Opinion: Drake Maye shouldn’t have had to apologize

If you were offended by what North Carolina quarterback Drake Maye said this week, I bet you’re a ton of fun at parties.

Listen, I love college sports.  Perhaps a bit too much if we’re being honest, but there is something different about them.  Even with the amount of money that is now involved in all aspects of it, the purity of it is still significantly greater than the pros.

We saw the NFL’s longest running rivalry this past Sunday night between the Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers and what was the entire rivalry talk of the telecast?  Things that happened before I was even born.  Sure, it doesn’t help that the series has been one-sided for the last 30 years, but rivalries in the NFL feel like such a flash in the pan compared to what they are in college.

Or at least what they’re supposed to be like.

On the many drives I’ve made down the Indiana Toll Road, I stopped at “The Knute” (aptly named gas station/fast food rest stop roughly 30 miles outside South Bend) before a Notre DameMichigan game in 2008.  The first person I saw when I got out of my car wasn’t wearing blue and gold or maize and blue, but instead an Appalachian State shirt.

Being a lifelong Domer I thought it was hilarious gave the guy a fist-pound.

I’ve seen what feel like a million college football themed shirts there and on college campuses over the years that have nothing to do with one’s own team as much as they do ripping a rival in an entirely harmless matter.

NEXT: Why I loved what UNC’s quarterback said this week

Robert Sarver selling the Phoenix Suns is a privilege, not a punishment, and it’s important we know the difference

Good riddance, Robert Sarver. Take your money and go.

To no one’s surprise, disgraced Phoenix Suns and Mercury owner Robert Sarver has decided to sell his teams after becoming the face of the league’s biggest scandal over the last few weeks.

For those of you out of the know, the NBA has been investigating Sarver over the last year regarding allegations of racism, sexism and workplace misconduct. After more than 320 interviews and evaluating more than 300,000 documents, the NBA suspended Sarver for one year and fined him the maximum amount of $10 million for his deplorable behavior in the toxic workplace he created.

Now, we’re here. Sarver is putting the teams up for sale and he’ll be out of the NBA’s hair for good.

To be clear, this was always the way this saga was going to end. Public pressure only continued to mount after the league’s announcement. Not only did fans think his punishment failed to match the breadth of his sins, but so did his minority owners and a major corporate sponsor. There is no world in which he could’ve walked back into the organization next year pretending things are peachy keen.

So he had to sell. This was the corner he was essentially backed into. This brings us to the feckless “woe, is me” statement Sarver released following the news of his decision to sell.

With this, as my colleague Andrew Joseph brilliantly pointed out, he managed to show a complete lack of remorse for what he did.

He blames an “unforgiving climate” as the reason he must sell the franchise he owns currently valued at $1.8 billion, according to Forbes. Clearly, there’s no such thing as accountability in the world of Robert Sarver. There’s no mention of the derogatory, offensive and straight-up hateful behavior and language he’s used to harm people. Instead, he finds time to cite the “good” he’s done “or could still do” — as if it weren’t a decades-long track record that got him here in the first place.

He makes it seem as if he’s just a boy who the world has chosen to punish for past misdeeds. Woe is him. He’s just another victim of the heinous cancel culture that eventually comes for us all.

But don’t get it twisted. Sarver is no victim here. What sort of victim leaves a situation where they’ve spent decades doing damage only to become $2 billion richer than they were in the first place?

Make no mistake — Sarver having to sell his team isn’t a punishment. If anything, it’s a privilege. One that only the richest of the rich could ever afford to have in our society.

Think about it. He repeatedly used the n-word and harassed his employees in all sorts of different ways for years. What were the consequences? He had to leave work for a year and pay a fine that probably feels more like $1,000 than $10 million to a man of his current worth.

Adam Silver openly admitted there wasn’t much the NBA could do. They couldn’t force his removal without majority approval from at least 23 owners — and well, good luck with that. He didn’t get a lifetime ban as his former colleague Donald Sterling did. He didn’t have to stop owning the team. He just couldn’t come to work.

Now, on his own volition, he’ll become a whole lot richer than he already is. Sure, he’ll never be able to show his face in the NBA again. But who cares? He’s about to make billions off of what is one of the best teams in the league.

