Where Florida’s opponents rank in post-Week 3 AP Top 25 Poll

Florida is nowhere near the AP Top 25 and things aren’t going to get easier moving forward. Here’s where SEC teams stand after Week 3.

Another loss for Florida means another week of no votes in the AP Poll, and Texas A&M moved back into the top 25 with the win over the Orange and Blue.

It’s hard to see the Gators making a push for a spot on this list with several ranked teams left on the schedule. Georgia and Texas are battling for the No. 1 spot in the land — the Longhorns leapfrogged the Bulldogs this week — Ole Miss and Tennesse are Nos. 5 and 6, respectively, and LSU is No. 16.

With the Aggies now ranked No. 25, Florida has seven ranked opponents on its schedule. Maimi continues its climb up the top 10 and is now ranked No. 8 in the country.

There’s another team to watch out for, too. The UCF Knights, who come to Gainesville in October for a highly-anticipated matchup with the Gators, earned six points in this week’s AP Poll.

The only team on Florida’s schedule that isn’t performing up to preseason expectations is Florida State, the only bigger disappointment in college football than the Gators at 0-3 after narrowly missing the College Football Playoff last year.

The regular season finale between Florida and Florida State has a chance to be the unofficial Misery Bowl if both of the Sunshine State’s most historic programs continue to struggle.

Here is the complete AP Top 25 following Week 1 of the college football season

Rank Team Record Points Change
1 Texas 3-0 1,540 (35) +1
2 Georgia 3-0 1,518 (23) -1
3 Ohio State 2-0 1,461 (5)
4 Alabama 3-0 1,358
5 Ole Miss 3-0 1,316
6 Tennessee 3-0 1,188 +1
7 Missouri 3-0 1,127 -1
8 Miami (FL) 3-0 1,094 +2
9 Oregon 3-0 1,093
10 Penn State 2-0 1,050 -2
11 USC 2-0 1,008
12 Utah 3-0 912
13 Kansas State 3-0 836 +1
14 Oklahoma State 3-0 742 -1
15 Oklahoma 3-0 649
16 LSU 2-1 537
17 Notre Dame 2-1 477 +1
18 Michigan 2-1 447 -1
19 Louisville 2-0 418
20 Iowa State 2-0 354 +1
21 Clemson 1-1 291 +1
22 Nebraska 3-0 266 +1
23 Northern Illinois 2-0 151 +2
24 Illinois 3-0 137
25 Texas A&M 2-1 82

Others Receiving Votes

Memphis 77, Boise St. 62, Syracuse 62, UNLV 54, Boston College 47, Washington St. 30, Arizona 15, Iowa 15, Indiana 13, California 11, Liberty 10, Toledo 9, UCF 6, South Carolina 3, North Carolina 3, Arizona St. 3, BYU 2, Pittsburgh 1.

Up next for the Gators

Florida will play their first road game of the season as they travel up to Starkville to play against the Mississippi State Bulldogs on Saturday, Sept. 21. Kickoff is set for noon ET and will be broadcast on ESPN.

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ESPN says Texas A&M QB a ‘game-time decision’ vs Florida

The SEC has been talking about Florida’s quarterback situation all week long, but it’s Texas A&M that has a problem under center heading into gameday.

All week long, the focus has been on which quarterback Florida will play more against Texas A&M, but now it’s the Aggies that have a decision to make under center.

After submitting a relatively clean SEC Availability Report on Wednesday, Aggies quarterback Conner Weigman was added to the list on Thursday. Pete Thamel of ESPN is reporting that Weigman is a “legitimate game-time decision,” according to a source.

Weigman is dealing with an unspecified upper-body injury and will need to be evaluated during pregame warmups in Gainesville. SEC teams must submit a final injury report 90 minutes ahead of game time, per the new conference rules.

If Weigman is too hurt to play, redshirt freshman Marcel Reed will make his first career start, similar to the position [autotag]DJ Lagway[/autotag] was in last week. The difference here is that Florida has an SEC defense, compared the FCS defense Lagway faced.

Reed got on the field last week as Weigman’s backup during a 52-10 blowout against McNeese. He threw for 71 yards and ran for another 43, so Florida must prepare to face a dual threat even if Weigman ends up playing.

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SEC Nation returning to The Swamp for Florida-Texas A&M

Florida is hosting SEC Nation for the second time in three weeks as the Texas A&M Aggies come to Gainesville for a Week 3 showdown.

The SEC Nation crew is back in Gainesville this weekend for a clash between the Florida Gators and Texas A&M Aggies on Saturday at 3:30 p.m.

Gators legend [autotag]Tim Tebow[/autotag] will join Paul Finebaum, Jordan Rodgers and Roman Harper on set, and UF Journalism School alumna Laura Rutledge will host the show.

