ESPN thinks Florida football needs a ‘vibe shift’ this season

A vibe shift would really benefit the Orange and Blue.

The college football landscape has seen some significant changes in recent years thanks in large part to NIL and the transfer portal. As a result, the tides turn on teams much more quickly than in the past which has rendered the polls mostly moot.

ESPN staff writer David Hale proposed a solution to this conundrum by splitting all 134 FBS teams into 20 ranked tiers. Among those listed are the Florida Gators, who landed in Tier 8: In need of a vibe shift.

“Florida returns a bunch of good players, but its schedule is so arduous, the Gators could take a big leap forward and still miss a bowl — potentially leaving [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag] as the first Florida head coach to depart Gainesville without a 10-win season since [autotag]Ron Zook[/autotag],” Hale offers.

“It’s never good when Florida fans are forced to remember the Zook era.”

Other Tier 8 teams

Joining the Orange and Blue in the eighth tier are a pair of SEC peers in the Auburn Tigers and Kentucky Wildcats. Additionally, the Iowa Hawkeyes, Maryland Terrapins, North Carolina Tar Heels, TCU Horned Frogs and Wisconsin Badgers are also among the eight Tier 8 teams.

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.

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Replacing a legendary head coach is hard. Just ask the Florida Gators.

The Spurrier-Zook transition is one of many examples of how hard it is to replace a legendary head coach like Nick Saban.

One of the greatest eras of college football came to a close on Thursday when legendary Alabama Crimson Tide head coach Nick Saban announced his intent to retire. The 72-year-old skipper won six national championships with the Tide plus a seventh with the LSU Tigers stretching over what ranks as the most impressive coaching career in Bowl Subdivision history.

Saban’s departure leaves a gaping hole in ‘Bama’s leadership circle, and as history has shown us, it is a tall order to fill when it comes to replacing the best.

Which begs some questions: How many schools have entered into the hiring pool after losing the most successful coach in program history? And what is the ensuing track record for the coaches hired to replace a legend?

USA TODAY Sports’ Paul Myerberg addressed those queries in his latest article about Saban’s retirement. In it, he included Florida football’s transition from [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag] to [autotag]Ron Zook[/autotag] as an example of a failed tandem.

“Spurrier rewrote the SEC record book and turned Florida into a title-winning powerhouse before leaving for the NFL following the 2001 season,” Myerberg begins. “Zook, his immediate successor, recruited a good chunk of the roster that won the 2006 title under Urban Meyer. But his struggles were magnified by the way Spurrier had kept Florida at or near the top of the FBS throughout his 12-season run.

“Though Meyer got the job done, the program has struggled with every other hire since losing Spurrier more than 20 years ago,” he concluded.

The interesting thing about the Meyer connection is that his tenure and departure in itself was a microcosmic version of the topic at hand. After winning two championships, he was followed up by a disappointing run by Will Muschamp who went 28-21 during his three-plus years in Gainesville.

Florida fans certainly are not shedding tears for the Tide right now.

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Do you know who Florida’s highest-rated recruit of the last decade is?

This former Gator was the second-highest-ranked prep prospect overall in the 2015 recruiting cycle.

Once upon a time, the University of Florida was a premiere destination for the top prep talent in the nation. Unfortunately, those days are now in the distant past but first-year head coach [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag] is hell-bent on getting the Gators back to that promised land.

The peaks of the program came under [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag] and [autotag]Urban Meyer[/autotag], with [autotag]Ron Zook[/autotag] connecting the two tenures with some solid recruiting of his own. But after the drama that surrounded Meyer’s final year in Gainesville, Florida fans were dealt a string of letdowns that led to a difficult decade in the Swamp.

However, in the recruiting class split between the outgoing [autotag]Will Muschamp[/autotag] and the incoming [autotag]Jim McElwain[/autotag], the Orange and Blue landed one of the crown jewels of the 2015 cycle — five-star offensive tackle [autotag]Martez Ivey[/autotag], who was the No. 2 overall prospect in his class and the top-rated player over the past decade for Florida. Here is what 247Sports’ writer Cameron Salerno offered on the former standout, who held a .9991 grade.

Coming out of Apopka (Florida) High School, Ivey was ranked as the No. 2 overall prospect in the 2015 recruiting cycle by 247Sports. The player that was ranked ahead of Ivey was Trenton Thompson, who signed with SEC rival Georgia. After going undrafted during the 2019 NFL draft, Ivey signed with the New England Patriots as an undrafted free agent. He currently plays for the Edmonton Elks of the Canadian Football League.

Ivey was one of many disappointments to come out of Florida during the middle of the decade and his failure to follow through on his immense talent undoubtedly took its toll on McElwain’s efforts. It just goes to show that nothing is ever certain when it comes to sports recruiting.

