
The glory days of the Tennessee Volunteers baseball under Tony Vitello are no longer guaranteed, and that reality has become clear entering Tuesday evening’s SEC Tournament matchup against South Carolina Gamecocks baseball in Hoover.
No. 10 seed Tennessee faces No. 15 seed South Carolina in a much earlier appearance than Volunteers fans became accustomed to during the Vitello era. For years, Tennessee walked into Hoover as a heavyweight and national title threat. This season feels different.
First-year coach Josh Elander deserves credit for keeping the program firmly in the NCAA Tournament picture after taking over for one of the sport’s biggest personalities mid offseason. Tennessee likely has done enough to earn a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament field.
Still, this has not been a dominant Tennessee club.
The Vols never consistently looked like a national championship contender, and they certainly did not resemble the overwhelming teams that helped define the Vitello era in Knoxville. The swagger, intimidation and week-to-week dominance simply have not been there at the same level.
That does not make Elander’s debut season a failure. Far from it.
Replacing a coach who transformed Tennessee into a national power was never going to be seamless. Elander kept the program competitive in the nation’s toughest conference and avoided a major drop-off during a difficult transition year.
But Tennessee fans may need to adjust expectations moving forward. The magic of the Vitello era is gone for now, and sustaining that level of dominance year after year is far easier said than done. Tuesday night in Hoover feels like proof of that reality.
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