Finebaum will host his eponymous show Friday at the Plaza of the Americas. Fans are encouraged to show up ahead of the 3 p.m. start time, and the festivities continue at 9 a.m. sharp on Saturday.

This will be Florida’s 13th time hosting SEC Nation but only the eighth time in Gainesville — neutral site games such as the Florida-Georgia matchup tend to be popular selections for the SEC Nation crew. Most recently, Florida hosted the show for a high-profile season opener against Miami. Hopefully, things will go better on the field this time.

SEC Nation’s new theme song also has Florida ties. Country singer Brooke Eden is an alumnus of the school and is the voice behind the theme.

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Florida upgrades pair of DBs on Week 3 SEC Availability Report

Florida was bitten by the injury bug early this season, but two Gators have been upgraded to available ahead of a Week 3 clash with Texas A&M.

The initial SEC Availability Report released by Florida on Wednesday painted a grim picture for the team’s secondary. Multiple starters were listed as either “out” or “questionable,” but a Thursday update has provided some hope that the Gators will have more depth on Saturday than initially expected.

Sophomore defensive backs [autotag]Sharif Denson[/autotag] and [autotag]Bryce Thornton[/autotag] are no longer listed on the availability report, signaling a likely return against Texas A&M.

Denson started at the STAR position in Week 1 against Miami and performed reasonably well at the hybrid position. Pro Football Focus gave him a grade of 63. 9 on defense, including a 74.0 grade as a run defender.

Redshirt freshman Aaron Gates stepped in for Denson at the STAR against Samford, but the team is better with both guys available. A position battle between the two during fall camp has led to both getting reps when healthy. If either goes down again, the team will lean heavily on the healthy one and use Alfonzo Allen Jr. sparingly as a backup.

Thornton will see the field for the first time in 2024 on Saturday after missing each of the first two games of the season. With fellow safety Asa Turner listed as “out,” Florida needs some depth on its last line of defense.

As a true freshman, Thronton played regularly in Florida’s secondary, starting four games and accumulating more than 300 snaps on defense. His 58.8 defensive grade on PFF is solid for a first-year player at the college level, but he’s expected to step up more in his second season.

Texas A&M adds names to availability report

The Aggies only listed three players on their initial availability report, but the number has since doubled.

Most notably, starting quarterback Conner Weigman is now listed as questionable, but Texas A&M has secondary troubles of its own, too. Starting nickelback Tyreek Chappell and starting strong safety Trey Jones III are both out this week.

That means former Florida Gators Jaydon Hill is likely to start at nickelback for TAMU.

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Highlights from Florida’s loss to Texas A&M in College World Series semis

Here’s a look at highlights from the final game of the 2024 season for the Florida baseball program.

Florida baseball’s postseason magic finally came to an end on Wednesday night when the Texas A&M Aggies turned the Gators’ carriage into a pumpkin with a 6-0 loss in the semifinals held in Omaha, Nebraska.

The Orange and Blue finished the regular season just a home over the .500 mark and entered the NCAA Tournament with a perfectly even record after a first-round loss to the Vanderbilt Commodores in the SEC Tournament.

From there, though, Kevin O’Sullivan’s squad assumed an entirely new identity. Unfortunately, there just was not enough in the tank to make it to the finals for the second straight year.

Below is a look at the highlights from the final game of the Florida Gators’ 2024 baseball campaign.

Auburn is among the toughest quarterback decisions in 2022

These schools join Auburn with tough quarterback decisions ahead of the 2022 campaign.

It isn’t just the Auburn Tigers who are facing a huge question revolving around the quarterback competition. There are several programs in the SEC alone that are facing that conundrum.

For Auburn, they have very little starting experience outside of the 2021 season. Newcomers Zach Calzada and Robby Ashford’s previous teams made the list as well. Calzada knew that his chances of starting at Texas A&M were slim. Haynes King is expected to return and they signed five-star quarterback Conner Weigman. Not to mention they added a two-year starter from the LSU Tigers, Max Johnson.

LSU has problems of their own with Myles Brennan returning for a sixth year in the program along with redshirt freshman Garrett Nussmeier and five-star signee, Walker Howard.

As far as Oregon Ducks go, they essentially completed a trade with Auburn. The staff added Bo Nix to their quarterback room and Robby Ashford returns to his home state of Alabama with the Tigers.

Recently, Bleacher Report put together the list of the top nine quarterback battles. We added one as an honorable mention, but we will get to the list in a moment.

What B/R Says About Auburn

Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

Rising junior T.J. Finley played well when Nix went down to injury. He finished the year having thrown for 552 yards, four touchdowns and just one interception with a passer rating of 116.4 in the Tigers’ last three games of the season.

Also on Auburn’s roster now, as mentioned previously, is former TAMU QB Zach Calzada. The former Aggies QB finished the season having thrown for 2,185 yards and 17 touchdowns in 12 games in 2021. He was integral in Texas A&M’s upset of then-No. 1 Alabama, too.

