Here’s a look inside the numbers at Tennessee’s 2014 season.

GOOD

.538: Tennessee finished with its first winning record since 2009, finishing at 7-6 overall. Quarterback Joshua Dobbs went 4-1 as a starter after making his debut during the third possession of a Week 9 loss to Alabama. Dobbs provided the Tennessee offense with a much needed spark after it struggling through early SEC losses. Tennessee averaged 37 points per game during its final five games, a 13-point improvement from its first eight.

21: Curt Maggitt (11) and Derek Barnett (10) have combined for 21 total sacks. The duo also had 35.5 tackles for loss and averaged 1.4 per game. Barnett set the Tennessee freshman record for both categories, while Maggitt, who spent most of his college career at outside linebacker, thrived in his new role and played through his first full season. The duo will remain in tact next season after head coach Butch Jones confirmed Thursday that Maggitt will return for his senior year.

899: Jalen Hurd emerged as the Vols’ top running back in his debut season. Hurd led Tennessee with 899 rushing yards and five touchdowns on 190 attempts. The Hendersonville native surpassed Arian Foster’s 879 yards for the most by a Vols freshman in the past decade. Hurd capped off his first season with 122 yards and two touchdowns on 16 carries in Tennessee’s bowl win against Iowa.

BAD

101: The Vols had the worst offensive line in the SEC. Tennessee ranked No. 124 overall in tackles for loss allowed and No. 117 in sacks allowed. Former starting quarterback Justin Worley faced constant pressure from opposing defenses, with the Vols averaging 3.3 sacks per game, which decreased with the mobile Dobbs under center. Tennessee must improve in the trenches to see success in 2015.

4: Tennessee had four wide receivers suffer season-ending injuries in 2014. Marquez North (shoulder), Josh Smith (ankle), Cody Blanc (achilles) and Jason Croom (knee) all went down prior to season’s end. Croom suffered his injury during the Vols’ TaxSlayer Bowl practice after battling injuries throughout the season. But if all four players enter training camp healthy, Tennessee could have one of the SEC’s best wide receiver corps.

38.9%: The Vols averaged a third down efficiency rating of 38.9. Tennessee averaged a season-low 18.8 against Ole Miss in Week 8, one game prior to Dobbs’ first appearance. But the Vols saw a season-best 57.9 percent conversion rate against Alabama the following week. Tennessee must improve on third down in order to be a contender in the SEC East in 2015.