How former Wisconsin QB Graham Mertz performed in Florida’s Week 1 loss to Miami

Former Badgers quarterback Graham Mertz injured in Florida Week 1 loss to Miami

It was a forgettable start to the 2024 season for the Florida Gators and former Wisconsin quarterback Graham Mertz.

The team fell, 41-17, to No. 19 Miami, and the former Badger left the game late in the third quarter with a head injury. His afternoon ended with 11 completions on 20 attempts for 91 yards and an interception.

Related: Big Ten Power Rankings after Week 1: Our first look at the expanded conference

Florida head coach Billy Napier said postgame that Mertz was diagnosed with a concussion. The hit came as he was sandwiched between two Miami defenders after he had released a pass that was intercepted.

The afternoon was a disastrous start to what shapes up as a rough season for the Gators. Napier has expressed confidence in the veteran quarterback throughout the offseason. That confidence may not matter with the team off to an 0-1 start and games remaining against No. 20 Texas A&M, No. 15 Tennessee, No. 1 Georgia, No. 4 Texas, No. 13 LSU, No. 6 Ole Miss and No. 10 Florida State.

It’s hard to see any light at the end of the tunnel for the Gators in 2024.

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Five-star true freshman D.J. Lagway took over for Mertz after his injury and played the fourth quarter. Lagway’s college debut finished with 3 of 6 passing for 31 yards and one interception, plus 20 rushing yards on four carries.

Next up for Florida is a home game against Samford before the brutal schedule continues. It will be worth monitoring whether Mertz is cleared in time to play.

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Patrick Mahomes praises Big Ten freshman quarterback for first time since Graham Mertz’s debut

Remember the last time Patrick Mahomes was excited about a Big Ten West quarterback?

Two-time NFL MVP and three-time Super Bowl champion Patrick Mahomes is back commenting about Big Ten football.

Badgers fans remember Oct. 23, 2020, Wisconsin’s season-opener against Illinois. Then-freshman Graham Mertz completed 20/21 passes for 248 yards and five touchdowns in the contest as the Badgers rolled to a 45-7 victory.

Related: Big Ten Power Rankings after Week 1: Our first look at the expanded conference

The game dominated headlines because it opened the 2020 Big Ten season. It also did so because Wisconsin appeared to have finally found a difference-making quarterback.

Mahomes was famously tuned in that night, posting ‘That man @GrahamMertz5 going crazy tonight!’ on X.

Badgers fans know how the story continued. Mertz mostly struggled throughout his Wisconsin career, then transferred to Florida ahead of the 2023 season.

We’ll see if things are different this time around, as Mahomes is back to praising another freshman quarterback in the Big Ten: Nebraska five-star true freshman Dylan Raiola.

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Raiola excelled in his first collegiate action against UTEP on Saturday, completing 19/28 passes for 238 yards and two touchdowns. After Nebraska’s struggles at the position last year, the upgrade to Raiola makes him look like Mahomes on the field.

That, and Raiola actually does look like the NFL legend.

Raiola’s play will be something to monitor for Badgers fans as the Luke Fickell and Matt Rhule eras at their respective programs are inevitably linked. Wisconsin has not lost to Nebraska since 2012, but that streak could end this season if the two teams continue on their divergent trajectories.

For now, it’s cool to see Patrick Mahomes dialed into (former) Big Ten West football.

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Florida QB Graham Mertz in concussion protocol after leaving Miami game

Billy Napier provided an injury update on Graham Mertz after he exited Florida’s Week 1 contest against Miami in the third quarter.

Florida starting quarterback [autotag]Graham Mertz[/autotag] is in the concussion protocol, according to head coach Billy Napier.

Mertz left the game under his own power after taking a big hit in the third quarter. He immediately winced in pain and moved his hands toward his eyes, which may indicate a fencing response.

“Graham had a concussion,” Napier said. “He’ll be in protocol and we’ll give you an update when we meet with you Monday and Wednesday of next week.”

