Tennessee and Illinois set for
Music City Bowl with each team missing starters
[December 30, 2025]
By TERESA M. WALKER
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Playing the Music City Bowl isn't exactly
what the Tennessee Volunteers once targeted in a season that
featured four losses to teams inside the top 15 of the final College
Football Playoff rankings.
“There has been some disappointment, obviously, but it’s a group
that continued to compete and get better,” coach Josh Heupel said.
“We’re not where we want to be, that’s not the standard at
Tennessee. It is about going and chasing and winning championships.”
That work already has started with Tennessee (8-4) playing Illinois
(8-4) on Tuesday at the bowl sponsored by Liberty Mutual.
Preparing for bowls still means more practice time for younger
players, with NFL draft opt-outs or transfer portal departures
presenting more opportunities in the bowl itself. Illinois coach
Bret Bielema said bowls still create great memories for players and
their families even in this changing landscape.

Tennessee has a chance to finish with nine wins for a fourth
consecutive season, which would be the Vols’ longest such stretch
since five straight between 1995-99. Illinois can notch its first
back-to-back nine-win seasons for the first time in program history.
“The opportunity to get better in this postseason play is really,
really huge,” Bielema said.
The missing
Tennessee will be without four defensive starters and the SEC's
leading receiver, with the five declaring for the NFL draft. Chris
Brazzell II led the SEC with 1,017 yards receiving and nine TDs.
Cornerback Jermod McCoy, a preseason AP All-American, didn't play
this season while recovering from an ACL injury. Cornerback Colton
Hood, edge rusher Joshua Josephs and linebacker Arion Carter are the
others sitting out while looking toward the draft.
“Planned on those guys making that announcement,” Heupel said. "We
feel good about where we’re at, guys that are here are ready to go
play.”
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Illinois will be without a trio of starters.
Outside linebacker Gabe Jacas, the Big Ten Conference sack leader
with 11, and left tackle J.C. Davis are preparing for the NFL draft.
Defensive back Matthew Bailey is recovering from surgery while
checking his own draft prospects.
Offensive firepower
The Vols rank fourth nationally and second in the Southeastern
Conference averaging 482 yards a game. They topped 400 yards in
every game except the regular-season finale loss to Vanderbilt.
Tennessee leads the SEC and ranks sixth nationally scoring 40.8
points a game. It scored at least 40 in seven games.
Joey Aguilar, who transferred to Tennessee late last spring, is the
Football Bowl Subdivision's active career leader averaging 275.8
yards passing and 290.8 total yards of offense per game.
Fighting Illini firsts
This not only is Illinois' first time in the Music City Bowl, the
Fighting Illini never have played Tennessee before, either. Bielema
has Illinois in consecutive bowl games for the first time since
2010-11, and a win would make him the program's first coach to win a
bowl in back-to-back seasons.
A victory also would give Illinois its most wins over a two-year
period at 19. The Fighting Illini finished the regular season by
winning three of their last four.
Home away from home
This is the sixth straight year Tennessee will play at least once in
Nashville, and the Volunteers are 6-2 all-time at Nissan Stadium.
This will be Heupel's third game at the home of the NFL's Tennessee
Titans. This is Tennessee's fourth Music City Bowl berth and first
since 2021.
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