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Re: Orange and Blue Forever: A Florida Gators Dynasty
The 2021 Offseason Refresher
By Tricia Green
It’s been an offseason to forget for Florida Gator fans, but it’s been one chock-full of drama. Florida can’t seem to keep a head coach in the building, as Dan Mullen bolted for the NFL (and the Jets, ewww) and the chance to coach Trevor Lawrence (that’s fair) — after an 11-3 year, where Florida lost to Auburn, Alabama, and then fell to North Carolina (who finished 13-1 and looked like the far better team in the surprisingly close 31-17 win for them), Mullen said, “Deuces” and walked out of Gainesville.
Following him was his AD and then his basketball counterpart in Mike White. Ouch.
Florida rebounded all right on the AD and basketball front — both candidates are pretty well-regarded. The questions are about the football coach — Desmond Flyer didn’t do too badly in his final season as HC of UCF, as his team finished 10-3 — losing to Cincinnati, Tulsa, and Tulane before barely beating UTEP in the New Mexico Bowl (hey Albuquerque!) 14-12.
But those types of results — great for UCF — are just the bare minimum for Florida, and that’s only for some years. Boosters and fans fall out of love with head coaches faster than my grandmother with whatever hunk was brought in for whatever her favorite soap opera is that week. Long story short, boosters and fans are fickle beasts. For years since Urban Meyer walked away and then quickly walked back into Ohio State’s arms, Florida has been trying — and failing — to find stability at the head coach position.
After Urban it’s been Muschamp (Coach Boom blew up our record), McElwain (he who was weird and lied about some stuff), and then Mullen (Mississippi State import, great pedigree, lured away by insane NFL money). You know who hasn’t struggled to get a head coach to stay for all that time? Alabama. That’s the gold standard of college football and Florida is desperate to find their Saban, their guy who’ll be a lifer for the school.
Those coaches are increasingly rare — as the NFL embraces more college-like schemes and college athletes take more ownership of their skills/bodies, the college game looks like a lot more work for a lot less cash; Saban, remember, tried (and failed) in the NFL — he took a shot and came back, much like Spurrier and other head coaches of old.
Will Flyer leave for new pastures? He has a history in the NFL, being a QB coach for Chip Kelly during that coach’s Eagles tenure. But Flyer lasted only four years there before making his way back to college (as OC at Oregon) before taking the HC job at UCF (where he’s spent the last six years). He doesn’t seem to want to go back to the pro game.
After this offseason, though, he may reconsider — this offseason has been the Gators “Series of Unfortunate Events” and it started with some transfers and a lot of leaving seniors. Two key young players, CB Rogers and RG White, both left due to lack of playing time. Emory Jones threatened to leave, but Flyer convinced him to stay — Jones was the clear starter, no one was going to argue that.
The Gators got a bit of good news with some great draft results. Pitts, Trask, and Toney all went in the first round, while Marco Wilson — much maligned as a Gator defender, almost in the “everyone hates Scrappy-Doo” zone — was drafted late in round seven.
The Gators had plenty of holes to fill with so many graduating seniors, and thanks to Mullen bolting, the recruiting scene was less than ideal — Flyer managed to assemble only the 25th best class, headlined by five star ATH Larry Scott.
It appears — at least through spring training — that the Gators this year are going to have to win as a team, because there isn’t an all-pro talent sitting on offense or defense; there’s no Kyle Pitts walking through that door this year, no headliner talent. This team isn’t Ocean’s 11, not even Ocean’s 8, it’s really like Ocean’s 0.5 — like, if you squint, MAYBE you can see a star talent emerging from someone.
Spring training went well, as a lot of guys got better … and then the injuries started to hit. First was Emory Jones, getting hurt in a weight lifting accident. Six days later, freshmen TE Mike Harris got into an accident on his scooter — both Jones and Harris will miss all the regular season, with an off-chance they can return if the Gators make it to the SEC title game.
Two weeks after those injuries, starting TE Kemore Gamble tripped down some stairs at his house and is out till week 6. Add in a suspension for starting RG Josh Braun (suspended for a post-practice fight with WR Ja’Markis Weston), who’s out till week 4 — then add in the benching of Weston (partly for the fight, partly for lack of effort in practice) and you can see that the narrative around the Gators is that the team is a mess.
And … well, the team is a mess. Injuries, suspensions, fights … it speaks to a team that’s having trouble in the locker room. Part of the reason is because the expectations for this season have significantly lowered with Jones out; the schedule also does the Gators no favors as they open the season in week 2 against the #2 team in the nation in Iowa State.
That’s where we are right now, just a month away from the start of the season, and with a bunch of questions to answer.
Top Gator Questions:
1. Who starts at QB?
That’s the biggest question within Gator fandom at the moment and it’s hard not to see why; Emory Jones was expected to be the type of QB that Desmond Flyer — a man whose offense is a dash of Spurrier, with a chunk of Chip Kelly, and some fun spread concepts that make great use of speed — would want in his offense. Jones was an effective runner and a thrower that, while untested in big-game moments, looked good in the limited snaps we saw him.
But now he’s gone and the QB competition over the spring was neck and neck between RS freshmen Anthony Richardson and RS Sophomore transfer Hiram Robinson, who was a backup at Oregon — the two have differing skillsets (Robinson is barely 6’1”, Richardson is 6’4”, Robinson can play both ways if needed, Richardson is definitely a QB) and throughout the spring it was reported that Coach Flyer was torn on who was the presumptive starter for this year.
The announcement of the starting QB may not be made for another week, as both players continue to take the same number of first-string snaps in practice.
