September 22, 2023Comments are off for this post.

From Where I Sit- Tennessee at Florida- September 16, 2023

Clearly, Florida's big win over Tennessee is an important milestone in the Gator’s rebuilding project. Maintaining perspective, however, should be a priority for all Florida fans. The team is still very much a work in progress with plenty of work left to be done. The Utah loss in week one and the Tennessee win this week are both steps along this path. Still…it’s good to pause and celebrate. It's great to be a Florida Gator.

Perhaps the most critical benefit to this win is the reduction of the “noise in the system”. More optimism and, hopefully, a renewed fan and media commitment to patience and trusting the process. Positive energy around any program fuels recruiting success and recruiting success (in time) brings on the field wins. Florida’s 2024 recruiting class is looking very good to date. Currently ranked as one of the top 5 in the nation, this recruiting cycle has the potential of finishing as Florida’s best since the Tebow/Spikes/Harvin class twenty years ago.

There is cause for enthusiasm around the improved depth and play in both the offensive and defensive lines. The number of young players, on both sides of the ball, seeing extensive action and delivering good outcomes is a real high point. Graham Mertz has shown why Billy Napier and staff went and got him in the transfer portal. Poise and consistency at QB was a need and he has provided both.

The Gator defense, despite it's youth, has earned a much higher level of trust and confidence than the defenses over the last several seasons. Through three games, Florida has the best stats in the SEC for missed tackles with only 19. Other than failing on five “third and long” situations in the second half of the Tennessee game, this defense has delivered. The aggressive style of play, especially from the linebackers and safeties has been a key.

Special teams play is a continuing area of concern for this year’s team. Florida has left too many points on the table and killed momentum with missed field goals and other special team's gaffes.

The last 9 seconds of the Tennessee game provided a disappointing end to what had been a game where Florida leveraged an advantage in focus and poise. Unfortunately, Josh Heupel’s poor decision to use Tennessee’s last time out while down 13 points, without the ball, and with only nine seconds remaining opened the door for unnecessary conflict. While Heupel’s decision and the ensuing personal foul on a Tennessee player were the triggers, the impulsive physical response by several Gator players was a backwards step. The officials had already flagged the Tennessee infraction and the game was over. The consequence of the fighting is three Gator players (all starters) will have to sit out the first half of the UNC Charlotte game this week. Truly disappointing that these players allowed themselves to be so easily drawn into Tennessee’s own lack of composure. It was also puzzling to hear some Florida fans attempt to justify the behavior with, “they started it”. I’m confident the Florida coaching staff is looking forward, as a part of the new team culture, to reaching the point where players place team goals ahead of their own instant gratification.

This week’s home game against the UNC Charlotte 49ers provides an opportunity for the Gators to maintain the forward momentum on offense and defense while also cleaning up special teams play ahead of the big September 30th game AT Kentucky.

October 10, 2022Comments are off for this post.

From Where I Sit- Missouri at Florida- October 8, 2022

In many ways the Florida Missouri game this week was a continuation of the themes that have persisted through this season. Billy Napier characterizes the Gators as a work in progress. Indeed they are. We still see inconsistent play, especially at quarterback. Getting stops defensively in third and long situations continues to be frustratingly difficult. Tackling in space is still a problem for several key players. There has, however, been noticeable progress in other important areas. Changing culture and building depth both take time. The progress made isn’t always reflected immediately in terms of winning games. On the days where the programmatic progress is reflected in wins, the effort being made is energized. The Missouri win was important in this regard. Florida hadn’t won a conference game in nearly a year. Saturday’s win ended that drought.

Among the encouraging take-aways are the clear continuing reduction in focus/discipline related penalties and the large numbers of true freshmen playing important snaps. Florida had ONE penalty of any kind this week. The Gators are also enjoying improved offensive line play and the associated productivity gains in the running game. The Missouri game also featured Florida’s first big special teams play of the year and the Gator’s first “pick six”. Both fall in the category of being game changers. Another positive aspect, defensively, from the Missouri game was Florida’s 13 tackles for loss and 4 sacks.

If the Gators hadn’t also given up numerous third and long conversions (again this week), the defensive performance could have been characterized as very good. Of Missouri’s 9 third down conversions, 5 were on plays that gained more than ten yards. Of these, 3 within the final 8:30 of the game gained 18 yards or more. Clearly, there is still much work to be done in Florida’s safe/prevent coverage package.

Areas for work, offensively, include yellow zone execution and play calling. Excluding the clock killing possessions to end each half, Florida had eight possessions. One began at the Missouri 24 yard line and resulted in a Florida field goal. Two other long drives ended with Gator touchdowns. Four of the remaining 5 drives reached Missouri territory, but stalled beyond the 30 yard line and netted no points. Coming away with zero points on those four drives kept the game closer than it could have been. The Gator receivers also dropped several catchable balls this week. Typically, this year, the receivers have been reliable, just not explosive.