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Mertz completed 11 of 20 passes for 90 yards and an interception in the loss. He also ran the ball six times for a combined three yards, including sack yardage.

Florida turned to true freshman [autotag]DJ Lagway[/autotag] after Mertz left the field. The first-year quarterback completed three of six passes for 31 yards and an interception while rushing for 20 yards on four attempts.

Those numbers don’t tell the whole story for Lagway, though.

“I think (Lagway) did a lot of good things,” Napier said. “In particular the second drive there, we got to some things where he had success, threw some great individual cuts, some good movement passes and made a few plays with his feet. I thought the players around him played well. So, it’s good.”

Lagway also orchestrated the most inspired drive of the day for the Gators, which resulted in a 1-yard rushing touchdown from [autotag]Treyaun Webb[/autotag].

“One of the positives was he had some success and we were able to go down and score touchdown with him in the game. Obviously, he’s a young player, but he’ll continue to work and improve. He’s got a bright future.”

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Three takeaways from Florida’s embarrassing loss to Miami

Things went from bad to worse quickly for the Florida Gators against the Miami Hurricanes on Saturday. Year 3 of the Billy Napier era begins with a loss.

This year was supposed to be different, but Florida’s 41-17 loss against Miami on Saturday has morale at an all-time low in Gainesville.

[autotag]Montrell Johnson Jr[/autotag].’s 71-yard touchdown in the second quarter was the only bright spot of the contest and was the last time Florida came within a score of its in-state rival.

The defense struggled after repeating several of the same mistakes we saw from them a year ago, and a [autotag]Graham Mertz[/autotag]-led offense appeared unable to manufacture anything positive until he got hurt.

Mertz’s injury might have brought the only silver lining of the day, though. No one expected the [autotag]DJ Lagway[/autotag] era to begin so early, but the true freshman led the Gators to its only score of the second half.

Too many missed opportunities in the first half

Things got ugly fast after halftime, but Florida wasn’t that far from holding a lead through the first 30 minutes of action.

A pair of roughing-the-passer penalties accelerated/extended Miami drives and directly led to a pair of touchdowns. The first came from Justus Boone on a third-down play that would have forced a punt from the Hurricanes. Instead, Miami quarterback Cam Ward found Cam McCormick to break a 0-0 tie.

The other roughing the passer penalty came in the second quarter on a DJ Douglas blitz that he couldn’t slow down on. Granted, that was on first down, so it didn’t directly lead to a touchdown, but it certainly accelerated Miami’s path to a two-score lead.

On offense, Graham Mertz struggled to connect on deep passes, completing just one of seven attempts from beyond 15 yards. Two notable overthrows in the direction of [autotag]Elijhah Badger[/autotag] stand out, in particular. If Mertz is healthy enough to return, he’ll need to refine his connection with the Arizona State transfer. The concepts aren’t the problem; it’s execution.

The defense is already banged up

Despite allowing Miami to put up over 500 yards of total offense, this Florida defense looks better than last year’s, or at least more talented. However, injuries are already an issue, both in the trenches and in the secondary.

[autotag]Devin Moore[/autotag], who has enough talent to be a shutdown cornerback in the SEC, left the game in the first half and didn’t return. Cam Ward targeted his backup, [autotag]Ja’Keem Jackson[/autotag], who doesn’t appear ready to be an every-down player quite yet.

[autotag]Asa Turner[/autotag] also went down with what looked like a non-contact injury to his lower body. Turner grabbed his hamstring walking off the field, but replays of the injury show a clear jerk in his knee. An ACL injury would devastate Florida’s secondary, and remove a veteran leader from the position room.

Those two injuries help explain Miami’s 385 passing yards and three scores through the air.

There’s also the front seven to worry about, although it seems to be the defensive line that struggled more than the edge guys and linebackers. [autotag]Shemar James[/autotag] reeled in a tipped pass for an interception at a crucial moment before things got out of hand, and [autotag]Grayson Howard[/autotag] had a nice wrap-up tackle in a one-on-one situation. Miami didn’t put up crazy rushing numbers, either — 148 yards and two touchdowns on 33 carries.

