From Friday-night recruit to Saturday college star to Sunday pro — where Tennessee’s football talent actually comes from, and where the money shows up along the way.
Over 2015–25, 1,131 Tennessee players earned a 247Sports ranking — only 5 were five-stars. Trace them forward to college and the NFL and a pattern emerges: on-field winning barely tracks school wealth (r=0.24, from the affluence report), but recruiting rankings track it noticeably harder (r=0.33). The stars cluster where the money is; the wins don’t.
| # | School | Legend score | Top-100 | NFL | Headliner |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Howard Hustlin' Tigers | 41.6 | 1 | 2 | Reggie White #6 all-time |
| 2 | Baylor Red Raiders | 20.6 | 1 | 10 | John Hannah #64 all-time |
| 3 | Melrose Golden Wildcats | 16.9 | — | 17 | Tony Pollard #1688 all-time |
| 4 | Brentwood Academy Eagles | 16.7 | — | 14 | Jalen Ramsey #430 all-time |
| 5 | Hollow Rock Bruceton Central Tigers | 14.0 | 1 | 1 | Patrick Willis #51 all-time |
| 6 | Knoxville Central Bobcats | 11.3 | — | 9 | Tim Irwin #2486 all-time |
| 7 | Montgomery Bell Academy Big Red | 10.2 | — | 8 | Billy Wade #461 all-time |
| 8 | Jackson Central Merry Cougars | 9.3 | — | 3 | Too Tall Jones #515 all-time |
| 9 | Lester | 8.5 | — | 2 | Claude Humphrey #204 all-time |
| 10 | Hamilton Wildcats | 8.3 | — | 11 | Keith Simpson #5243 all-time |
| 11 | Dobyns Bennett Indians | 8.3 | — | 9 | Gerald Sensabaugh #6212 all-time |
| 12 | Oak Ridge Wildcats | 7.9 | — | 8 | Tee Higgins #3989 all-time |
| 13 | Austin East Roadrunners | 7.7 | — | 8 | Raleigh McKenzie #2767 all-time |
| 14 | Memphis South Side Scrappers | 7.2 | — | 9 | Terdell Middleton #4408 all-time |
| 15 | Maplewood Panthers | 6.7 | — | 6 | E.J. Junior #1415 all-time |
One school towers over the rest: Howard in Chattanooga, on the strength of Reggie White — the 6th-greatest pro in the dataset. Baylor (John Hannah), Melrose (a whole Memphis pipeline), and Bruceton’s Central (Patrick Willis) follow. Producing one true legend outweighs a roster of role players.
| # | School | Points | Recruits | 5★/4★ | Avg | Top recruit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brentwood Academy Eagles D-II | 74 | 49 | 0/6 | 82.1 | Ryan Johnson 91 → Tennessee |
| 2 | Oakland Patriots D-I | 56 | 32 | 1/6 | 83.8 | JaCoby Stevens 98 → LSU |
| 3 | Ensworth Tigers D-II | 53 | 29 | 0/9 | 84.6 | Key Lawrence 95 → Tennessee |
| 4 | Baylor Red Raiders D-II | 46 | 28 | 0/4 | 84.5 | Shekai Mills-Knight 93 → Ole Miss |
| 5 | Whitehaven Tigers D-I | 44 | 32 | 0/2 | 82.0 | Aubrey Miller 92 → Missouri |
| 6 | Lipscomb Academy Mustangs D-I | 42 | 23 | 0/6 | 85.8 | Rutger Reitmaier 93 → Oregon |
| 7 | Pearl Cohn Firebirds D-I | 41 | 27 | 0/3 | 83.6 | Barion Brown 96 → Kentucky |
| 8 | Ravenwood Raptors D-I | 38 | 22 | 0/5 | 84.6 | Van Jefferson 95 → Ole Miss |
| 9 | Christ Presbyterian Academy Lions D-I | 36 | 25 | 0/2 | 82.9 | Ondre Evans 95 → Georgia |
| 10 | Mccallie Blue Tornado D-II | 30 | 20 | 0/2 | 83.3 | Jay Hardy 95 → Auburn |
| 11 | Blackman Blaze D-I | 28 | 19 | 0/2 | 83.5 | Jauan Jennings 96 → Tennessee |
| 12 | Knoxville Catholic Fighting Irish D-I | 28 | 17 | 0/4 | 83.2 | Cade Mays 96 → Georgia |
| 13 | Alcoa Tornadoes D-I | 26 | 19 | 0/0 | 82.1 | Eli Owens 88 → Michigan |
| 14 | Montgomery Bell Academy Big Red D-II | 26 | 17 | 0/3 | 81.4 | Ty Chandler 95 → Tennessee |
| 15 | Hillsboro Burros D-I | 24 | 15 | 1/0 | 84.1 | Kyle Phillips 98 → Tennessee |
| 16 | Maryville Red Rebels D-I | 24 | 19 | 0/0 | 80.6 | Dylan Jackson 86 → Stanford |
| 17 | Independence Eagles D-I | 24 | 16 | 0/2 | 82.2 | Nate Johnson 92 → Michigan |
| 18 | Memphis University School Owls D-II | 22 | 14 | 0/2 | 84.5 | Drew Richmond 95 → Tennessee |
Brentwood Academy leads the state in raw recruiting output — a private school in Williamson County — followed by Oakland, Ensworth, and Baylor. The blue-chip map leans private and suburban in a way the win-rate map does not.
Tennessee keeps the most of its own — 84 ranked recruits to UT — but the in-state mid-majors (Memphis, MTSU, Austin Peay) and Vanderbilt take a huge share. The SEC pull is real, but most ranked TN players stay in the region.
This is the through-line of the whole football series. Winning on the field barely correlates with how wealthy a school is. Recruiting rankings correlate more. Stars are awarded partly on exposure, camps, and competition — things money buys — so the recruiting board tilts toward affluence in a way the scoreboard never has.
And the funnel mostly holds together: recruiting points track on-field ELO at r=0.52 and all-time NFL production at r=0.40. Good programs recruit well and send players up — but the recruiting layer is the one where a school’s zip code leaves the clearest fingerprint.