
Fran Brown knows what to expect from Tennessee. He’s seen the program multiple times as a member of Georgia’s coaching staff before joining the Orange.
“They gonna go fast,” said Brown.
For Brown, it’s different preparing for the Volunteers now. At Georgia, he only had to focus on the game from a defensive backs perspective. As the head coach, Brown now watches the complete games all the time. He does this to prepare for every scenario.
However, the opponent is still very similar. Syracuse opens up
the 2025 college football season in unique fashion. The Orange and Volunteers will meet in Atlanta for the Aflac Kickoff Game. Brown was clearly excited to go up against one of the “Blue Bloods” of college football, as he said during his weekly press conference prior to the game.
“I’ve looked up to this team for a long time,” said Brown.
Brown has known about the quality of the Tennessee football program since his younger days. One of his cousins is Rashad Baker, a four-year starter at safety for the Volunteers from 2000-2003. Because of this, Brown knows what Tennessee’s mindset is when the Volunteers hit the field.
“Tennessee runs what they run,” said Brown. “They’re not worrying about you’re in. You better worry about what they’re in.”

On Syracuse’s side, the challenge is preparing the team for the year.
With many key seniors graduating from last season’s 10-3 team, new and young faces have to start stepping up to fill those voids. The key to getting not just those players, but all of the players ready for the season is coaching and practice, according to Brown. Emphasizing the importance and meaning of each situation is what he says will help prepare the team for game week.
“If they understand and they know that, when the game comes, it becomes trained behavior.” said Brown.
That include the new transfers that joined the program this year. Many players transferred to Syracuse, both in the winter and spring transfer windows. Even throughout training camp, Brown hasn’t had time for players to fall behind. He needs the new players to figure how his culture and coaching style quickly.
“The faster that you make sure guys understand and know that, the quicker they get the opportunity to go be the best versions of themselves,” said Brown.
And Brown knows that his team doesn’t necessarily have the playing time that other programs this season. But he knows that he has a talented team. But the key thing that Syracuse needs to get better at is pretty clear.
“We just gotta keep getting tougher,” said Brown.