Chris Doering announces top six teams ahead of Tennessee-Georgia game

Chris Doering announces his top six teams ahead of the Tennessee-Georgia game.

Tennessee (8-0, 4-0 SEC) defeated Kentucky (5-3, 2-3 SEC), 44-6, Saturday at Neyland Stadium in Week 9.

The win is Tennessee’s fifth versus a top 25 opponent this season.

Tennessee’s 2022 regular-season schedule features home games against Ball State (W, 59-10), Akron (W, 63-6), Florida (W, 38-33), Alabama (W, 52-49), UT Martin (W, 65-24), Kentucky and Missouri.

The Vols’ 2022 schedule features road contests at Pittsburgh (W, 34-27 OT) in the second edition of the Johnny Majors ClassicLSU (W, 40-13), Georgia, South Carolina and Vanderbilt.

2022 Tennessee Vols’ football: Vols Wire’s downloadable schedule wallpaper

PHOTOS: Tennessee debuts dark mode helmets versus Kentucky

Following Week 9 games, former Florida wide receiver Chris Doering announced his top six teams on SEC Network’s “SEC Football Final.” Doering’s top six teams are listed below.

Legendary Gators WR to be Mr. Two Bits for season opener against Utah

A Gators legend from the ’90s will don a yellow shirt and a blue and orange tie as the first Mr. Two Bits of the Billy Napier era on Saturday.

It wouldn’t be a Florida Gators game with the Two Bits cheer, and the honorary leader of it on Saturday will be former UF wide receiver [autotag]Reidel Anthony[/autotag], who earned All-America honors in the 1990s while playing for [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag].

Since 2013, Florida has had celebrity dress up in the same yellow shirt and blue and orange tie made famous by Gators superfan George Edmondson to lead the Two Bits chant, and Anthony is the latest Gators legend to claim the honor. [autotag]Percy Harvin[/autotag], [autotag]Chris Doering[/autotag] and [autotag]Ike Hilliard[/autotag] are among the receivers that have been Mr. Two Bits.

An exciting player in college — he once lept into the stands of Tennessee‘s Neyland Stadium to celebrate a touchdown during a 31-0 rout of the Volunteers — Anthony’s routine should be one of the more explosive in recent memory. He’s not letting anyone know his plans, but the Head Ball Coach’s words of wisdom will be in the back of his mind.

“I haven’t gotten that far yet. First, I need to get the rules and regulations,” Anthony said to the UAA. “Coach Spurrier used to always tell me, ‘You know, Reidel, you’re the only one who ended up in the NCAA’s what-not-to-do video they show teams every year.’ I made it three years in a row, so I guess I better see what they allow.”

Single-game tickets have been sold out for the season opener, so there should be a good crowd in the Swamp for Anthony’s Two Bits. There’s excitement in the air for not only the start of the 2022 season but also for the start of the Billy Napier era at UF. Anthony couldn’t pass up a chance to add to that atmosphere.

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Gators legend Chris Doering rips Florida fans in interview

The legendary UF alumn had some harsh words for the Gator Nation during an interview with Jake Crain of the Crain and Co. Show recently.

Times have been tough for the Gator Nation since the highwater mark of the football program (and, coincidentally, the men’s basketball program as well) back in the mid-aughts.

For a long stretch, starting with the arrival of [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag] on the Swamp’s sidelines as well as [autotag]Billy Donovan[/autotag]’s tenure across the street inside the O’Connell Center, Florida fans were spoiled by success.

And who can argue with a run that saw three national championships on the gridiron as well as a pair of back-to-back trophies on the parquet? Not that the entire time was smooth sailing; the [autotag]Ron Zook[/autotag] era will always be there to haunt us while Billy D also hit a few potholes along his path to superlative success.

But the past decade has been a harsh come-down from the peak the two major sports achieved despite a College Baseball World Series win in 2017.

It seems those loyal to the Orange and Blue had their expectations rise too high or at least that is the opinion of Florida football great [autotag]Chris Doering[/autotag], who recently aired his grievances with the fans duing an interview with Jake Crain of the “Crain and Co. Show.” Here is what the legendary wide receiver had to say.

“I’m a lifelong Gator fan. The son of two Florida grads. I lived in Gainesville growing up, so I feel like I can say this. Our fan base has become the worst. In terms of criticism and lack of patience. ([autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag]) hasn’t even coached a game yet and his popularity has been up and down mostly because of the recruiting criticism he has gotten. That’s ultimately what cost [autotag]Dan Mullen[/autotag] his job.”

“I don’t think people understood the disarray the program was in. The lack of elite SEC talent on that roster. I hope Florida fans understand where they are right now, and how difficult the schedule is. I think if they go 8-4 with the schedule they have to face, that should be viewed as a successful season.”

As a Gainesville native who has spent more than two decades in Hogtown, I find myself agreeing mostly with his opinion — with a few caveats, of course. After four generations of family who have attended the university, our credo has always been: “They’ll break your heart every time.”

That success we saw nearly two decades ago seems to have shifted the paradigm prematurely: The programs returned to their disappointing ways after Meyer’s and Donovan’s departure.

Florida fans had become accustomed to the blue-blood treatment their programs rightfully earned, but unfortunately have not maintained. The transition from the Jeremy Foley to the Scott Stricklin administrations was anything but smooth. The outgoing AD had lost his edge, while the newcomer never really had one.

Also, at the risk of putting a yellow onion on my belt and trading in bee nickels, it seems the fan base simply is not as patient as it has been (for better or for worse) in the past. There have been demands for a top-five recruiting class in the new staff’s first year, which is simply ludicrous to a reasonable person, among other pie-in-the-sky desires.