Don’t let Robert Sarver — or anyone else on the internet, for that matter — fool you. He’s totally fine. He’s probably a lot happier today than he was yesterday. A couple billion will do that for you.

Good for you, Robert Sarver. And good riddance. Take your money and go.

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COLUMN: Buy stock in Brian Kelly’s LSU

LSU showed improvement against Mississippi State, and Tigers fans once again have hope.

You never want to overreact to one game. Takes written in the seconds after a contest has gone final tend to be reactionary. They’re the type of statements that can come back to bite down the road, but tonight, we’re going to have a good time.

Despite being at home against a program LSU has historically dominated, the Tigers were underdogs as Mike Leach’s Mississippi State Bulldogs came to town.

LSU got down early. Things didn’t look good. It felt like Mississippi State was going to roll in and roll out of Baton Rouge with ease.

That wasn’t the case. LSU figured things out and didn’t let go.

In Brian Kelly’s first SEC game, the Tigers came out on top, winning 31-16.

It was undeniable progress. LSU started two freshmen at offensive tackle and two sophomores at guard. They held up and the OL played its best game they have in some time.

LSU even found some success on the ground, with [autotag]Armoni Goodwin[/autotag] popping a big one in the fourth quarter. LSU rushed for over 200 yards on the night.

Through the air, we saw LSU struggle at first, but as the offense gained composure, it converted third downs into first and red zone trips into touchdowns.

On defense, the front seven did what you would expect of a unit that talented. [autotag]BJ Ojulari[/autotag] had one of the best games of his career and the linebackers controlled the middle of the field.

The secondary made play after play, holding Will Rogers to just 5.1 yards per attempt.

This was a complete game. It’s the type of performance we have been waiting for.

Watching this game, you felt a sense of hope. Young guys made play after play. LSU isn’t where it should be yet, but again, we are seeing real progress.

For the first time in a long time, this feels like a competent team. There are more growing pains to witness, but we now have proof this staff knows how to deal with them.

Against Florida State and Mississippi State, LSU has shown a willingness to make adjustments.

The next two games on the schedule, New Mexico and Auburn, are both winnable. We could be looking at a team that is 4-1 getting ready to host Tennessee in Tiger Stadium.

I’m not declaring LSU is going to a New Year’s Six Bowl or anything close to it, but this is a good team that is going to have some big moments this fall, moments that Kelly can build on to get this program back where it should be.

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COLUMN: LSU might lose this week, and that’s okay

LSU might lose to Mississippi State on Saturday. Tiger fans should not overreact to a loss.

Conference play is once again upon us.

LSU will host Mike Leach and Mississippi State on Saturday night as the underdog. The Tigers aren’t supposed to be an underdog at home against MSU, right?

Well, these are different times, and LSU is in the midst of a rebuild.

A 65-17 win against Southern has helped reset the negative feelings that dwelled after the loss to Florida State. LSU begins conference play in a similar spot to where it began the season — with a lot of questions, but also a lot of potential. If the team that showed up in the fourth quarter against Florida State shows up against Mississippi State, LSU will win this game.

However, I’m not sure how wise it would be to count on that team to show up. That loss was just two weeks ago, and [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] might be a good coach, but he doesn’t have a magic wand.

LSU has made adjustments. [autotag]Jay Ward[/autotag] is now at the nickel spot and [autotag]Greg Brooks Jr.[/autotag] will slide back to safety. We saw a new-look offensive line last week with [autotag]Charles Turner[/autotag] at center, [autotag]Garrett Dellinger[/autotag] at guard and [autotag]Miles Frazier[/autotag] bumping over to right tackle.

On top of personnel adjustments, these coordinators should have a better understanding of these players and we should see improved playcalling. Even after the loss to Florida State, I said this LSU team is better than the one we have seen the last two years.

It still might not be enough. This is a hard league to play in. Mississippi State is a good team, but it’s far from the best LSU will see this year. Mike Leach has his program close to where he wants it to be while Kelly is rebuilding. These programs are on different planes right now, even if the teams are similar in ability.

My expectation is that LSU will lose this game. That’s okay.

Nobody wants to start 1-2, especially after the way 2020 and 2021 played out, but it’s part of the process. Mississippi State has experience. It’s a group that’s well-coached on both sides of the ball.

