari Small and Princeton Fant added rushing scores.

The 52 points scored by Tennessee were the most against Alabama in any game since Sewanee posted 54 back in 1907. It was the third-most points scored against the Tide in their program history, and the 101 combined points Saturday were the most in rivalry history.

Hello, College Football Playoff?

Saturday's win establishes Tennessee as a legitimate threat to No. 1 Georgia in the SEC East and puts the Vols firmly in the College Football Playoff conversation. Tennessee hosts UT-Martin next week before returning to the SEC grind against No. 22 Kentucky on Oct. 29. Then comes the all-important game at UGA on Nov. 5.

Though the matchup figures to be critical in the division title race, the Vols may be able to withstand a loss against the reigning national champions and remain in the CFP picture if they don't slip up elsewhere. On two occasions in the eight-year history of the CFP, schools have reached the playoff without having played in their conference title game. Those teams were Ohio State in 2016 and Alabama in 2017.

Dismal records

Alabama's errors began on the first play of the game when they were whistled for an illegal block in the back and forced to start the in poor field position. The miscues only picked up from there for the Tide, which entered as one of the most-penalized teams in the country and surpassed their season average for penalties in a game before halftime.

By game's end, Alabama had been whistled for a school-record 17 penalties totaling 130 yards. On Tennessee's scoring drive to tie the game at 49 late in the fourth quarter, a pair of pass interference calls on the Tide gave the Vols life.

Silver lining?

Young's return -- and his performance in that return -- should not be overlooked. After missing last week's 24-20 win over Texas A&M due to a shoulder injury suffered against Arkansas on Oct. 1, Young looked healthy against Tennessee. He was nails all game not only throwing the football but taking care of it in the pocket and evading rushers to extend plays. He also led the Tide into Vols territory late, setting up Reichard's potential go-ahead field goal that ultimately sailed wide right.

Though the loss eliminates Bama's margin for error in its bid to win the SEC West and reach the CFP, Young's play should serve as some encouragement that all is not lost for Alabama this season. The Tide can still win the division, advance to the SEC Championship Game and likely earn a playoff bid if it can claim the conference title.

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Live updates
 
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Here we go

Tennessee takes over deep in its own territory after a nice Alabama punt. Vols trail 35-34 and are on the wrong side of a 25-6 run. But they have a chance to end 15 years of misery against the Crimson Tide if they can put together 15 minutes of their best football. Should be a fun finish on CBS.

 
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Tennessee struggling

Hendon Hooker, known for taking care of the football and delivering accurate passes, just overshot a wide open man and was intercepted on third down. Alabama has the football and the lead as the tone of this game has changed dramatically here in the third quarter. Hooker's first INT since Nov. 13, 2021 against Georgia. He also threw one last year at Alabama.

 
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Epic rally

Since being down 28-10, Alabama has outscored Tennessee 25-6 with points on five straight drives. The missed PAT looms large for the Vols at the moment, as does that defensive pass interference call in the end zone. Tennessee had multiple chances to bring Young down after a series of self-inflicted Alabama errors. In the end, the Vols bailed them out. But Tennessee fans will rightly question the validity of the PI call.

 
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Alabama leads

Bryce Young just evaded about three would-be sacks, leading to a defensive pass interference penalty in the end zone that set Alabama up with a first-and-goal after the Crimson Tide squandered away a touchdown with a holding penalty. From there, Jahmyr Gibbs punches it in to give Alabama its first lead of the game at 35-34 with 4:27 left in the third quarter. Amazing play from Young that won't register in the box score.

 
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Bama on the cusp

Tennessee is doing a reasonably good job of keeping Bama from generating consistent yardage in the run game. But the Vols' pass rush is fading, and Bryce Young is turning in a Heisman-esque performance.

 
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Quick answer

Tennessee gets some energy back in Neyland Stadium with a 60-yard bomb from Hendon Hooker to Jaylin Hyatt, who now has three touchdown catches on the day. Three plays and 55 seconds after Alabama ties it up, Tennessee is back in front. A missed PAT may loom large though.

 
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Difference in a week

Tennessee got LSU down early last week after the Tigers made a bunch of mistakes, and the Tigers didn't have the execution to claw their way back. Alabama hasn't panicked. Specifically, Bryce Young has remained cool, calm and collected and has the Crimson Tide back with the momentum here. He's showing why he's the reigning Heisman Trophy winner.

 
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Tie game

Bryce Young hit Jermaine Copeland for a beautiful, contested 36-yard completion on a second-and-13 play and Jahymr Gibbs ran untouched for a 26-yard touchdown on the next play. Then, Young found Ja'Corey Brooks for the 2-point conversion. That's 18 unanswered for Alabama, and the air seems to have left Neyland Stadium. 28-28 early in the third quarter.

 
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Alabama takes over

Tennessee had Ramel Keyon running wide open down the right sideline on second-and-13 as the cornerback fell down. Hooker overshot him, and Keyton also kind of awkwardly began backpedaling instead of running full speed. The end result was an incompletion. The Vols wound up going for it on fourth down and failed. Big stand for the Crimson Tide, who get the ball with a chance to tie the game on their first possession of the second half.

 

Second half storylines

Can Tennessee keep its foot on the gas here with an 8-point lead? It better. After scoring touchdowns on their first three possessions, the Volunteers scored on just one of their final three drives (one of four if you can't the final possession with under a minute left in the half). Alabama's offense is in a pretty good rhythm, and this might be a tie game if not for the Crimson Tide's botched special teams play early in the second quarter.

 
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