Florida’s pass rush was non-existent, however. Ward and his receivers had all the time in the world to break coverage, and Florida’s lone sack ([autotag]Tyreak Sapp[/autotag]) came because Ward held the ball too long. The Gators face too tough of a schedule to win without getting penetration up front. And they certainly can’t afford to commit penalties when the pass rush does work.

Miami’s offense ran up and down Steve Spurrier Field at will on Saturday. Imagine what Georgia, Tennessee and Texas are going to do away from Gainesville if this kind of play keeps up from Florida.

Hover over the panic button, but don’t press it

A three-score loss after two straight losing seasons is typically enough for an SEC fan base to turn on its coach and athletic director. Half of Gator Nation is already there, but the other half is still hoping that this was just the Week 1 jitters.

Florida’s in for a long season if things don’t change, but the Mertz injury might have forced Billy Napier’s hand in the best way. DJ Lagway is the future of this program, and getting him on the field now against the toughest schedule he’ll see as a Gator is a good thing.

Lagway only attempted six passes over three drives, one of which was an interception, but there’s no denying the tone shift that came when stepped on the field. Lagway looks like an SEC quarterback, even if he makes the mistakes a true freshman should. He leads the drive with intent, and he’s a legitimate dual threat, unlike Mertz.

Former Florida wide receiver [autotag]Jacob Copeland[/autotag] commented on social media that Lagway showed shades of [autotag]Anthony Richardson[/autotag] in his first appearance in the Orange and Blue after seeing Lagway rip a 16-yard run. If Lagway gets significant playing time moving forward, this is a completely different Florida offense.

That’s not to say Graham Mertz shouldn’t return if he’s healthy enough, but rather to suggest a complete lean into a two-quarterback system. It’s worked for Florida in the past (Leak-Tebow). Why not try it again?

It would be malpractice not to mention Montrell Johnson Jr. again in this section. He ran for 106 yards and a touchdown on 11 carries after missing most of fall camp with a knee injury that required minor surgery. His 71-yarder provided the bulk of those yards, but he was effective throughout the game. Florida needs to lean on him more moving forward if he can handle the workload.

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Four former Wisconsin quarterbacks will start elsewhere in 2024

Four former Wisconsin quarterbacks will start elsewhere in 2024

Wisconsin head coach Luke Fickell and offensive coordinator Phil Longo have discussed building a ‘quarterback factory’ at Wisconsin.

That ‘factory’ would include a strong high school recruiting pipeline at the position, star players at the college level and an increased level of professional-caliber players.

Related: Ranking the biggest storylines entering Wisconsin’s Week 1 contest vs. Western Michigan

It’s early, Fickell and Longo are only entering their second season at the helm. But it’s safe to say Badgers fans are still waiting for results in the ‘quarterback factory’ department.

Of course, Miami transfer Tyler Van Dyke is expected to be the first in the line of strong play at the position. Former SMU transfer Tanner Mordecai was expected to be that in 2023, but an injury and inconsistent play made that not the case.

Wisconsin’s method of taking one-year transfers while building up its high school recruiting base will need a further deep-dive after the season. An initial thought is the high school recruiting results have not been impressive at the position. But it’s reasonable to counter that better on-field results with Van Dyke in 2024 will help that cause.

Along these lines, it’s worth mentioning that four former Wisconsin quarterbacks are set to start elsewhere in 2024. Graham Mertz at Florida, Nick Evers at UConn, Deacon Hill at Utah Tech and Myles Burkett at Albany.

All three will do so under different circumstances. Mertz transferred to Florida after the 2022 season, Hill also left during the coaching transition, Evers left for UConn this spring after getting buried on the depth chart and Burkett recognized his chance to start would be at a lower level.

None of these four are indictments on Wisconsin’s vision at the position, except maybe Evers who was a blue-chip transfer addition by Fickell and Longo during the 2022 offseason.