It’s not that LSU isn’t well-coached. I have faith in this coaching staff, but it’s going to take some time for LSU to be able to compete on a consistent basis. I think the players have bought in and I think this is a team committed to winning, but again, issues can’t be fixed overnight or one offseason.

I’m excited to see where this LSU team goes over the course of the year, but we should be prepared for a few more growing pains in the meantime.

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Lusk: Five things I learned from an incredible two days playing in the U.S. Hickory Open in Florida

Hickory clubs are surprisingly good, and good shots with them seem even better.

HOWEY-IN-THE-HILLS, Fla. — To be honest, I’ve never felt so out of place at a golf tournament as I did walking through the parking lot at Mission Inn Resort & Club on Tuesday morning. I was underdressed, under-equipped and unprepared.

It all rolled into a sense of apprehension as I approached my 8 a.m. first-round tee time in the 2022 U.S. Hickory Open. I had never played a round of hickory golf. I didn’t own hickory clubs. I wasn’t decked out in knickers or other golf attire that might have felt at home in the 1910s but looked entirely novel in the early-morning Florida humidity.

You might think it’s a stretch for a complete hickory novice to take up the game using replicas of ancient golf clubs in a national championship. I certainly did. I’ve performed in very mediocre fashion in plenty of golf tournaments over the decades, but this was a whole ’nother ball game and I tried to focus on my hopes that I – a relatively low-handicapper when using modern equipment – could get the ball in the air. I decided that anything beyond dribblers, shanks, cold tops and even whiffs would be a blessing.

And I was entirely wrong about the whole scene.

The Society of Hickory Golfers, which operates the national championship, couldn’t have been more welcoming. The clubs were relatively easy to hit, even if they don’t go as far. The game is the same, even if it is very different in select ways – just try to get the ball into the hole as quickly as possible.

And it was an absolute blast – two days and 36 holes of tinkering, swinging, chasing foul balls and frequently laughing at my own moderate ineptitude. I even managed to not embarrass myself, shooting 86-85 to finish in a tie for sixth in the open division. I haven’t had so much fun shooting in the 80s since I was about 12 years old.

I had only one day to mentally prepare after Peter Flory – a Golfweek’s Best course-rating ambassador and the mastermind behind a digital replica of the famed Lido course in New York that led to Sand Valley building an actual replica in Wisconsin – told me there was a spot available in the national championship he has tried to win for several years.

After an opening stretch of bogeys – a series of results of which I am just as capable with modern clubs – I eased into hickory golf and took mental notes of why I was falling in love with this centuries-old version of the game. Following are five things I learned:

Adam Silver can’t just tell us suspended Suns owner Robert Sarver has ‘evolved.’ He has to prove it.

Adam Silver should tell us about the context we are missing.

NBA commissioner Adam Silver held a press conference on Wednesday, which was his first public address since Phoenix Suns owner Robert Sarver was fined and suspended for violating workplace standards.

Many fans were surprised that Sarver was not ousted from the league like former Clippers owner Donald Sterling. As my colleague Prince Grimes wrote, the punishment was way too lenient. NBA stars, including LeBron James, have emphasized this point.

Silver told reporters that he was in “disbelief” and “disheartened” when he discovered what transpired within the Suns organization. He stated that the conduct was indefensible.

You can watch Silver’s full press conference here.

As noted by Sean Highkin and Jonathan Feigen, Silver emphasized the transparency of the report — which you can read in its entirety here.

But the commissioner also mentioned that the league’s punishment was based on the “totality” of the circumstances, which included information not issued to the public due to confidentiality.

“I have access to information that the public doesn’t, and again, I’m able to look at the totality of the circumstances around those events in a way that we’re not able to completely bring to life the nuance that you see when you read a report or deal with it sort of in short bursts of news reporting.

“Differentiating between the facts in this situation and Donald Sterling, is the context. I have available to me more of a context than the public can, and that’s just the nature of it, because we have investigators who then can explain what they learned in 320 interviews and say, for example, the person was there and heard those words but this is how they interpreted them in that context. In the case of Sterling, we all could make our own judgments.

“Remember, while there were these terrible things, there were also many, many people who had very positive things to say about him through this process. Ultimately, I took all of that into account in making the decision that the one-year suspension plus the fine was appropriate.

