“On the back end of the season, you want guys to make the right choice for them, their families, their future, so you have conversations with them,” Heupel said Monday. “You also try to help provide information to them and make sure that they’re putting themselves in the right position for their future on the field and off.”

He added: “At the end of the day, guys have got to be ready to make the decision — either way, right?” he said. “And if you try to rush or pressure them into that, they end up in a situation where they maybe make the wrong one. At the end of the day, you’ve got to be where your feet are, and I’m talking about for the next calendar year. So you provide information to them. Some of it takes longer as you’re trying to gather NFL information for those guys, too.”

The Vols have 31 scholarship seniors or redshirt seniors on the roster. (There are seven non-scholarship seniors as well.) Tennessee is yet to finalize the full list of who is and who isn’t going to walk on Senior Day, but it’s important to remember that for those that aren’t super seniors – there are 17 of them – that whether they go through Senior Day or not isn’t necessarily an indicator of their future plans.

Ahead of the regular-season finale, it’s a good time to look at Tennessee’s senior class in its entirety – who can’t return (the so-called super seniors using their Covid-exempt season in 2023), who has the option to return and what some of those who can return might decide about next season.