The post Tennessee Volunteers most to blame for crushing home loss to Oklahoma appeared first on ClutchPoints.
The Tennessee Volunteers suffered a disappointing 33ā27 home loss to the Oklahoma Sooners in Week 10 of the 2025 NCAA football season. That was despite dominating many statistical categories early on. Tennessee footballās offense piled up 255 yards and 17 first downs in the first half but struggled to convert those into points. However, they also had costly miscues. These included three turnovers, two second-quarter interceptions, and a missed field goal. Quarterback Joey Aguilar faced relentless pressure. He took four sacks, while injuries to Tennesseeās defensive backs further exposed the Volunteersā defense.
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Devastating collapse
Ā© Angelina Alcantar/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Oklahoma football capitalized on these struggles with a pivotal 71-yard fumble return touchdown and a late offensive surge to secure the victory. This left Tennessee football to rue missed opportunities and mistakes in a crushing home setback. The 14th-ranked Vols squandered early scoring chances and gave No. 18 Oklahoma ample opportunities to steal the game.
Again, Aguilar tossed two picks and fumbled once. Meanwhile, Oklahoma football kicker Tate Sandell was perfect on four field goal attempts. These included bombs from 51 and twice from 55 yards.
The loss stung particularly for Josh Heupel, Tennesseeās head coach and a former Oklahoma Heisman Trophy runner-up. This third defeat of the season likely ends the Volsā hopes for a second straight playoff bid. It sends them into an off week searching for answers before hosting New Mexico State on November 15.
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Here we will look at and discuss the Tennessee Volunteers most to blame for crushing home loss to Oklahoma.
Joey Aguilarās brilliance couldnāt mask his mistakes
At first glance, Joey Aguilarās stat line reads like one of an offensive explosion. He completed 29-of-45 passes for 393 yards and three touchdowns. Peel back the numbers, though, and the flaws become painfully clear. His two second-quarter interceptions derailed promising drives. In addition, his fumble early in the third quarter was the turning point that flipped the gameās momentum permanently.
On a first-and-10 from midfield, Aguilar failed to recognize a blind-side blitz. Linebacker Owen Heinecke came in untouched. He delivered a hit that jarred the ball loose. Defensive end R. Mason Thomas scooped it up and lumbered 71 yards for a touchdown. It was the longest fumble return in Oklahoma history. Tight end Miles Kitselman had a chance to tackle Thomas but whiffed badly. It was a play that defined Tennesseeās unraveling.
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Still, Aguilar achieved career milestones even in defeat. He became the fifth UT quarterback to record at least four 300-yard passing games in a season. Aguilar joined legends like Peyton Manning, Tyler Bray, Hendon Hooker, and Andy Kelly. He also moved into 11th on the Volsā single-season list for touchdown passes (21) and extended his FBS-best streak to 33 consecutive games with at least 200 passing yards.
Those achievements, however, will ring hollow. For all the yardage and records, the costly turnovers ultimately defined his performance. Aguilarās leadership has carried the Vols for much of the year. However, Saturday was a sobering reminder that one or two mistakes against a quality opponent can undo everything else.
Offensive line collapses when it mattered most
If Aguilarās turnovers told part of the story, Tennesseeās offensive line failures told the rest. On the pivotal fumble return, freshman right tackle David Sanders appeared confused about his assignment. He hesitated, allowing Heinecke a free run at the quarterback. The Sooners didnāt just capitalize. They feasted.
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Oklahoma footballās front seven applied consistent pressure all night. They sacked Aguilar four times and forced him into hurried throws on at least a dozen plays. Tennesseeās once-efficient pass protection broke down repeatedly in the second half. Oklahoma effectively disguised blitzes that Sanders and fellow lineman Dayne Davis failed to pick up.
The run game offered no reprieve. The Vols averaged just 1.8 yards per carry, and DeSean Bishop never found room to operate against an aggressive Oklahoma defensive front. The inability to protect the quarterback or establish the run made them one-dimensional and predictable.
Failure to capitalize on golden opportunities
Tennessee football didnāt lose because it lacked talent. The Vols lost because they failed to finish drives. Despite outgaining Oklahoma by over 100 total yards and benefiting from multiple Sooner penalties, the Vols consistently came up short when it mattered most.
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In the fourth quarter alone, Tennessee reached Oklahoma territory three separate times. However, they managed just 10 points. A missed 39-yard field goal by kicker Charles Campbell early in the game and red-zone inefficiency throughout proved costly. Twice, the Vols settled for short field goals when touchdowns could have buried the Sooners. Instead, those empty possessions left the door open.
Meanwhile, Oklahomaās Tate Sandell provided a masterclass in clutch kicking. His four field goals gave the Sooners points on drives that stalled. His performance kept the pressure squarely on Tennessee.
Compounding the problem, the Volsā special teams couldnāt flip the field. Their coverage units allowed consistent returns. A muffed punt also nearly turned into another turnover. Small mistakes added up to a big letdown.
The Heupel factor: frustration and familiar flaws
Saul Young/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
For coach Heupel, this loss will sting deeper than most. Facing his alma mater, Heupelās team mirrored the very inconsistencies that plagued his early coaching career. They were explosive but erratic, aggressive but undisciplined.
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His offensive system continues to produce yards in bunches. However, without cleaner execution and sharper adjustments, those numbers mean little against elite competition. The sideline body language told the story. Fans saw frustration from players and visible tension between coaches.
The Volsā playoff hopes are effectively gone, but the season isnāt. Saturday nightās loss to Oklahoma was more than just a setback. It was a mirror held up to Tennessee football, which reflected brilliance undone by its own mistakes.
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