“I think what your litany leaves out are many very positive things he did, as well, and also leaves out how those events were characterized by those people who were directly involved in them and how they described them to the investigators.”

According to Silver, “much of the behavior” outlined in the findings occurred “much earlier” in his ownership tenure. He added that what the litany leaves out are the “many very positive things” that Sarver has done.

During the press conference, Silver boldly stated that Sarver “clearly has evolved as a person” during his time with the organization.

But what does that mean? What are we missing that Silver is alluding to but won’t actually say? It is almost impossible to imagine anything that could make Sarver’s actions any more permissible, but if Silver has such a thing, then what is it?

Within the report, Sarver told investigators that he has made “substantial personal and professional contributions” to social and racial justice causes.

His attorney, Thomas Clare, celebrated the “longstanding commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, and social justice” that Sarver has displayed. Clare argued Sarver has “proven time and time again” that he is a “tireless advocate” for social justice.

But the findings of the report paint a different picture, far more damning.

For example, as early as 2004, Sarver was “made aware” that he should not use racial slurs. Yet the report indicated that Sarver’s ugly pattern of behavior then continued until at least 2017.

That lack of discretion, as you can read below, included an instance in which he emailed the league office using the slur as recently as October 2016:

“The investigation finds that Sarver said the N-word in repeating or purporting to repeat what a Black person said: (1) during a 2004 meeting to recruit a free agent player; (2) during a 2012 or 2013 Suns team-building exercise in Phoenix; (3) after the Suns’ October 30, 2016 game against the Golden State Warriors; and (4) at least twice between 2010 and 2017 in recounting an incident involving a player’s family member. As early as 2004, Sarver was made aware that he should not use the N-word even when repeating another person’s use of it.”

Sarver also had “confrontations with Black coaches” as recently as 2019.

Silver stated that in order to understand the context of the language used, individuals have to understand the “totality of circumstances” (a phrase that the commissioner repeated six times during the press conference) to interpret the motivations.

Additionally, the report found Sarver’s behavior toward women was both inequitable and demeaning. Meanwhile, examples of Sarver’s crude and vulgar commentary regarding sex occurred as recently as 2021.

This hardly suggests that Sarver is the “evolved” person that Silver had characterized him as during the press conference.

So what is the difference between Sarver and Sterling, the former Clippers owner? Silver stated that there was a “realism” to Sterling’s actions due to the audio recording:

“I think it was more the nature of how we learned about it, how the public was aware of it in a time where — the way it was disseminated so quickly over the internet. I think there was a realism to it that exists when you have audio of something that put — back to my earlier comments, put everyone in essence in the same position I was in. We were all looking at the same record, anyone who cared to listen to Donald Sterling’s words.”

As noted by Brendon Kleen, however, TrueHoop’s Henry Abbot obtained a video of Sarver making vulgar, inappropriate comments at a funeral (!!!) in April 2021.

Meanwhile, ESPN’s Baxter Holmes reported that in May 2022, a female Suns employee resigned due to toxic and misogynistic workplace culture.

She alleged that the organization had “never been more dysfunctional” and that the culture of the team is “rapidly eroding” to the point that it had finally become intolerable.

Let’s take a step back and process that for a moment. Just a few months ago, someone who worked for the team since 2014 stated that Sarver’s workplace had never been worse than it was in this season.

Silver argued that Sterling displayed “blatant racist conduct” directed at a “select group of people” before he sold the Clippers in 2014. Sarver may not have directed his actions towards a specific group, but there is quite a bit of evidence that he showed indefensible behavior.

If the commissioner has evidence that Sarver has actually evolved, and that there is some necessary context that the public is missing, then now would surely be a good time for that to come to light.

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Jerry Seinfeld, not Timmy Trumpet, is to blame for Mets losing the divisional lead

The Mets had the lead until the KITH photoshoot droppd.

The New York Mets are having an incredibly enjoyable season, but it isn’t enough to make Jerry Seinfeld happy.

The comedian took to Instagram to blame Timmy Trumpet for the Mets losing the divisional lead in the NL East. He claimed that “celebrating in season” when the team hasn’t “won anything yet” created “bad mojo” for the team.

I don’t care what Seinfeld said. The live performance of “Narco” at Citi Field was the best moment of the season for the Mets. Honestly, it was one of my favorite baseball moments in years. Timmy Trumpet even had a fresh take on “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” that gave me chills.

