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2006 Tennessee Volunteers football team; 2007 Tennessee Volunteers football team; 2007–08 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team; 2008 Tennessee Volunteers football team; 2008–09 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team; 2009 Tennessee Volunteers football team; 2009–10 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team; 2010 Tennessee Volunteers football team
The 2007 Tennessee Volunteers football team represented the University of Tennessee in the 2007 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They won the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference before falling to the eventual national champion LSU Tigers in the SEC Championship Game .
Tennessee's first exhibition game was against the California-Pennsylvania Vulcans, winning handily, 106–46. Crews also missed about a month due to heart problems. The Vols finished 31–5, winning the SEC regular season championship, for the first time since 2000, but the Vols lost in the 3rd round of both the SEC and NCAA Tournament.
The 2007 SEC Championship Game was played on December 1, 2007, in the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia. The game determined the 2007 football champion of the Southeastern Conference. The LSU Tigers, winners of the Western division of the SEC, defeated the Tennessee Volunteers, who won the Eastern division, by a score of 21–14. This was the ...
The Volunteers (14-0, 1-0) have matched the top start that was put together by the 1922-23 squad. It certainly will be a big accomplishment if they surpass the mark against the Gators.
The 2006–07 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team represented the University of Tennessee as a member of the Southeastern Conference during the 2006–07 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by second-year head coach Bruce Pearl , the Volunteers played their home games at Thompson–Boling Arena in Knoxville, Tennessee .
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The name "Volunteers" also reflects the Tennessee volunteers who came to the assistance of the Texans during Texas's 1836 War for Independence from Mexico. The name became even more prominent in the Mexican-American War of 1846 when Governor Aaron V. Brown issued a call for 2,800 men to battle Santa Ana and some 30,000 Tennesseans volunteered.