Former Tennessee and Philadelphia Eagle end Ray Graves, a Georgia Tech assistant, was anointed as Florida's new head coach for the 1960 season and his staff included Gene Ellenson, young Air Force offensive coach Pepper Rodgers, and former Gator QB Jimmy Dunn. He would leave it to offensive-guru Rodgers to leave the Woodruff era behind. The more open and productive Offense paved the way to a 9-2 finish that included a 13-12 Gator Bowl victory over Baylor, with Auburn, the only SEC loss. That 10-7 disappointment cost Florida the SEC crown but upsets over Georgia Tech and LSU made Grave's debut memorable. HB Lindy Infante scurried to a TD that made the Tech game close at 17-16 with only thirty-three seconds left. The two-point conversion won it 18-17 which greased the skids for the rest of the season.
An offensive collapse that brought but seven points in three games despite good play from Florida’s tiny QB Larry Libertore and RB's Lindy Infante and Bob Hoover left the Gators with a surprisingly poor 4-5-1 mark at the end of the '61 season. The 7-4 team of 1962 played erratically although Soph FB Larry Dupree led the SEC in rushing with 619 yards and was SEC Sophomore Of The Year. Teaming with RB's Infante and Bob Hoover, QB Tom Shannon led a good offense in a three-unit rotation. Leading Duke 21-0 at the half and losing 28-21 mirrored the unpredictable play. Still, the team came to the Gator Bowl to defeat highly favored Penn State by 17-7 as defensive coach Ellenson presented his new Monster Defense which effectively shut down the Penn State Offense.
“If we had won, it would have been a mockery to everything for which football stands…We weren’t ready for the game and Florida was.”—Penn State backfield coach Joe Paterno when explaining Penn State’s 17-7 loss to Florida in the 1962 Gator Bowl.
The 6-3-1 team of 1963 was epitomized by the heart of Larry Dupree whose baby was stillborn and buried the next day while his wife lay ill in a hospital bed. With her encouragement and sleep-deprived for three days, Dupree's father-in-law, the head of the area Highway Patrol, gave him a police convoy that got him to the Georgia game by kickoff where the Gators won the 21-14 contest. QB Tom Shannon led the charge in the 10-6 upset of Bama-Bear Bryant’s first in Tuscaloosa.
There was excitement on campus and among members of the staff in 1964 as sophomore QB Steve Spurrier took the reins of the Gators and took them to a 7-3 season that included upset wins over LSU who was Sugar Bowl-bound, Auburn, an Miami. With FB Larry Dupree missing time due to injury, the big contest was against Alabama, both undefeated going into the season's fourth game which Alabama won in a hard fought 17-14 contest.
Spurrier at times had senior QB Tom Shannon filling in for him and Charley Casey was a reliable receiver for both. Spurrier finished the season ranked third in the SEC in total offense in a preview of more to come. It was clearly Spurrier's team in '65 with soph Harmon Wages backing him up. Offensive coach Pepper Rodgers had taken the head coaching job at UCLA and Graves was now inclined to allow Spurrier to throw almost at will. With receivers Richard Trapp and Charley Casey who led the SEC in receiving, the strategy was sound. The payback wins over Georgia by 14-10 and Florida State in a 30-17 finale, were offset by upset losses to Mississippi State and Miami. All American safety Bruce Bennett was the hub of the defense. The Gators 7-3 mark put them into the Sugar Bowl against Big 8 champ Missouri where they lost in a furious comeback attempt, 20-18 after going for 2 point conversion attempts and failing after all 3 Touchdowns.
If Steve Spurrier was not there for his senior season of glory, Larry Smith, a sophomore Fullback out of Tampa would have been everyone's season highlight favorite, leading the SEC in rushing and adding twenty-three receptions out of the backfield.. Smith was the total package who could and would block, run, throw, or catch. However, All American Steve Spurrier was back for his final campaign and he made it a dandy. Leading what Head Coach Ray Graves called "My best team, all around", Spurrier had the rushing of Smith to to balance out his passing to Richard Trapp. The team ripped off seven straight wins. Spurrier had a rare bad day against Georgia, throwing three INT's in six passes, falling 27-10 to the Bulldogs which once again cost Florida the SEC title. scUM upset them 21-16 in the year's final game as Ted Hendricks controlled the field, but 9-2 got them to the Orange Bowl where Spurrier led Florida to a 27-12 victory over Georgia Tech. Larry Smith had a memorable 90+ yard touchdown run despite the fact that his pants were falling down as he broke free. Steve Spurrier capped the season by becoming Florida's first Heisman Trophy Winner-a result that was all but assured after his late game heroics in a victory over Auburn which included Spurrier kicking the game winning field goal.
