An elite signee Tennessee football can poach from Utah with Kyle Whittingham retiring

With Kyle Whittingham retiring, Tennessee football has a chance to poach an elite Utah signee.
Tennessee coach Josh Heupel during a NCAA football game between Tennessee and UAB at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, Tenn., September 20, 2025.
Tennessee coach Josh Heupel during a NCAA football game between Tennessee and UAB at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, Tenn., September 20, 2025. | Angelina Alcantar/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Major breaking news in college football broke on Friday afternoon, as longtime Utah head coach Kyle Whittingham announced he will retire after the Las Vegas Bowl.

This is significant news for Tennessee football since it could potentially benefit greatly from this development. The Vols already signed a top-10 class for 2026, and it has the chance to get even better with Whittingham gone.

Salesi Moa, a longtime Tennessee commit, flipped to Utah on signing day, but he now could potentially want out of his letter of intent. This would be a major flip for the Vols.

Can Tennessee flip Salesi Moa back to the Vols?

When a coach is fired or retires players are eligible to opt out of their letter of intent without penalty. While there has been no indication that Moa will opt out of his yet, you would have to think it's on his mind.

Moa is an elite athlete who would further solidify the Vols' wide receiver room. The 247Sports composite has him ranked as the 45th player in the country and the top player in Utah.

Adding Moa would also be a major help, given that it's looking more and more likely that Legend Bey won't make it to Knoxville. Kelsey Pope, the Tennessee wide receivers coach, just received an extension this afternoon, so if Moa came to Knoxville, there would be some stability here.

Furthermore, two other teams that made a hard push for Moa were Michigan and Michigan State. Michigan has fired Sherrone Moore for cause, and Jonathan Smith was fired from Michigan State after a 4-8 campaign. I can't imagine Moa is considering Michigan due to the fact that they have no head coach. Michigan State is interesting because his brother plays for the Spartans, but Pat Fitzgerald still hasn't hired an offensive coordinator, so that seems unlikely.

Tennessee could be a major winner here because Josh Heupel isn't going anywhere anytime soon. Moa still might decide that staying home is the best option for him, but you can't deny that Tennessee develops wideouts at a level very few programs can match.

This might turn out to be nothing, but Vols fans should be cautiously optimistic about the chance of Moa joining the 2026 class.

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