Vols believe depth should help them avoid another late fade

Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes talks with forward Armani Moore (4) and guard Kevin Punter (0) during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against South Carolina Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016, in Knoxville, Tenn. Tennessee won 78-69. (AP Photo/Wade Payne)
Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes talks with forward Armani Moore (4) and guard Kevin Punter (0) during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against South Carolina Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016, in Knoxville, Tenn. Tennessee won 78-69. (AP Photo/Wade Payne)

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Tennessee believes it finally has enough depth to avoid the February fades that have knocked the Volunteers out of postseason contention the last two years.

Depth issues have been contributed to Tennessee not making NCAA Tournament or NIT appearances in its first two seasons under Rick Barnes, whose teams had earned 19 NCAA bids in the 20 seasons before his arrival in Knoxville. Tennessee finished 16-16 last year and hasn't posted a winning season since reaching the Sweet 16 in 2014.

Two years ago, the Vols lost leading scorer Kevin Punter Jr. to a foot injury and dropped seven of their last 10 games . Last season, they lost six of their last eight games when knee problems limited the effectiveness of top scorer Robert Hubbs III.

"Our last two years have proved we haven't had enough," Barnes said Thursday at Tennessee's preseason Media Day event. "When Robert got hurt, we didn't have anyone that could step up there. Two years ago when Kevin went down, we didn't have enough. We've got enough now."

Barnes addressed the depth issues by adding plenty of newcomers with varying levels of experience.

Howard graduate transfer James Daniel III averaged 27.1 points per game in 2015-16 to lead all Division I scorers before an ankle injury limited him to two games last year. Vincennes (Indiana) transfer Chris Darrington was Tennessee's top scorer during the Vols' three-game European exhibition tour this summer. Freshman forward Derrick Walker has earned raves from teammates and coaches.

Daniel and Darrington should add scoring punch and experience to a backcourt that lacked both traits last season. The frontcourt should get a boost from the freshman trio of Walker, Zach Kent and Yves Pons. Tennessee also has redshirt freshman forward Jalen Johnson preparing for his college debut and forward John Fulkerson returning from a dislocated right elbow and fractured right wrist that caused him to play just 10 games last year.

The Vols are hoping those additions assure they aren't staying home in March for a third straight year.

"Being here in spring last year hurt," said sophomore forward Grant Williams, the Vols' top returning scorer . "It was not fun. Nobody wants to do it. I don't want to do it again. Nobody here does. That's our goal, to be there playing in the tournament and ready for whoever comes at us."

Even with all those newcomers, the Vols actually have more experience than last season, when their roster included seven true freshmen and one redshirt freshmen.

This marks Daniel's first season with Tennessee, but he's a fifth-year senior. Darrington arrived on campus as a junior. Tennessee returns five guys who played at least 19 minutes per game last season in Williams, junior forward Admiral Schofield and sophomore guards Jordan Bowden, Jordan Bone and Lamonte' Turner.

"We're not that young anymore," Schofield said. "We've got a lot of guys with experience, a lot of guys who've played. We can't use that age excuse anymore."

Tennessee still has plenty of concerns as it prepares for its Nov. 10 season opener with Presbyterian.

Daniel says he's at "about 80 percent" as he recovers from his ankle injury. Barnes acknowledged Fulkerson could need some time to work his way into peak form after missing so much time last season. Johnson is recovering from offseason surgery, and the timetable for his potential return remains uncertain.

But the Vols now believe they have enough reinforcements to withstand those types of issues.

"There's no question that we've got more depth this year than we've ever had," Barnes said.

They have newcomers ready to make immediate impacts and returning players eager to show how much they've learned. They're hoping that combination prevents them from cooling off down the stretch again.

"Last year as a group, we were just kind of immature," Bone said. "We just didn't get the job done. I think this year, just having that knowledge and having last season in the back of our head is really going to motivate us not to have that feeling again."

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