But having numerous former players starting at quarterback at other schools will hopefully not be the case moving forward. Wisconsin is working to create a pipeline of high school recruiting to the field in Madison, not to the field elsewhere.

Again, Evers, Hill and Burkett were never in line to start for the Badgers. And Mertz’s transfer made sense given the circumstances. Wisconsin is likely in better shape with Van Dyke under center than any of the four teams listed.

Still, it would be better for the Badgers long-term to not have a large collection of players starting elsewhere.

It will be interesting to watch how all four perform in 2024, how Van Dyke does in his one year with the Badgers and what Wisconsin does recruiting at the position moving forward.

This will be a topic that we revisit during the offseason.

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Florida head coach again calls former Wisconsin QB ‘one of the best in the country’

Billy Napier is calling Graham Mertz one of the best QBs in the country again. Do you agree with his sentiment?

Florida head coach Billy Napier is doubling down on his confidence in former Wisconsin Badgers quarterback Graham Mertz entering the 2024 season.

Napier was recently asked about the potential for the Gators to run two-quarterback systems with the starter Mertz and five-star freshman D.J. Lagway. His response again labeled Mertz one of the best quarterbacks in the country.

Related: Where Wisconsin football players have ended up out of the transfer portal in 2024 offseason

“We have one of the best quarterbacks in the country on our team,” Napier said. He went on to clarify that the Gators have “been [Mertz’s] team since day one of the offseason.”

This high praise is nothing new from the Florida head coach. He called Mertz ‘one of the best quarterbacks in America’ back at SEC media days in July.

The praise follows Mertz’s solid-yet-unspectacular 2023 season with the Gators. He threw for 72.9% completion, 2,903 yards, 20 touchdowns and three interceptions as the Gators struggled to a 5-7 record.

Top options RB Trevor Etienne (transfer, Georgia) and WR Ricky Pearsall (NFL, San Francisco 49ers) are now both gone from last year. They together accounted for 1,952 scrimmage yards and 15 total touchdowns.

That will put more on Mertz’s shoulders in 2024, tasking him to carry the team against a brutal schedule that includes preseason No. 19 Miami, No. 20 Texas A&M, No. 15 Tennessee, No. 1 Georgia, No. 4 Texas, No. 13 LSU, No. 6 Ole Miss and No. 10 Florida State.

If Napier’s sentiment is correct, then Mertz will elevate his game and help the Gators return to bowl eligibility.

I’m sure Badgers fans may have a different read on the situation.

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Here’s what college football coaches think of Florida’s Graham Mertz

Mertz might miss Pearsall this season but Tre Wilson III will likely fill that void.

The Florida Gators will be leaning heavily on their incumbent starting quarterback [autotag]Graham Mertz[/autotag] this season as they look to snap a three-season losing streak. It will not be easy for the Orange and Blue, but the former transfer just might be up to the task.

ESPN senior writer Adam Rittenberg recently put together an aggregation of opinions on starting quarterbacks gathered from college football head and assistant coaches and Mertz was one of many who earned an entry. While the former Badger has been somewhat of a mixed bag in Gainesville he does offer a stead hand calling the plays under center.

“Although Florida’s 2023 season did not go well for the team, Mertz revived his career under coach [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag],” Rittenberg begins. “The Wisconsin transfer had career highs in completions (261), passing yards (2,903), touchdown passes (20), completion percentage (72.9), passing average (263.9 YPG) and efficiency (157.8), while throwing a career-low three interceptions.”

Those stats put up in Gainesville were vast improvements upon his efforts back in Madison.

“Mertz, the highest-rated quarterback recruit in Wisconsin history, never completed more than 61.1% of his passes in a full season with the Badgers, but he did so in every start last fall for the Gators, eclipsing 79% in five consecutive games with no multi-interception performances.”

However, an SEC coach suggested that his numbers are “misleading” because the Gators often played from behind; nonetheless, his peers noted his improvements made under Napier.

