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Tennessee vs. Missouri score, takeaways: No. 5 Volunteers dominate second half in bounce-back win over Tigers

No. 5 Tennessee put the disappointment of its first loss behind it in emphatic fashion as the Volunteers cruised to a 66-24 win over Missouri at Neyland Stadium. The SEC East showdown carried major postseason implications for both teams, and while the Tigers pushed Tennessee at times in the game, they ultimately had no answer for the Vols' explosive offense.

Redshirt senior quarterback Hendon Hooker reignited his Heisman Trophy hopes with over 400 yards of total offense and four touchdowns as the Volunteers racked up a program-record 724 yards and set a school record for most points scored in an SEC game. When Missouri drew within 28-24 early in the third quarter, the Volunteers ticked off three straight touchdowns drives of 67 yards or longer to retake control of the game. Ultimately, they scored the game's final 38 points and didn't slow down even when backup quarterback Joe Milton entered late.

After finishing with just 289 total yards in a 27-13 loss at Georgia last week, Tennessee accumulated 365 yards in the first half alone. While Missouri quarterback Brady Cook gave the Volunteers defense fits with his scrambling ability at times, Tennessee came up with seven three-and-outs in the game as a sellout crowd offered support on the program's Senior Day.

With the win, Tennessee finishes the home portion of its schedule unbeaten for the first time since 2007 as the Volunteers hit the road for games against South Carolina and Vanderbilt to close the regular season. At 9-1, Tennessee has now matched its best season win total since that '07 season with at least three games still remaining.

College Football Playoff implications

With Georgia set to clinch the SEC East with a win in either of its next two games, Tennessee will likely need to earn a College Football Playoff berth as a one-loss squad that did not play in its conference championship game. That has only happened twice before in the eight years of the CFP's existence. But Saturday marked a start toward redemption for Tennessee after the disappointing showing against the Bulldogs knocked the Vols from the No. 1 spot. 

The Volunteers could not afford another slip up, and they probably need some style points to help their case. That might explain why second-year coach Josh Heupel kept airing it out with the game out of reach and Milton in the game. Things got chippy when Tennessee scored its final touchdown with just 36 seconds on the clock, but if the goal was to make a statement with a dominant victory, then the extra pair of touchdowns in the final minutes helped accomplish that goal.

Hooker's highlights

The Heisman Trophy race is still wide open, but Hooker needed a big game to revitalize his hopes after Georgia's defense stymied Tennessee's offense last week. The redshirt senior delivered through the air and on the ground to keep his name firmly in the race. He finished 25-of-35 passing for 355 yards with three touchdowns while also running for 54 yards and a score. 

Hooker has now thrown for 24 touchdowns and just two interceptions with another five scores on the ground. The Virginia Tech transfer positioned himself to surpass 3,000 yards passing for the season next week against South Carolina.

Running back depth

While Tennessee's aerial attack was on display with Bru McCoy and Jalin Hyatt each surpassing 100 yards receiving, its rushing game was on point against Missouri as well. Hooker, Jabari Small, Jaylen Wright and Dylan Sampson each rattled off runs of 19 yards or more as the Vols averaged 7.1 yards per rush attempt. Sampson's performance was particularly noteworthy as the true freshman ran eight times for 98 yards and a score.

The workload marked his largest in a conference game this season, and the former three-star prospect made a compelling case to be a larger part of the running back rotation moving forward. With Tennessee leading just 35-24 in the third quarter, Sampson rattled off runs of 42 yards and 15 yards on consecutive plays to set up a 2-yard touchdown strike from Hooker to Princeton Fant.

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Emphatic win

Final: Tennessee 66, Missouri 24

Much was made about Missouri's improved defense entering this game after Tennessee throttled Missouri 62-24 last season with 683 yards. Well, the Volunteers have surpassed that yardage total here today while making an impressive statement about their worthiness for College Football Playoff inclusion. If style points were the goal, Tennessee succeeded today with more than 700 yards, and Hendon Hooker may just have resurrected his Heisman Trophy hopes as well.

