How to Watch Tennessee vs. Alabama: Live Stream, TV Channel, Time

How to watch Tennessee vs. Alabama.  
How to Watch Tennessee vs. Alabama: Live Stream, TV Channel, Time
How to Watch Tennessee vs. Alabama: Live Stream, TV Channel, Time /

No. 1 Alabama hosts Tennessee on Saturday for the 100th meeting between the two schools. 

Undefeated Alabama (7-0) is coming off a 41-9 win against Arkansas.

Tennessee (3-3) is coming off a 15-9 loss to South Carolina. Redshirt freshman quarterback Jarrett Guarantano went 11-for-18 for 133 yards in the loss. He had 44 yards on the ground on 10 attempts. 

See how to watch Saturday's game below:

SI's 2017 Midseason All-America Team

QB: Baker Mayfield, Oklahoma

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AP/Shutterstock

The national leader in completion percentage (72.7%) and passing efficiency (207.3), Mayfield seems destined for a return trip to New York City as a Heisman Trophy finalist. The Sooners are still in the mix for a Big 12 title, but their suspect defense might force Mayfield to throw them back into playoff contention.

RB: Bryce Love, Stanford*

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Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Love has been the most unstoppable force in college football through seven weeks, averaging 198.1 rushing yards per game and outgaining the nation’s No. 2 rusher (Hawaii’s Diocemy Saint Juste) by nearly 300 yards.

RB: Saquon Barkley, Penn State

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Brett Carlsen/Getty Images

Everyone knows the Nittany Lions are getting Barkley the ball, and many of them still can’t contain him for 60 minutes. He’s averaging 32.3 yards per kick return, too (tied for fifth nationally), which helped him earn second-team midseason All-America honors as an all-purpose player.

WR: David Sills V, West Virginia

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Matthew Pearce/Icon Sportswire

You probably know all too well by now that Sills committed to play quarterback for Lane Kiffin and USC at age 13 before finding his calling out wide in Morgantown. Broadcasters have relayed that story during most of his 12 touchdown catches this season, three more than any other player in the country, and they should have plenty more opportunities to tell it.

WR: James Washington, Oklahoma State

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Brett Deering/Getty Images

It’s no small feat to be quarterback Mason Rudolph’s favorite target within a Cowboys offense loaded with super-talented skill players. With 882 yards and six touchdowns through six games, Washington is on the way to smashing his 2016 numbers.

TE: Mike Gesicki, Penn State

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AP/Shutterstock

Gesicki burst out of the gate with a pair of multi-touchdown games in blowout wins over Akron and Pittsburgh. His performance down the stretch of last season indicates he’ll be there when the Nittany Lions need him most as their Big Ten tests stiffen.

OT: Mike McGlinchey, Notre Dame

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Zach Bolinger/Icon Sportswire

Quietly, Irish running back Josh Adams has found his way into the nation’s top 10 leading rushers (while playing one fewer game than many of the names directly above him). McGlinchey and left guard Quenton Nelson (see below) have dominated their side of the line and led the way for Adams to wear defenses down.

G: Braden Smith, Auburn

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Butch Dill/AP

Smith’s raw strength at right guard sets the tone for an Auburn offense committed to running early and often—the Tigers have 19 rushing touchdowns and average 222.4 yards per game on the ground.

C: Bradley Bozeman, Alabama

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Daniel Dunn/Icon Sportswire

Bozeman has been a steady pivot man in his second year starting on a line that helped the Crimson Tide set a Nick Saban–era record in September with 496 rushing yards in a win over Vanderbilt.

G: Quenton Nelson, Notre Dame

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AP/Shutterstock

Nelson was a unanimous first-team selection in the preseason and has been as good as advertised as Notre Dame has jumped out to a 5–1 start.

OT: Orlando Brown, Oklahoma

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LM Otero/AP

Brown will play a vital role in keeping Mayfield clean down the stretch, protecting the Heisman candidate’s blind side and helping pave the way for breakout freshman running back Trey Sermon. He should be rewarded with a first-round pick next spring if he leaves Norman.

DL: Bradley Chubb, NC State*

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Keith Srakocic/AP

The Wolfpack’s ACC hopes rest on Chubb and the rest of their talented, tenacious defensive line. Chubb sits tied for sixth nationally with 6.5 sacks, and his 14 tackles for loss are second only to Northern Illinois’s Sutton Smith.

DL: Austin Bryant, Clemson

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Richard Shiro/AP

Bryant entered this season as something of a forgotten man along a defensive line that also includes Dexter Lawrence, Clelin Ferrell and Christian Wilkins. Five sacks, 11 tackles for loss and one acrobatic interception later, no one underestimates the havoc Bryant can wreak in the backfield anymore.

DL: Hercules Mata’afa, Washington State

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Robert Johnson/Icon Sportswire

Mata’afa’s 12 tackles for loss (the most in the Pac-12) are a big reason why the Cougars’ defense has turned a corner in its third year under coordinator Alex Grinch. Even in Washington State’s stunning blowout loss to Cal to drop from the ranks of the unbeaten, the redshirt junior finished with two sacks and was all over the field.