The full list of the teams having huge quarterback battles in alphabetical order:

The SEC’s top returning running backs based on production

The Auburn duo hopes for big things in 2022.

The SEC as a whole is seeing a lot of talented running backs exit following the 2021 campaign. Of the top 10 rushers last season, only four are set to play in 2022 with their original team.

The good news for Auburn is that two of the top backs returning for 2022 just happen to be on the current roster. They likely will need to have big campaigns to help prevent the outcome of 2021.

The 2021 leading rusher Tyler Badie of Missouri is off to the NFL, as well as the No. 3 player on the SEC rushing list Brian Robinson Jr of Alabama. We dive into the top five returns based on their production in 2021.

Max Johnson joins his brother Jake at Texas A&M

Max Johnson joins his brother.

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Max Johnson now has his new team according to On3 Sports. He will join his younger brother Jake, who signed with the Texas A&M Aggies. There was some thought that they might head to Florida State but once Jake signed with the Aggies, it was only a matter of time before the elder Johnson would join him.

Max signed with the LSU Tigers in the 2020 class as the No. 10 quarterback of the class and No. 26 recruit from Georgia. Johnson played in 18 games for LSU, started all 12 games in 2021. He completed 60.3% of his passes this season for 2,814 yards with 27 touchdowns and six interceptions. He now joins the team he helped defeat on Nov. 27 in Death Valley.

Johnson joins a quarterback group in College Station that has Haynes King and incoming freshman Conner Weigman. Johnson is the most experienced of the three and it could be quite the battle to see who rises to the top for the Aggies.

We could see the battle in the 2022 season finale we never got in Baton Rouge, Max Johnson vs Myles Brennan.

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Message board encroachment: TAMU fans discuss upcoming Georgia game

I spent the week exploring various Texas A&M message boards to get a feel for how Aggie fanatics view their football team. As often as I spend Saturdays glued to a television, I figured that it’d be best to get a feel for Georgia’s next opponent …

I spent the week exploring various Texas A&M message boards to get a feel for how Aggie fanatics view their football team. As often as I spend Saturdays glued to a television, I figured that it’d be best to get a feel for Georgia’s next opponent through engaging with the people who watch all sixty minutes every Saturday.

Considering this will be the first ever conference matchup between Georgia and A&M since they joined the SEC in 2012, neither team’s fan base has a much of a point of reference of how these teams stack up outside of statistical information we have available. After all, the last time these two squads had to worry about one another was in preparation for the 2009 Independence Bowl.

Among the most shared sentiments were the following:

Their fans feel that the Aggies are a very balanced team with no overwhelming strengths and no glaring weaknesses.

Several fans did say that if one unit is better than the other, it’s the defense, but only slightly. One Ag pointed out that, between last season and this one, they’ve had to replace their most productive tailback and tight end in school history with a freshman and sophomore, respectively.

As the fan noted, “If we cannot get the ground game moving or get decent production from tight end, our offense will get crushed,” acknowledging Georgia’s “stout” 2019 defense.

Other fans believe the offensive onus will be placed squarely upon QB Kellen Mond in getting the ball moving. He’s a solid pocket passer and has thrown for the third most yards of any quarterback in the conference behind LSU’s Joe Burrow and Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa, the latter of whom won’t play again this season.

What sets him apart from other quarterbacks Georgia’s defense has seen thus far in 2019 is his ability to extend plays and throw while rolling out beyond the hash marks. The Dawgs saw a decent bit of that in the most recent win at Auburn and contained it well, setting the edge and keeping a spy linebacker focusing on the signal caller.

“The entire offense plays at the level [Mond] plays,” one fan said. “We don’t really have any game breakers that can do it themselves.”

Kellen Mond is faster on his feet and more experienced than Bo Nix, but a number of A&M fans agreed that if there is one position group of weakness, it would be their offensive line. The Aggies have given up 24 sacks on the year. Compare that to Auburn’s 16 allowed. Now compare that to Georgia’s six.

If Georgia’s front seven can adequately pressure Mond behind his pedestrian offensive line, Texas A&M fans expect doom and gloom.

Looking on the other side of the ball, the Internet’s Aggies don’t fear Georgia’s passing game nearly as much as they fear the rushing attack.

I’m sure you can imagine that I came across some toxic and blatantly non-factual posts disparaging Jake Fromm. After one poster declared everything aside from Fromm’s career completion percentage as “totally unimpressive,” several more rational A&M fans pointed out that the Dawgs don’t go long often simply because of the “monsters” the Bulldogs showcase in the backfield.

Georgia’s offense has long been based on controlling the clock with a run-first offense balanced between three or more top-self tailbacks. Any Texas A&M supporter who can recognize this has admittedly watched more Georgia football this season than I have watched Texas A&M football.