“He’s a good processor, he knows where he wants to go with the ball,” said a defensive coordinator who will face Mertz. “You can tell he’s coached up well, he doesn’t throw a lot of interceptions, and he’s athletic enough to get away from the rush.”

An SEC defensive coordinator followed suit by offering the idea that lacking top wide receiver [autotag]Ricky Pearsall[/autotag] — an NFL first-round draft pick — will be a major trammel in his efforts but at least there is Eugene Wilson III to fill that void.

“He’s smart, he’s efficient,” another SEC defensive coordinator said of Mertz. “I don’t think he throws the deep ball very well, with accuracy. He’s better than people give him credit for. He’s really, really smart.”

Florida’s season opener for 2024

The Florida Gators and No. 19 Miami Hurricanes square off on Aug. 31 in Gainesville, Florida to open their schedule for the 2024 season. Kickoff is set for 3:30 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on ABC Sports.

Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.

ESPN predicts DJ Lagway’s role with Florida during his freshman year

A pair of ESPN sports writers penned up their prediction for DJ Lagway’s usage this coming fall.

A new era of Florida football will be ushered in this fall with five-star 2024 quarterback recruit and future Gators gunslinger [autotag]DJ Lagway[/autotag] standing on the sidelines for his true freshman campaign.

One of the biggest questions surrounding the program heading into the regular season has been whether or not — or maybe more appropriately, how much — Lagway will see playing time in the upcoming campaign. While incumbent starter [autotag]Graham Mertz[/autotag] has proven to be a capable play-caller, it may behoove the Orange and Blue to put the neophyte under center for a few snaps.

ESPN’s Eli Lederman and Adam Rittenberg recently took on the task of predicting freshman roles for college football’s top 10 recruits which included Florida’s five-star newcomer.

Florida’s QB position outlook

“Florida enters 2024 confident in redshirt senior Graham Mertz ahead of his second season with the program. Lagway is expected to serve as Mertz’s backup for the Gators this fall, leading a quarterback group that includes Colorado State transfer Clay Millen and a trio of walk-ons.”

ESPN’s projection for Lagway

“Florida did not sign a high school quarterback in the 2023 class, and while the Gators are still scouring the class of 2025, the program doesn’t have a quarterback committed in the current cycle, either,” the authors note. “Lagway, the five-star passer from Willis, Texas, is Florida’s quarterback of the future.”

ESPN and other members of the media project him as one of the most intriguing backup quarterbacks in the country.

“He’s better and further along than really what we expected,” a team source told ESPN. “Always knew he was super talented and the right type of kid, hard worker and all of that. But I think he’s made a tremendous jump from when he first got here just mechanically and understanding the offense.”

Since his arrival on campus, Lagway has not been perfect but he has shown early on why he was such a highly-heralded recruit.

“Consistency and decision-making were the trouble spots for Lagway in the spring. Head coach Billy Napier opened fall camp with praise for Lagway’s growth, noting his development in reading the defense and his sharpened mechanics, focusing particularly on Lagway’s footwork.”

Florida’s season opener for 2024

The Florida Gators and No. 19 Miami Hurricanes square off on Aug. 31 in Gainesville, Florida to open their schedule for the 2024 season. Kickoff is set for 3:30 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on ABC Sports.

Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.

Believe it or not, Gators among top ‘underdog contenders’ in 2024

The Gators could sneak into the College Football Playoffs if everything — we mean EVERYTHING — goes right.

The 2024 season is in many ways a make-or-break season for head coach Billy Napier. However, the potential outcome easily varies from catastrophic to triumphant depending on how the ball bounces this fall, with plenty of room in between those extremities

Many metrics predict a sub-.500 finish for the Florida Gators, which would mark the program’s first streak of four consecutive losing seasons since the 1930s. Then some foresee an even 6-6 finish to the regular season and others are bullish enough to call for a winning campaign.