LB: Roquan Smith, Georgia

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Wade Payne/AP

The Bulldogs’ defense has been one of the breakout stories of the first half, giving up just 4.18 yards per play (seventh in the country) and elevating Georgia to playoff contention in Kirby Smart’s second season in charge. Smith is the heartbeat of that fearsome unit, with no fewer than six tackles in each game so far.

LB: Josey Jewell, Iowa

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Charlie Neibergall/AP

Jewell is a tackling machine at the center of Iowa’s stingy defense, with 70 total tackles through six games, plus a forced fumble and an interception.

LB: Devin Bush, Michigan

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Tony Gutierrez/AP

The Wolverines are once again on their way to finishing in the top five of several defensive metrics, and in his first year as a starter Bush has blossomed more than any other underclassman asked to take on more within a unit that lost a ton of talent. The sophomore has six tackles for loss, five sacks and six pass breakups through six games.

LB: Ogbonnia Okoronkwo, Oklahoma

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Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Okoronkwo has at least a half sack in every game this season (six in total) and has hit a different gear in the Sooners’ two highest-profile wins of the year against Ohio State and Texas.

CB: Carlton Davis, Auburn

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Butch Dill/AP

Davis had an up-and-down night in Auburn’s early-September loss to Clemson, making 11 tackles but allowing some critical completions. Since then, he has delivered time and again for the Tigers, who are allowing just 15 points per game, behind only Alabama and Georgia in the SEC.

CB: Jalen Davis, Utah State

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Dannie Walls/Icon Sportswire

Davis logged five interceptions in September alone, returning two of his three picks for touchdowns in the Aggies’ win over BYU. He has six additional pass breakups that put him among the top 15 in the nation in passes defended.

S: Minkah Fitzpatrick, Alabama

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Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Fitzpatrick has done a little bit of everything as the leader of the Crimson Tide defense: 32 tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss, four pass breakups, an interception, a fumble and even a blocked kick. He has passed second-team selection Derwin James as this season’s best hope for a Heisman winner on the defensive side of the ball.

S: DeShon Elliott, Texas

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Jordon Kelly/Icon Sportswire

Elliott became the first Longhorn with an interception in three straight games since Earl Thomas in 2009 when he posted five over a stretch that started with September’s double-overtime loss to USC. He’s a big-play threat on a defense that Texas needs to step up to keep pace in the Big 12.

K: Matt Gay, Utah

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Rick Bowmer/AP

Gay has 16 makes through six games, two more than the next-closest kicker, and he’s one of nine players with two 50-plus-yard field goals on the year.

P: Johnny Townsend, Florida

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John Raoux/AP

Townsend is the most reliable part of most Gators offensive possessions, averaging a career-best 48.5 yards per punt so far this year. He has a punt of at least 59 yards in all six games.

All-Purpose: Jaylen Samuels, NC State

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Ethan Hyman/The News & Observer via AP

You’ll notice that Samuels made SI’s second-team offense as a tight end, but his contributions to the Wolfpack’s unconventional offense can’t be described with just one position. The senior has 10 total touchdowns already (three receiving, seven rushing) and accounts for nearly a third of his team’s receptions so far.

Return Man: Dante Pettis, Washington

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Christopher Mast/Icon Sportswire

Opponents have figured out that Pettis needs to be avoided at all costs. He opened the season with a punt return touchdown in three straight games, bringing him into a tie with the all-time NCAA career record of eight.

Second-Team Offense

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Denis Poroy/AP; Sue Ogrocki/AP; AP/Shutterstock

QB: Luke Falk, Washington State; RB: Josh Adams, Notre Dame; RB: Rashaad Penny, San Diego State; WR: Cam Phillips, Virginia Tech; WR: Anthony Miller, Memphis; TE: Jaylen Samuels, NC State; OT: David Edwards, Wisconsin; OT: Mitch Hyatt, Clemson; G: Cody O’Connell, Washington State; G: Will Hernandez, UTEP; C: Frank Ragnow, Arkansas.

Second-Team Defense

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Don Juan Moore/Getty Images; Charlie Riedel/AP; AP/Shutterstock

DL: Nick Bosa, Ohio State; DL: Ed Oliver, Houston; DL: Da’Ron Payne, Alabama; LB: Dorian O’Daniel, Clemson; LB: Micah Kiser, Virginia; LB: Joe Dineen Jr., Kansas; LB: Josh Allen, Kentucky; CB: Levi Wallace, Alabama; CB: Josiah Scott, Michigan State; S: Derwin James, Florida State; S: Quin Blanding, Virginia.

Second-Team Specialists

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Rick Scuteri/AP; Joe Murphy/Getty Images; James Black/Icon SMI

K: Quinn Nordin, Michigan; P: Mitch Wishnowsky, Utah; All-Purpose: Saquon Barkley, Penn State; Return Man: Tony Pollard, Memphis.

How to Watch

Time: 3:30 p.m. EST

TV channel: CBS

Live stream: Watch online with Fubo TV. Sign up now for a free seven-day trial. 

Next Three Games

Tennessee: at Kentucky (10/28), vs. Southern Miss (11/04), at Missouri (11/11)

Alabama: vs. LSU (11/04), at. Mississippi State (11/11), vs. Mercer (11/18)


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