At the end of the day, Florida came away with an important (for measuring progress) SEC win despite a large time of possession deficit and execution that wasn’t especially sharp. To notch another win next week against LSU, the Gators will need to execute better than this past week and have fewer turnovers than the Tigers.

November 29, 2021Comments are off for this post.

From Where I Sit- Championship Mentality- November 29, 2021

Sunday’s announcement of Billy Napier as the University of Florida’s new head football coach turns the page on a disappointing season and begins the process of rebuilding a consistent winning culture for the Florida Gators. Napier will be Florida’s 5th head coach since the 2008 National Championship season. The pattern for the last three hires has been two or three good years, one bad season, and gone. Expectations in Gator Nation are ruthlessly high. Here’s to hoping Napier is up to the task.

The box score from Saturday’s game against Florida State provides an excellent snapshot for where the program stands today. Just enough talent to overcome typical errors and win a home game against an underdog. The Gator’s weren’t poised enough this season to win road games or to upset favorites in the swamp. There weren’t any games, excepting the home loss to Alabama, where Florida exceeded expectations. On Saturday, the Gators added to their SEC leading penalties total with 13 more. They also added to their SEC leading interceptions thrown total with three more, two of them on FIRST down plays.

Beginning with day one, Billy Napier will have work to do reassuring and confirming Florida’s 12 currently committed 2022 recruits. He will have until the December 15th early signing date to add up to about 12 more commitments. By reputation, Napier is a strong recruiter, but recruiting is about building relationships and three weeks isn’t much time. Best case, he might close this recruiting cycle successfully by adding a few highly regarded Gator leans and then looking to the transfer portal. Realistically, the 2022 class is about damage control.

The second item that should be at the top of Billy Napier’s priorities is rebuilding a winning culture within the Gator football program. This task comes with a great deal of complexity and is unavoidably incremental. It isn’t about swagger. Beginning with swagger places the cart before the horse. It is about creating a mindset, individually and collectively, that reinforces an internal locus of control and accountability. It’s also about having a culture where TEAM results are the end game.

Questioning the Gators 2021 team effort level is the easy button for fans who might equate outward emotionality with effort, but Dan Mullen and team leaders have been clear in stating the problem hasn’t been about effort and desire. They have regularly attributed this season’s losses and failures to inconsistent focus and reoccurring mistakes.

We live in a world where the values that have historically supported team play are no longer universally held. Individualism and personal goals are greater priorities now for many. Increasing numbers of people aren’t willing or, perhaps, capable of delaying immediate gratification in favor of longer-term, bigger picture goals. This has been a big part of the problem for the 2021 Gators. Napier must build a culture for the 2022 team and beyond where mental focus and individual accountability for team goals is the measuring stick.

Mental focus aligns directly with both having an internal locus of control and with reducing external distractions. Individual accountability results from having clear standards and expectations that are reinforced when met and punished when they aren’t met.

The most successful athletes have a strong internal locus of control. They focus on the things they can control and work tirelessly to improve their ownselves. Their primarily source of motivation is on becoming the best version of themselves possible. They don’t need to be motivated by proving others wrong. They simply ignore the negativity of others because they are too busy working on the things that improve their own game. Responding to criticism on social media is the very least of their priorities. Their number of Twitter followers and their NIL agreements are clearly secondary to their football responsibilities.

The mindset during games for top performers is on making sure they are ready for the next play. The goal is to string together a series of consecutive good plays by maintaining game focus and not digressing into mini-celebrations and posturing after any decent effort. Trash talking energizes fans and social media, but most good players don’t need the distraction. They let their on field playmaking serve as their resume. This year’s Florida defense featured a handful of guys whose swagger was bigger and more consistent than their actual play. The frequent outcome was a good play followed immediately by a bad play. Staying focused and getting lined up and ready has to be a higher priority next year. On-field dancing to the music during dead-ball timeouts is time that could have been spent reviewing assignments and staying focused on the task at hand.

In terms of individual accountability for meeting team goals, consistently successful athletes play fundamentally sound assignment-based football. They fill assigned gaps and maintain contain on the edges. They line up correctly and know the snap count on each play. They understand down and distance and make in-game decisions that reflect an understanding of these concepts. They play as a part of a unit and subrogate individual attention in favor of team success. These are areas of needed improvement at Florida.

These are 18 to 22 year olds playing an intensely physical game in a high profile environment. Emotion and intensity are important components, but the ability to harness that energy constructively, deflect pressure, and perform at consistently high levels is a large part of what separates the top teams from the also rans. Without any doubt, Billy Napier’s ability to transform a program that lacked poise, focus, and accountability in 2021 into a consistent championship contender will determine if Florida is hiring a new head coach again in 2025.