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Florida football among schools in ‘7 coaches this century’ club

Take a look at the seven former Gators coaches and their stats, joining six other schools as the most since the turn of the century.

Things were going great during the 1990s under head coach [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag], who resuscitated the program after the scandal-marred decade of the 1980s. However, the stability the Head Ball Coach brought to the sidelines of the Swamp came to an abrupt end after the turn of the millennium when Florida’s golden boy left Gainesville for the then-named Washington Redskins.

Following a weird tenure by [autotag]Ron Zook[/autotag], Gator Nation found its savior in [autotag]Urban Meyer[/autotag], who led the Orange and Blue to two national titles — the highwater mark in Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. However, once again, fate did not let the golden era last long. Meyer dealt with reported health issues that were allegedly tied to the stress of the job, ultimately leading to his departure.

Since then, a carousel of mediocrity has lasted more than a decade, with [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag] up as the next contestant on “The Coach Is Right” show. Time will tell if he is the one to break the rut or if the cycle of coaches will continue.

Take a look below at the seven different head coaches that have walked the sidelines of the Swamp since the turn of the millennium, according to On3, making Florida one of six programs to have earned the notorious distinction.

Dooley’s Dozen: Looking back at Florida’s 5-star recruits since Urban Meyer

Pat Dooley looks back at all of Florida’s 5-star recruits since the end of the Urban Meyer era.

Do you remember the old days Florida used to sign five-star recruits as if the Gators were shopping at a convenience store?

Those were the days of [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag], [autotag]Ron Zook[/autotag] and [autotag]Urban Meyer[/autotag], the two-time national titlist who used to text recruits while he was in church.

During that stretch of those three coaches (and you have to include the Zooker because he set Meyer up with the talent to win it all in 2006), Florida won 78.7% of its games.

Since then, Florida has won 55.3% of its games and fired three coaches.

Coincidence? We think not.

The latest Dooley’s Dozen looks at the last 12 (with a caveat) five-stars who have signed with Florida and how they did at UF. We do that while waiting for [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag] to sign his first.

We’re using the 247Sports composite rankings and we’re not counting transfers for this list.

Dooley’s Dozen: 12 fascinating facts about the Eastern Washington Eagles

Pat Dooley dishes out a dozen important facts about Florida’s upcoming Sunday home game against the Eastern Washington Eagles.

With Hurricane Ian bearing down on Florida, we are going to see a real rarity at the Swamp – a Sunday game.

The Week 5 matchup has been rescheduled for noon Sunday, and is still only going to be offered on ESPN+ and SEC Network+ as well as the Gators Radio Network.

It was important for Florida to schedule the game a day later for a number of reasons like bowl eligibility, as well as [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag] just needing to get his team back on the field again in his first season.

So, it will be a Saturday for Gator fans to just sit back and watch football. It certainly will be interesting to see what kind of crowd shows up for a Sunday game as well.

We’ll see what that looks like then, but for now, the Dooley’s Dozen looks at 12 things you need to know about the Eastern Washington Eagles.

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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Gators get visit from this top 2024 legacy linebacker

The Gators are hot in pursuit of Earnest Graham’s 4-star son.

Florida football’s recruiting team has all hands on deck this month as Billy Napier and Co. welcome a plethora of prep prospects onto campus in an effort to rebuild the program from the ground up. But the focus has not entirely been on the 2023 class — despite the large number of visitors who are currently high school juniors, the Gators are also looking ahead to 2024.

Among the recruits that Florida is vying for in the next class is four-star linebacker [autotag]Myles Graham[/autotag] out of Atlanta (Georgia) Woodward Academy — a legacy of the Orange and Blue through his father Earnest, who played running back for the Gators straddled between the [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag] and [autotag]Ron Zook[/autotag] eras. The 6-foot-1-inch, 200-pound back is obviously very familiar with the university through his dad but the Gators have worked hard to make his time in the Swamp count, including his visit this Sunday.

He told Swamp247 after his spring stop that he has started to get in with the new coaching staff.

“I had a lot of fun on my visit. I talked to the coaches, watched practice, the photoshoot was great. I really enjoyed my time. I think the biggest highlight was getting the offer from Coach [Billy] Napier and talking with Coach [Jay] Bateman. The photoshoot was really fun too.”

That family connection also runs very deep.

“Since I was a little kid I have been dreaming of getting this offer. I didn’t even know what college football really was, I just always wanted to play at Florida.”

Graham currently ranks No. 65 overall and No. 5 at his position nationally in the 2024 class according to the 247Sports composite, while the On3 consensus has him at Nos. 32 and 3, respectively. The On3 Recruiting Prediction Machine has the Auburn Tigers in the lead for his talents with an 18.4% chance of inking him while the Tennessee Volunteers are not far behind in second at 16.1% and the Gators in third at 13.8%.

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