This leads to the other issue. Not only is Napier breaking into the top tier of college football still wet behind the ears, but he is attempting to resuscitate a program that collapsed at the end of Mullen’s tenure. The fact that his army of staffers have clawed the team back near the top 10 — and still climbing — in the recruiting rankings is a reason to be optimistic.

However, I disagree with the suggestion that the fans ran Mullen out of the job. The former head coach was by all measures an awkward personality on the recruiting trail, who simply was not cut out for what it takes to handle one of the top brands in college sports. Not everyone is built for that grind, and if he could not stand the heat he did not belong in the kitchen.

Long story short is that Doering is correct. The Gator Nation needs to slow its roll when it comes to its criticisms of the new regime and allow the situation to play out. UF is not the only program experiencing turnover and trying new approaches. Especially with the Miami Hurricanes causing problems from the south end of the peninsula, Florida’s will not be a linear path to the success we all hope for.

In the meantime, Gator fans, keep calm and chomp on.

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Former Florida WR predicts Kentucky to upset Georgia

SEC Network analyst Chris Doering predicts that Kentucky will upset Georgia

Former Florida Gators wide receiver Chris Doering predicts that Kentucky Wildcats will upset Georgia during the 2022 college football season. Doering, who held the SEC’s receiving touchdowns record from 1995-2020, is an analyst for the SEC Network.

Doering had to make a bold prediction and chose to pick Kentucky to win against Georgia. The Wildcats host the Bulldogs on Nov. 19. Kentucky challenged Georgia in Athens more than most teams in 2021. The Wildcats have a very talented team and finished second in the SEC East last season.

Will Kentucky quarterback Will Levis be able to engineer a big performance against Georgia’s defense? We will find out in November.

Former Florida star Chris Doering made his prediction clear on the SEC Network:

Chris Doering joins former Auburn Tigers linebacker Takeo Spikes in predicting the Bulldogs to fall victim to a road upset this season.

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What is this ‘culture change’ we keep hearing about at Florida?

Pat Dooley talks with some big names about what exactly “culture change” entails.

On a list of cliches that are tired and worn out, there is this one: “There’s a new sheriff in town.”

With a new coach in any sport there is a change in the way everyone in any sport goes about their daily work because — and here comes another beauty — of “culture change.”

In some cases, it can be culture shock as coaches wean their rosters of the people who just don’t get it. Because in the end, while there is a template for how a college program should be run, there is no handbook. Every coach at every level in every sport has his fingerprints on his or her program that is part of the culture change.

“Culture change,” said CBS Sports’ Dennis Dodd, “is a mystery phrase to me. But it can be anything from running off players to just teaching kids the way the coaches want to approach it.”

And that’s the thing about culture change.

There’s no right way to do it.

There’s only YOUR WAY or the highway.

We’ve seen it in Gainesville over time and certainly currently with new coaches on football and basketball.

The biggest culture change happened when [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag] took over on New Year’s Eve 1989 as the head football at Florida. He switched to the blue jerseys because the orange ones “looked like Clemson,” ripped up the artificial turf and set the new policy of no excuses.

“It was about attitude as much as anything,” he said. “We had to get the players to believe that they could beat Georgia, that playing Auburn and Georgia back-to-back wasn’t a problem. We had good players, really good players, when I got here and we just had to get the attitudes straightened out.”

Spurrier did that and had incredible success.

“For him to do that so quickly was incredible,” said [autotag]Chris Doering[/autotag] of the SEC Network and Sirius radio. “We inherited his personality.”

One thing that tends to happen when an athletic director is making a coaching change is that he wants something different. In the case of [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag], Florida wanted a coach that was passionate about recruiting after the previous coach was not.

“Being around Billy, everything is so well thought out, nothing is left to chance,” Doering said. “It’s not just the recruiting part of it. It’s everything.

“The biggest thing is the ability to connect with players. And you have to be clear in what they want to create.”

Certainly, it is different when a coach leaves on his own. In the case of [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag], he inherited a program that had been good but not great.

Florida basketball will look different under Golden than it did under [autotag]Mike White[/autotag] and in many ways “different” was what a program that had become stagnant needed — a jolt, if you will, built on a modern approach to the game.

It’s always been that way. When [autotag]Billy Donovan[/autotag] took over the basketball program, the biggest change in culture was to ramp up recruiting to a level we had never seen at Florida. At the same time, Donovan established early that players who did not but in were not going to play.

[autotag]Urban Meyer[/autotag] came into the Florida football program in 2005 and immediately went about establishing a culture change by banishing the players from the locker room and not allowing them to wear Gator gear until it was earned.

Meyer’s culture included the same attention to detail and enthusiasm for recruiting that Napier has, but Meyer did establish another culture that was dangerous — entitling his best players to have a different set of rules to live by.

What he left behind was a mess that [autotag]Will Muschamp[/autotag] had to clean up. That started when he threw [autotag]Janoris Jenkins[/autotag] off the team.

“You look at how the culture changed under Nick Saban at Alabama,” Dodd said. “Same with Sam Pittman at Arkansas. They got the players to buy in quickly and then it is established what the standard is.”

That goes for every sport that brings in a coach with a different set of expectations for his players.

You can change the culture, but not everyone will jump on board the bright and shiny new train. Napier himself is trying to weed out the problems of inheriting a roster of student-athletes that didn’t come to Florida to play for him.

Not everyone accepts culture change. That’s why the transfer portal in every sport is stacked with players who want a different culture and that’s where it gets tricky.

Any player who wants to come to Florida in any sport has to understand what that culture is and what is expected of them.

There are some new cultures in town. Gator fans are excited about the coaches who are implementing them.

Of course, they are both still undefeated as Gator coaches. How these new cultures work out is still a work in progress and — in the cases of both football and basketball — there is a long way to go to establish that culture.

Buckle up. It’s going to be interesting.

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