KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT) -- University of Tennessee Vols head football coach Phillip Fulmer officially announced Monday that he will step down, and won't return to coach the Volunteers next season.
"This is not an easy day for me or my family. This is not a day that I sought or accepted easily," Fulmer said.
Fulmer appeared to be fighting back tears as he made the announcement with a shaky voice.
"Our Tennessee family is united in its goals, but divided in the right right path to get there. I love Tennessee too much to her stay divided." Fulmer said, "That is why I accept the university's decision that this will be my last season as Tennessee's head football coach."
He said, " I am more than confident that our staff and players would turn this trend around. Our history proves it; our recruiting this year proves it."
Fulmer says the university has asked him to remain with the program in some capacity.
"I love this university, and I hope everyone knows that beyond a shadow of a doubt," Fulmer said.
UT Men's Athletic Director Mike Hamilton said Monday that the Kentucky game will be "Philip Fulmer Day" in recognition of Fulmer's dedication to the University of Tennessee.
"Over the last several weeks, Coach Fulmer and I have discussed in detail the direction of Tennessee football, the things that were working and issues that needed to be addressed." Hamilton said, "Through this process, the items that have been paramount were providing our young men with the greatest opportunity for success, protecting our winning tradition, and recognizing our fans' roles in our ability to achieve our goals."
Fulmer led the Vols to their sixth loss of the season Saturday against the South Carolina Gamecocks coached by former Florida Gator coach Steve Spurrier.
"Our discussions leading to Coach Fulmer's announcement today did not come without great consternation or thought, but it's in my opinion the best solution, given our current circumstances," Hamilton said.
Fulmer said he reached an agreement with school officials, deciding that it was in everyone's best interests that he not return to coach the Vols next season.
"I have nothing to say about today's announcement. I would like to say that I am a Tennessee Vol, and I will always be a Tennessee Vol." Former Vol head coach Johnny Majors said, "And I have nothing but the best of wishes and good fortune for the entire University of Tennessee, and particularly to their great football program with such great tradition."
Majors said, "And I think that the new football coach, whoever that might be chosen by the University administration, will find the University of Tennessee fans to be some of the greatest fans in America, as I have always found them to be as both a player and a coach."
Majors wouldn't comment further, saying "My tale is told."
"You talk about giving your all for Tennessee," Coach Bruce Pearl told Volunteer TV's Rick Russo before a UT Vol exhibition game at Thompson-Boling Arena, "I don't know if anybody's done it any better or any longer than Coach Fulmer.
"He's been an unbelievable friend and advisor. He loves Tennessee, he really does," Pearl said. "It's a sad day, its a sad day for all of us."
Fulmer could receive up to $6 million from the university in order to buy-out his contract.
The school may also have to spend several million dollars to buy-out Fulmer's assistant coaches.
Former Tennessee defensive end Xavier Mitchell sent a letter to the Sports Overtime team. Here's what he said:
"I cannot speak for all of the players who have worn the uniform, but I can say for most that the treatment of Coach Fulmer by the University is an outrage and embarrassment to the University of Tennessee who has took more pride in their tradition than anything else. The forced resignation is a spit in the face of Coach Fulmer, Doug Dickey, General Neyland and other great names that represent the great history of the University of Tennessee. It saddens me to see a man with great values such as Phillip Fulmer demeaned in his departure as head coach of this University. We all know what his accomplishments were and what they are to this point, and by no means do I say settle for a national and conference title that was won 10 years ago, but you’re telling me after a combined service of 34 years to this University he’s not allowed to have a down season or two? The man knows how to win, and does in a fashion that not many people can. He has not only been winning ball games for years, but being fathers to some fatherless or some kind of mentor in his tenure here as a Tennessee Volunteer. I would be naïve to say that he was liked by everyone that has stepped foot on this campus, but he is respected, hard working, fair, reliable, a terrific leader, a motivator and a teacher. I could go on. I will not sit here and say that I have agreed with all the decisions he has made over my career there, but who does. If he were a man that was liked by everyone he wouldn’t be head coach of any football team for 17 years. I love to win and I hate losing. I’m one of the most competitive people you will meet, but I guarantee that Coach Fulmer and his staff are as well, and they have more invested in it than any fan, booster, or athletic director. We are the ones as players running at 6am, lifting, meeting, practicing, going to class, traveling, playing all while trying to have some normalcy in our lives with our friends and families. The coaches are up all night watching film, game planning, away from their families and on the road recruiting trying to get a parent to trust that they have their baby boy’s best interest at heart. Coach Fulmer lived both lives along with some of those coaches on that staff. So who are those people that question the motives of how Coach Fulmer is running this program? Those are the same people who go to work and go home at night to their family after a hard day’s work. Well, I know for a fact that Coach Fulmer’s work does not end when the sun sets. There is no time clock for him. I know he has slept in his office before and I’m sure still does at some point. This isn’t a gimmick about another former player writing about his former coach. This is real life and the reality of it all is that the way this was handled was wrong. We live in a new era now where it’s all about putting fans in the stands and about the money being brought in. Boosters want to see their money put to work. I’m here to tell you that boosters have been giving their money to this university for the past 16 years. Nothing has changed. Like I said from the beginning the man knows how to win, along with the essentials of running a good program and mentoring to over a hundred boys that will leave there as prosperous young men. This isn’t some beginner coach who was given 4 years to win or he’s out, but yet we send him off as so and cover it up by saying we want him around the university. That is a cop out. Coach Brooks used to say when we would come to practice looking sloppy or we’d do something wrong that it ran down hill. So that raises my question of who was the pressure really on? If I’d given this university 34 years of my life and had a record most coaches dream of having I don’t know if I would. That’s a trust I would feel I’ve built with my University and Athletic Director. Where was that trust and loyalty? Where was the trust that I can overcome this because I’ve been doing it for almost 2 decades? I don’t think for one moment Coach Fulmer doubted that he could overcome this bump in the road whether it had been this year or next year. I don’t believe the pressure was on him at all. It started higher than that and that’s a shame to have a person that sat next to him for 16 years through the good, the bad, and the ugly sell him out to keep his own job. Coach Fulmer and his staff believed in themselves because they’ve done it for years. Why couldn’t our athletic director or president or any other of the higher ups do the same? I’m not here to protest the forced resignation of Coach Fulmer even though I don’t agree. I’m here to say that the way he was forced to leave this program was wrong. Not only wrong, but cowardly because it was obvious that Coach Fulmer didn’t quit. My heart goes out to Coach Fulmer and his family and to the staff and their families."
Sincerely Former UT football player,
Xavier Mitchell
According to their contracts:
Defensive Coordinator John Chavis - $687,500
Offensive Coordinator Dave Clawson - $687,500
Assistant Athletic Director of Football Operations Bruce Warwick -$300,000
Offensive Line Coach Greg Adkins - $300,000
Defensive Ends Coach - $300,000
Defensive Line Coach Dan Brooks - $285,000
Defensive Backs Coach Larry Slade - $262,000
Running Backs Coach Stan Drayton - $255,000
Tight Ends Coach Jason Michael - $255,000
Wide Receives Coach Latrell Scott - $225,000
In total, the University of Tennessee could spend nearly $9.6 million dollars to buy-out the contracts of Fulmer and his coaching staff.
Fulmer has a 150-51 record as the head coach of the Tennessee Vols.
He's won one national championship (1998), and has made 15 bowl appearances.
For a complete look at Fulmer's career, CLICK HERE.
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