Football

Nashville High School Football: 50 Questions Shape the 2026 Season

Examining transfers, coaching changes, and championship hopes as the new campaign approaches

A season poised for change

The 2026 Tennessee high school football season is slated to open on August 21, kicking off a schedule that will see 50 probing questions examined by The Tennessean as the state’s power programs jockey for position.

Transfer rules and eligibility

Among the storylines, the debut of the one‑time transfer rule era looms large, potentially reshaping rosters as athletes like Brentwood Academy’s Kenneth Simon II, who moved from Alabama, and Rockvale’s influx of power‑conference prospects seek eligibility.

Coaching carousels

Blackman will enter the year with a new head coach after losing key players from its 2025 6A semifinal run, while Lipscomb Academy welcomes back Trent Dilfer for his first season back in the program. At James Lawson, Montario Hardesty, a former Tennessee running back, takes the helm, and Hillsboro taps Jamaal Stewart, who previously turned East Nashville into a contender, to lead a new era.

Teams to watch

Oakland aims to achieve a second Class 6A three‑peat under Kevin Creasy, while Rockvale’s deep talent pool and Brentwood Academy’s roster featuring four‑star commits Kesean Bowman and Larry Sanders make them early favorites. Blackman, despite personnel losses, hopes to rebound, and Pearl‑Cohn and Springfield see an opening to challenge Alcoa’s 11‑year championship streak.

Championship outlook and venue plans

The prospect of moving the state championship games to Nashville’s new enclosed Nissan Stadium in 2027 adds a fresh backdrop to the competition, as does the ambition of teams like Friendship Christian to unseat Nashville Christian in the Division II‑A Middle Region.

Standout performers such as quarterback Andre Adams, who posted 3,421 passing yards and 48 touchdowns last season, and running back Larry Sanders, who rushed for 1,833 yards and 31 scores in 2025, headline a list of players who could shape the outcomes. Additional names like Miles Reding, Jacob Vaughn, and Xavier Murray add to the season’s narrative.

The Tennessean’s preview also notes the return of veteran coaches, the emergence of new leaders, and the ongoing quest for postseason success across the region, promising a year filled with drama, eligibility debates, and championship dreams.

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