Seinfeld, however, deduced the whole thing down to a “stupid” performance.

But he is way off. As my colleague and friend Andy Nesbitt wrote, Diaz’s entrance music is exactly what the MLB needs right now. It’s one of the many reasons why the Mets have become a fun team to root for even as a bandwagon fan.

It’s fun! Sports are supposed to make us happy, and this song makes so many people happy. There is a reason why the video of the performance has more than 10 million views.

Erik Berg

Let’s be honest with ourselves for a second. The Mets maintained a lead in the division throughout the entire season, including when Timmy Trumpet performed at Citi Field at the end of August.

But do you know what happened that may have actually caused a change in the cosmos?

Seinfeld, while sporting a Mets hat, modeled for the NYC clothing brand Kith’s fall campaign. Remember: New York had the lead in the division until this photoshoot reached the internet and he incarnated the real-life version of the “How do you do, fellow kids?” meme.

I’m not the only person who thinks that Seinfeld, not Timmy Trumpet, is to blame for the recent collapse in Queens. Robby Kalland, of UPROXX, stands in solidarity with my opinion.

Seinfeld is acting like a bitter boomer bummed out by boastful bops.

You hate to see it.

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COLUMN: Where do we go from here?

After a loss like that, it’s tough to make sense of everything. Here are some initial thoughts about where this LSU team is headed.

LSU’s loss to Florida State is one that will linger in the minds of the fans for a long time. It didn’t have many expectations heading into 2022. It’s the first year of the [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] administration, and we knew this was going to be a rebuild.

This team is full of transfers and young guys. Even players that do have experience, like offensive lineman [autotag]Garrett Dellinger[/autotag], found themselves in a new role and position.

[autotag]Jayden Daniels[/autotag] had never played a game with these wide receivers. The defenders are still developing chemistry and learning how to communicate with one another.

There’s a lot that’s new here. New pieces can be cause for excitement, and in this case, many still are. Things needed to change, new players needed to be brought in. That doesn’t mean a transition is going to be easy.

We didn’t expect much, but that’s still a loss that hurts.

Optimism built throughout the summer as LSU gained momentum on the recruiting trail and we heard good thing after good thing about how players looked in camp.

After dropping the season opener in 2020 and 2021, this looked like a time where LSU might be able to start the year on the right foot.

With the way that game ended, what’s important here can become blurry. There’s so much to think about here and the blame doesn’t belong at the feet of any single entity. This was as much of a team loss as a loss can be.

Every unit had their good moments and their bad and the same can be said for individual players. Jayden Daniels legs kept LSU in the game, creating big first downs when LSU needed it most. He also marched LSU the entire length of the field to set up that final touchdown.

Daniels struggled in the first half, though. It’s hard to tell how much of his struggles were his own doing, the offensive line, the playcalling or the wide receivers. In the first half, nobody on offense really stepped up.

Daniels showed enough to keep the job moving forward. LSU doesn’t need to play musical chairs at quarterback right now. The Tigers need consistency, and it needs to allow someone to get comfortable back there.

It shouldn’t be lost on us that LSU did not quit. This team crawled back into this game and made some big plays in some big moments. The heartbreaking way in which it ended can make that easy to forget, but this was a one-point loss where a lot of the underlying numbers were solid.

Going forward, my opinion of this team has not changed much. It’s going to take some time to fix some of these issues, it always was, but they showed enough to where I think a fix is possible.

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COLUMN: We’ve waited all summer

That’s what makes this sport what it is. The intensity never gets old. We return to the same places expecting the same thing and yet, we never grow tired. 

Football is back.

We’ve waited all summer for this.

Once again, we will take to the fields to tailgate. Lose our lungs on the third down. Check the Wi-Fi on Saturday morning to make sure we’re ready for the day. Sneak that one earbud in so we can listen to the game on the radio at a wedding we didn’t want to attend.

We’ll step outside as the sun is setting and smell the fall smoke in the air. See those leaves falling from the trees. We’ll hear those drumlines marching through campus. We’ll listen to a drunk friend explain why his favorite team is about to pull off the upset of the century.

We’ll get our hopes up just to be let down again. Or maybe, our expectations will be met, and we’ll make the memories of a lifetime.