The Gators 1967 season ended in a decent but disappointing 6-4 record after would-be starting QB Harmon Wages was suspended for disciplinary reasons. While the program was solid and the teams most often competitive, it seemed that their inability to capture an SEC title while loaded with talent was unacceptable and frustrating to their fans and alumni. 1968 had the mix of a great sophomore class and some seasoned vets as well. Larry Smith, the offensive leader pulled a hamstring muscle before the season's opener and suffered further injury against Vanderbilt later in the year. Despite good play from junior DB Steve Tannen, soph DE Jack Youngblood, and a 4-0 burst out of the gate, what had become an almost annual swoon ruined the year. After a devastating loss to Georgia, many felt it was time for Graves to step down. Winning the final two games brought a respectable 6-3-1 but far from the expected championship-run season. Not yet having won an SEC title, and appraising the high level of talent in his '68 freshmen players, Graves decided to give it one more shot and announced that he would coach another season.
Ray Graves did a terrific job recruiting, especially with the limitations imposed by Florida's stricter-than-the-rest-of-the-SEC academic qualifications. This gave him teams that were always solid and competitive, but teams that also disappointed the boosters and fans because the ever-elusive SEC title was expected at some point in time. He wanted one more season to enjoy the "Super Soph" class, as they were known, and make a bid for a major bowl game and the conference championship.
QB John Reaves was the sophomore leader and he didn't disappoint. Following neighbor and former Gator RB Larry Smith to Gainesville, he set the bar by taking on top ten Houston in the opener and put on such an exciting show, including a 70-yard TD bomb to Carlos Alvarez on his first pass in the 58-34 win, that paying customers who had heard the game on the radio were still streaming in during the fourth quarter. Sophomore RB's Tommy Durrance did the pounding as Reaves threw to TE Jim Yancey and sophomore consensus All American Carlos Alvarez, a Cuban refugee who was so fast he needed a double team at all times. Upperclassmen Kim Helton at center and captain and tackle Mac Steen led up front. The defense was tough with DE Jack Youngblood and senior DB Steve Tannen patrolling the secondary.
The Gators, lost only to Auburn although the 13-13 tie with Georgia stung because once again, it cost them the SEC title. If the 1969 season would have ended at 8-1-1, Graves could have retired gracefully but SEC Champion Tennessee and Florida agreed to meet in the Gator Bowl while rumors swirled about UT head coach Doug Dickey, taking over as Florida's head coach. Both teams were angry and distracted and when Florida beat the SEC Champion Vols 14-13 in the Gator Bowl, the players could only see that they were getting "the losing coach" as their new mentor. Compounded by Graves "second thoughts" that perhaps he should stay for another title run, his retirement and move to full time Athletic Director proved to be messy and had a psychological carry-over into 1970.
An offensive collapse that brought but seven points in three games despite good play from Florida’s tiny QB Larry Libertore and RB's Lindy Infante and Bob Hoover left the Gators with a surprisingly poor 4-5-1 mark at the end of the '61 season. The 7-4 team of 1962 played erratically although Soph FB Larry Dupree led the SEC in rushing with 619 yards and was SEC Sophomore Of The Year. Teaming with RB's Infante and Bob Hoover, QB Tom Shannon led a good offense in a three-unit rotation. Leading Duke 21-0 at the half and losing 28-21 mirrored the unpredictable play. Still, the team came to the Gator Bowl to defeat highly favored Penn State by 17-7 as defensive coach Ellenson presented his new Monster Defense which effectively shut down the Penn State Offense.
“If we had won, it would have been a mockery to everything for which football stands…We weren’t ready for the game and Florida was.”—Penn State backfield coach Joe Paterno when explaining Penn State’s 17-7 loss to Florida in the 1962 Gator Bowl.
The 6-3-1 team of 1963 was epitomized by the heart of Larry Dupree whose baby was stillborn and buried the next day while his wife lay ill in a hospital bed. With her encouragement and sleep-deprived for three days, Dupree's father-in-law, the head of the area Highway Patrol, gave him a police convoy that got him to the Georgia game by kickoff where the Gators won the 21-14 contest. QB Tom Shannon led the charge in the 10-6 upset of Bama-Bear Bryant’s first in Tuscaloosa.
There was excitement on campus and among members of the staff in 1964 as sophomore QB Steve Spurrier took the reins of the Gators and took them to a 7-3 season that included upset wins over LSU who was Sugar Bowl-bound, Auburn, an Miami. With FB Larry Dupree missing time due to injury, the big contest was against Alabama, both undefeated going into the season's fourth game which Alabama won in a hard fought 17-14 contest.