The Athletic’s Peter Keating and Jordan Brenner published a list of their seven best underdog contenders for the College Football Playoff and included the Orange and Blue among the unheralded ranks. The Gators are a distant darkhorse candidate to make the expanded postseason bracket but are given plus-25,000 odds heading into the fall.

What the Gators have going for them

“Navigating the expanded SEC is a daunting task and the league’s media members project the Gators to finish 12th in the conference,” the authors offer. “Sportsbooks have set their over/under win total at just 4.5. So that’s not encouraging information.”

However, things have been looking up in Gainesville of late, and maybe with a little bit of mojo, Napier and Co. can find the flow.

“But Billy Napier added another top-20 recruiting class, not to mention the nation’s fifth-ranked transfer class. QB Graham Mertz enters his sixth year in college (four at Wisconsin, two at Florida) and is coming off a season in which he threw 20 touchdowns and just three interceptions.”

However, one cannot ignore the brutal gauntlet of a schedule that the Orange and Blue face in 2024.

“Is Florida likely to find enough wins in a schedule that includes Georgia, Texas, Ole Miss, LSU and Tennessee? Probably not. But the same could have been said of any of our 14 historical underdogs, and the Gators share several traits with those teams.”

Florida’s season opener for 2024

The Florida Gators and Miami Hurricanes square off on Aug. 31 in Gainesville, Florida, to open their schedule for the 2024 season. Kickoff is set for 3:30 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on ABC Sports.

Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.

CBS Sports puts pair of Gators in top college football players rankings

A couple of Florida Gators are represented in CBS Sports’ top-151 college football players of 2024.

A couple of star players from the Florida Gators’ football program have landed on CBS Sports’ top college football player rankings for the 2024 season.

Sports writer Blake Brockermeyer of CBS Sports ranked the best 151 college football players in the country and quarterback Graham Mertz (No. 86) and cornerback Jason Marshall Jr. (No. 141) are the two Gators represented in the rankings.

This spotlight not only showcases their standout talents but also gives them their much-deserved recognition as they gear up for a pivotal 2024 football season.

What CBS Sports says about Mertz

CBS Sports has Mertz as the 13th-best quarterback heading into the 2024 college football season.

“Yep. I’m a believer in Mertz,” Brockermeyer wrote.Don’t forget he profiled as an elite prospect out of high school. A change of scenery, from Madison to Gainesville, did him well in 2023. He was consistent, completing 73% of his passes for the season for 2,900 yards, and took care of the football, throwing just three picks.”

Brockermeyer went on to write, “Florida has an unbelievably difficult schedule ahead and Mertz’s favorite target Ricky Pearsall is off to the NFL. Mertz can really silence the doubters if he delivers a good season in what will be choppy waters.”

CBS Sports’ thoughts on Marshall

“A former five-star recruit, Marshall Jr. is a lengthy cornerback who has led the Gator defense in pass breakups two years in a row with 19 combined — as well as two interceptions, Brockermeyer wrote. “Had some of his better games vs. Georgia as well. Can he make one final leap in 2024?

Marshall is the 12th-best cornerback on the rankings.

CBS Sports’ Top 10 college football players

  1. CB Travis Hunter (Colorado Buffaloes)
  2. EDGE James Pearce Jr. (Tennessee Volunteers)
  3. DT Mason Graham (Michigan Wolverines)
  4. QB Shedeur Sanders (Colorado Buffaloes)
  5. WR Luther Burden III (Missouri Tigers)
  6. OT Will Campbell (LSU Tigers)
  7. QB Jalen Milroe (Alabama Crimson Tide)
  8. QB Carson Beck (Georgia Bulldogs)
  9. RB Ollie Gordon II (Oklahoma State Cowboys)
  10. OT Kelvin Banks (Texas Longhorns)

Florida’s season opener for 2024

The Florida Gators and No. 19 Miami Hurricanes square off on Aug. 31 in Gainesville, Florida to open their schedule for the 2024 season. Kickoff is set for 3:30 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on ABC Sports.

Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.