We’ll sit down and forget about what else is going on in the world. For a few hours, we’ll never be alone, because there’s thousands, maybe millions, watching the same game, rooting for the same team.

For three hours, our family won’t be determined by who we share blood with, but by the colors we wear. We will see things we’ve never seen before. Spectacular plays and thrilling comebacks.

But for all the moments that shock and surprise us, we’ll still have our traditions. Things we’ve seen a hundred times before but still leave us in awe every time.

Maybe, that’s what makes this sport what it is. The intensity never gets old. We return to the same places expecting the same thing and yet, we never grow tired.

Whether it’s a tiger who roams in Baton Rouge, an eagle who flies in Auburn, or a Bulldog that patrols the sideline in Athens.

Metallica will blare in Blacksburg, Virginia. Students in Wisconsin will jump around and cowbells will ring out in Mississippi.

Legends will be made. New eras will begin and some will come to an end.

No matter how we consume this sport or which transitions we embrace, it’s back. So, friends, once again, let’s get together. Let’s go on this joy ride that is the college football season. Feel all of it, victory or heartbreak.

We’ve waited all summer for this. Now, it’s here.

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OPINION: Regardless of what happens, Napier’s first year is already a success

Florida football has come a long way since Billy Napier was hired as head coach. Regardless of what happens this season, the Gators are in good hands.

On December 5, 2021, [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag] was hired as the 29th head football coach in Florida football history. The soft-spoken coach took the podium and said everything right. He talked about how he wanted to build the best football program in the SEC, the importance of coming together as a program and fan base, and how he was going to revitalize Florida football recruiting.

If you want to read more about that opening press conference, legendary Florida Gators reporter and Gators Wire’s own Pat Dooley wrote up a great piece on the top 10 quotes from that day.

What stood out to me wasn’t anything that Napier said, per se. But rather the sense of calmness that Napier brings to the program. In the modern era of Florida football (from Spurrier onward), we haven’t seen a coach radiate a sense of tranquility as Napier does. Everything he says has been carefully calculated to prevent being a distraction. While other coaches might cosplay as Darth Vader after a brawl breaks out at halftime, Napier seems like the kind of guy that would consider his thoughts on the situation to be an internal matter.

That sense of groundedness, of stability, of organization, is what the Orange and Blue desperately needed when Napier was brought it. The team seemed to quit down the stretch of the 2021 season, fans were up in arms over the rapid decline from Mullen’s first three seasons, and recruiting was seen as an afterthought.

While not overly specific about all the issues, Napier put things into overdrive. He began by forming the largest staff in Florida football history, announcing hires like an industry-crafted album rollout.

If your first thought was, “There are more polos than jerseys in that picture,” that’s the point. Napier understands that in order to win in the SEC and compete for national championships, you need to have the infrastructure to do so. I mean, “scared money don’t make money” seems to be an accurate assessment of the Georgias, Alabamas and Ohio States of the world.

It’s also important to remember that while Florida chose Napier, Napier also chose Florida. He was notoriously picky when his name was being thrown around for SEC jobs in years prior, being rumored to have turned down multiple SEC jobs before landing in Gainesville. That’s because he saw the potential the Gators could reach if given the resources.

In that December 5 introductory press conference, Napier expressed the importance of patience in rebuilding the Florida program. He even had to issue an open letter to the fan base in June after the Gators missed out on a couple of high-profile recruits. His response? He had one of the best recruiting stretches in recent Gators history, jumping into the top 10 on On3’s recruiting rankings just six weeks later.

A few days out from Napier’s debut under the lights of The Swamp, it’s important to remember how far the program has come in such a short time. The culture change is already taking shape. Napier’s presence can be felt all over the program, even in the state-of-the-art football facility that open just a couple of weeks ago, despite being in the works years before his arrival.

The players that Napier will bring in future recruiting classes won’t be on the field this season. The bumps in the road will be there. The Gators will lose football games and will be outplayed at times this season. All of those things are true. Regardless of what the win-loss record indicates at the end of the season, make sure to remember all that Napier has done off the field and how the mentality of this team is already completely different than in years prior.

So have some patience, enjoy the season, and take solace in the fact that the future of Florida football is in good hands under “Blue-Chip Billy”.

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