Spurrier at times had senior QB Tom Shannon filling in for him and Charley Casey was a reliable receiver for both. Spurrier finished the season ranked third in the SEC in total offense in a preview of more to come. It was clearly Spurrier's team in '65 with soph Harmon Wages backing him up. Offensive coach Pepper Rodgers had taken the head coaching job at UCLA and Graves was now inclined to allow Spurrier to throw almost at will. With receivers Richard Trapp and Charley Casey who led the SEC in receiving, the strategy was sound. The payback wins over Georgia by 14-10 and Florida State in a 30-17 finale, were offset by upset losses to Mississippi State and Miami. All American safety Bruce Bennett was the hub of the defense. The Gators 7-3 mark put them into the Sugar Bowl against Big 8 champ Missouri where they lost in a furious comeback attempt, 20-18 after going for 2 point conversion attempts and failing after all 3 Touchdowns.
If Steve Spurrier was not there for his senior season of glory, Larry Smith, a sophomore Fullback out of Tampa would have been everyone's season highlight favorite, leading the SEC in rushing and adding twenty-three receptions out of the backfield.. Smith was the total package who could and would block, run, throw, or catch. However, All American Steve Spurrier was back for his final campaign and he made it a dandy. Leading what Head Coach Ray Graves called "My best team, all around", Spurrier had the rushing of Smith to to balance out his passing to Richard Trapp. The team ripped off seven straight wins. Spurrier had a rare bad day against Georgia, throwing three INT's in six passes, falling 27-10 to the Bulldogs which once again cost Florida the SEC title. scUM upset them 21-16 in the year's final game as Ted Hendricks controlled the field, but 9-2 got them to the Orange Bowl where Spurrier led Florida to a 27-12 victory over Georgia Tech. Larry Smith had a memorable 90+ yard touchdown run despite the fact that his pants were falling down as he broke free. Steve Spurrier capped the season by becoming Florida's first Heisman Trophy Winner-a result that was all but assured after his late game heroics in a victory over Auburn which included Spurrier kicking the game winning field goal.
The Gators 1967 season ended in a decent but disappointing 6-4 record after would-be starting QB Harmon Wages was suspended for disciplinary reasons. While the program was solid and the teams most often competitive, it seemed that their inability to capture an SEC title while loaded with talent was unacceptable and frustrating to their fans and alumni. 1968 had the mix of a great sophomore class and some seasoned vets as well. Larry Smith, the offensive leader pulled a hamstring muscle before the season's opener and suffered further injury against Vanderbilt later in the year. Despite good play from junior DB Steve Tannen, soph DE Jack Youngblood, and a 4-0 burst out of the gate, what had become an almost annual swoon ruined the year. After a devastating loss to Georgia, many felt it was time for Graves to step down. Winning the final two games brought a respectable 6-3-1 but far from the expected championship-run season. Not yet having won an SEC title, and appraising the high level of talent in his '68 freshmen players, Graves decided to give it one more shot and announced that he would coach another season.
Ray Graves did a terrific job recruiting, especially with the limitations imposed by Florida's stricter-than-the-rest-of-the-SEC academic qualifications. This gave him teams that were always solid and competitive, but teams that also disappointed the boosters and fans because the ever-elusive SEC title was expected at some point in time. He wanted one more season to enjoy the "Super Soph" class, as they were known, and make a bid for a major bowl game and the conference championship.
QB John Reaves was the sophomore leader and he didn't disappoint. Following neighbor and former Gator RB Larry Smith to Gainesville, he set the bar by taking on top ten Houston in the opener and put on such an exciting show, including a 70-yard TD bomb to Carlos Alvarez on his first pass in the 58-34 win, that paying customers who had heard the game on the radio were still streaming in during the fourth quarter. Sophomore RB's Tommy Durrance did the pounding as Reaves threw to TE Jim Yancey and sophomore consensus All American Carlos Alvarez, a Cuban refugee who was so fast he needed a double team at all times. Upperclassmen Kim Helton at center and captain and tackle Mac Steen led up front. The defense was tough with DE Jack Youngblood and senior DB Steve Tannen patrolling the secondary.
The Gators, lost only to Auburn although the 13-13 tie with Georgia stung because once again, it cost them the SEC title. If the 1969 season would have ended at 8-1-1, Graves could have retired gracefully but SEC Champion Tennessee and Florida agreed to meet in the Gator Bowl while rumors swirled about UT head coach Doug Dickey, taking over as Florida's head coach. Both teams were angry and distracted and when Florida beat the SEC Champion Vols 14-13 in the Gator Bowl, the players could only see that they were getting "the losing coach" as their new mentor. Compounded by Graves "second thoughts" that perhaps he should stay for another title run, his retirement and move to full time Athletic Director proved to be messy and had a psychological carry-over into 1970.