2. What’s with all the injuries and suspensions?
Rightly so, the drama behind the scenes is a point of concern for anyone that that has eyes — the type of dysfunction we’ve seen with the Gators this offseason is usually reserved for head coaches about to be fired, not ones just hired! Yet, Coach Flyer and his staff have had to deal with a rash of problems that will affect the team all year.
Flyer, for his part, has attributed the injuries to bad luck — and that’s a fair explanation — and the discipline issues as “growing pains” with the new culture they’re trying to institute which, okay, maybe? It’s not a good look for the program and many fans (and most importantly boosters) are concerned that this is the first step towards scandal, not titles.
Flyer has to get this team under control and ready to play against ISU in week 2, else he could be a very short-lived Gator HC.
3. Who’s the starting running back?
Florida has itself a lot of questions on offense, but the starting running back might just be the biggest — Florida entered the spring with five different HBs on the depth chart: Seniors Dameon Pierce (rushed for 1290 yards and 8 TDs last year), Senior Malik Davis (rushed for 449 yards and 4 TDs), RS Sophomore Nay’Quan Wright (rushed for 333 yards and 5 TDs), RS Junior Lorezon Lingard (literally rushed once for 2 yards), and former Clemson recruit RS Freshmen Demarkcus Bowman (redshirt last year).
Talk about a treasure trove of riches … someone was bound to not get carries and Lingard, in an effort to actually start, agreed to play fullback — a position not normally associated with Florida football in recent years — and will be deployed in certain formations as that guy. Meanwhile, with 4 other running backs to feed, the favorites to get the starting job this year are either Pierce or Davis.
Having this many backs is a good problem to have, but managing their playtime will be a high-wire act for Coach Flyer — Bowman may be the most talented of the bunch, but with Pierce and Davis being seniors (and both performing well as a tandem last year), Flyer is likely to give the bulk of the carries to them.
4. What kind of unit is the special teams?
Florida will be employing a brand-spanking new kicker this year, Justin Andrews, and multiple recruiting services made him out to be one of the top-3 kickers of the 2021 class. Andrews is a power guy, hailing from Tennessee, but there are questions about his accuracy — and whether or not he can perform in pressure situations. Andrews, in high school, was great … except when it came to “clutch” kicks (defined as FG attempts in the last 2 minutes that will get a team a tie or a lead); Andrews tried 10 such kicks, made only 5, but his high school coaching staff trotted him out at some ludicrous distances for a teenager (3 of those 5 missed attempts were at 55+ yards).
Andrews will have to prove in college that his high school career wasn’t his ceiling, but merely a stepping stone towards greater things.
5. How will the defense look?
The offense is a mess, so it’s not worth asking how messy it will be (on a scale from “Spilled Milk” to “Britney Spears Meltdown” the offense is probably in the middle at “Christian Bale Method Acting Too Hard”). The defense, though, is the Gators strongest unit by default — in terms of experience and health, the defense sports talent at every position and the depth behind those positions to survive adversity.
Flyer’s first hire as HC was to bring in his super-talented d-line coach from UCF, Richie Marks. Marks is young — just 32 — and it’s his first crack at a defensive coordinator job — and Marks is very happy to be a Gator.
“Lifelong dream, that’s what this is,” he said at his introductory press conference. “The amount of talent that comes through this program is tremendous, the passion of the kids is incredible, and this university has put produced some of the most fearsome defenses in college football history. I want to be a good caretaker of that legacy and add something to that legacy … I don’t take that duty lightly.”
Marks sounds like someone who’s excited to be at the job but he’ll be deploying a defense never seen at the University of Florida — the 4-2-5. A defense that’s heavily dependent on good defensive backs, good front four pressure, and linebackers that play with discipline, the 4-2-5 will be a big change of pace for Florida. With the amount of talent on the defensive side, Marks will have to get that unit on the same page — something previous DCs have failed to do.
Recruiting News
Florida is due to lose 12 seniors this year total for graduation, but there are some RS sophomores and RS juniors will likely take their talents elsewhere — whether that be to the pros or another school via transfer. Atop the list of likely departures is Emory Jones — after having been convinced to stay only to get injured and be out for the year, sources are reporting that he wants to start fresh somewhere else … and really, he can’t be blamed for that. It’s been one misstep after another here and, much like George Clooney and his god-awful Batman movie, he needs to get as far away as possible from Gainesville.
Other likely departures include CB Kaiir Elam, LG Richard Gouraige, and LE Brenton Cox Jr; each of these are starters, each veterans, each important … so chalk up another 4 likely gone to make Florida’s total losses about 16 players. Flyer and his staff will have to recruit defense HEAVY this year as a lot of the projected losses are coming there, chief among them DT, where two players are graduating.
NCAA News
The drama wasn't just confined to Florida, as college football saw a lot of changes over the offseason — chief among them a new (and old!) crop of head coaches. Look, it’s McElwain again!
McElwain takes over Akron, FSU fired another head coach and hired Pete Golding (Alabama’s DC, in theory, but we all know Saban is doing the defensive work over there), and Brady Hoke (former Michigan man) took over Ball State.
Also, congrats to the Big 12 for being 12 members again! Only took a few years for them to work out that math. They added SMU and Houston, then slotted all the Texas teams into the South division — winners of that division will get bragging rights as the best team in Texas (assuming TAMU never wins an SEC division, which is highly likely because Alabama exists).
Preseason Top 25
The top 25 sees the pollsters ranking — to no one’s surprise — Alabama first, followed by Iowa State, and then Notre Dame. Florida is ranked 9th — not bad considering the turnover.
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