 
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Back to action

Tennessee racked up 365 yards and 18 first downs in the first half, but the Volunteers are not out of the woods yet. Those Hyatt drops at the end of the half showed how quickly this attack can grind to a halt when something goes wrong. Mizzou has some belief and is one big defensive play away from this getting real interesting as the third quarter is set to get underway.

 
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@MizzouFootball via Twitter
 
@MizzouFootball via Twitter
 

Missouri hanging around

It looked like Tennessee was going to add to a 28-14 lead before half, but the Hyatt drops and some more shifty running from Brady Cook allowed the Tigers to enter the break with momentum. Harrison Mevis hit a 32-yarder on the final play of the half to make it 28-17. Tennessee's offense looked great for most of the half, but the Vols will be kicking themselves to be up only 11. Tennessee football to begin the third quarter.

 
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Uncharacteristic mistakes

Jaylin Hyatt dropped a pair of would-be first down passes over the middle to bring Tennessee's offensive momentum to a halt. Vols went for it on fourth down and failed, turning the football over to Missouri on downs. Rough sequence for the Vols to cap an otherwise explosive first half.

 
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@Vol_Football via Twitter
 

Danger zone

Cook had Tyler Stepens on third down over the middle, but he dropped the pass. Tigers go conservative and punt on fourth-and-1 from their own 41. Tennessee takes over with Missouri now entering the danger zone. Vols up 14 already and get the football to start the third quarter. Big series for Missouri's defense.

 
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Using the run

Jabari Small and Jaylen Wright alternate big runs on back-to-back plays as the Vols surge into the red zone. Hendon Hooker took it from there with a read-option TD run around the right side. He is reigniting the Heisman campaign here in the fist half with a nearly flawless performance thus far. Vols are making a statement offensively. 

 
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Momentum swing!

Tennessee was on the verge of getting Missouri off the field, but Drinkwitz rolled the dice on fourth-and-1 and it pays off in a big way. Cook finds Tauskie Dove for a contested deep ball and he takes it the distance as the corner and safety collide. 21-14 as the Tigers keep hanging around here in the first half.

 
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Amazing catch

Princeton Fant's first touchdown reception of the season is an absolute beauty in the back of the end zone as he elevates over the coverage to bring it in and hang on as he hit the turf. Six Vols have caught passes already as Hooker spreads it around. Both tight ends have gotten involved as the Vols already have 243 yards of total offense.

 
@Vol_Football via Twitter
 
@Vol_Football via Twitter
 
@Vol_Football via Twitter
 

Three-and-out

Three of Missouri's four possessions have now resulted in three-and-outs. Not a recipe for success in this matchup with the Volunteers able to score so quickly. Vols get it back at their own 28 up 14-7. Tigers have run the football effectively but aren't biting off much through the air.

 
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Good start for Vols

Explosive start to the second quarter for Tennessee as Hooker hits Hyatt on a deep slant on fourth down to open the quarter. Great catch. Then Jaylen Wright punches it in to put Tennessee ahead 14-7. Hooker is already 10 of 15 for 148 yards. Vols have moved the football well on all three possessions, and Heupel's fourth-down gambles have evened out.

 
@Vol_Football via Twitter
 
@MizzouFootball via Twitter
 

Good one early

Missouri took an early punch and looks like it is poised to be competitive here. Tennessee was lucky not to have a Hooker deep ball intercepted on this series. Vols facing their second big fourth down play when the second quarter begins. Vols will be sick over the fourth down penalty that turned a Missouri FG into a TD if this one ends up coming down to the wire.

 
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Missouri responds

Tie game! Five-star freshman Luther Burden lands a 4-yard receiving touchdown from Brady Cook. Really nice drive from Missouri sparked by a couple of Cook QB keeper runs that went for first downs. Came down to a fourth-and-1 in the red zone. Missouri kicked the field goal, but a penalty on Tennessee gifted Missouri a first down and the Tigers scored on the next play.

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