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Video: 2025 QB Ryan Montgomery talks early offers, Florida spring practice visit

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Topics:

- What it is like to have such big offers at such a young age.
- How his brother's commitment to Ohio State will impact his decision

Spring Practice stops:
Michigan
Notre Dame
Ohio State
Florida
Penn State

Summer stops at:
Georgia
Tennessee
LSU
Alabama

Thoughts of the Day: March 2, 2022

By Franz Beard
A few thoughts to jump start your Wednesday morning:
YA GOTTA BELIEVE! GATORS STAGE IMPROBABLE RALLY TO BEAT VANDY

Improbable might be the wrong word to use here. Impossible might be better, because Florida’s 82-78 come-from-behind win over Vanderbilt at Memorial Gym Tuesday night had that impossible feel to it and left you wondering how it happened.

“You feel like you stole one,” Florida coach Mike White said after the Gators (19-11, 9-8 SEC) kept their NCAA Tournament hopes from slip-sliding away by outscoring the Commodores, 9-0, in the final 31 seconds. “You’re always talking about trying to steal one on the road. We really stole this one.”

Scotty Pippen Jr. hit a pull-up jumper in the lane with 44.3 seconds remaining that gave the Commodores a 78-73 lead. The ball wasn’t the only thing that drained through the bottom of the net. So did the collective stomachs of the entire Gator Nation. Dead-in-the-water? That was the feeling, but if there is one thing that is becoming increasingly evident about this Florida team it is they don’t give up. They may lose games, but not because they gave up.

Thirteen seconds after the Pippen dagger, Vandy made the mistake of fouling Colin Castleton. He was on radar lock, knocking down both ends of a 1-and-1 to make it 78-75 but on the inbounds pass, Vandy found Pippen sprinting behind the Florida defense past midcourt. Pippen, who had already worn the Gators out for 29 points, gathered in the pass and streaked to the basket for what looked to be a breakaway dunk.

Here is where that never give up attitude showed up. Phlandrous Fleming Jr. trailed Pippen, caught up with him at the rim and got a hand on top of the ball for a clean block. Tyree Appleby retrieved the ball and started a fast break the other way that ended Fleming finding Tuongthach Gatkek for a layup to cut the Vanderbilt lead to 78-77 with 21 seconds remaining.

“Everybody in the gym thought he [Pippen] had it,” Fleming said. “I thought he was going to try and dunk it. My teammates even told me that they if they would have seen the picture, they didn’t think I was going to go and get it.”

Vandy called a 30-second time out with 19.9 seconds remaining to set up an inbounds play, knowing fully well the Gators were going to foul whoever caught the ball. With the 5-second count about to expire, Jordan Wright’s inbounds pass skipped out of bounds without touching anyone. Florida basketball. Still 19.9 on the clock.

The Gators inbounded the ball to Appleby, who evaded defenders and then dumped the ball off to Castleton. Three Commodores converged around Castleton but before they could collapse on him he passed to the left corner to Fleming, who drilled a three with 6.3 seconds to go, giving the Gators an 80-78 lead.

There was still enough time for Vandy to either tie or win the game. The Commodores put the ball in Pippen’s hands and he dribbled down the sideline only to be fouled by Brandon McKissic. Pippen at the line, 1-and-1, 2.3 seconds to go. At that point, everyone at Memorial Gym was thinking overtime but Pippen did the unthinkable, hit the back rim on the first shot. Castleton rebounded, was fouled with 0:00.5 left, and hit the two free throws that finalized a win nobody expected with a half minute to go in the game.

This was a game that had a Florida loss written all over it in the second half when Vanderbilt drained seven 3-pointers and led by as many as nine (65-56) with 8:58 to go. It was eight (76-68) with 3:50 to go when Trey Thomas hit his fifth three of the game. The rest of the way, however, the Gators outscored Vanderbilt 14-2 and 9-0 in the final 31 seconds.

For the second straight game, Fleming was a hero. He scored a season-high 27 back on Saturday to lead the Gators past Georgia, a game played before a huge contingent of family and friends in his home town of Athens. Fleming scored 16 against Vandy to go with four rebounds, six assists, two blocked shots and three steals.

He loved making the game-winning shot, but admitted post-game that his highlight was the block.

“I’m a defender first,” Fleming said.

Thanks to this impossible win, the Gators are in far better shape when it comes to the NCAA Tournament. A loss would have seriously harmed UF’s chances but this win keeps the tournament very much in play. A win over Kentucky in the O-Dome Saturday could seal it.

Beating Kentucky? Impossible? So was outscoring Vandy 9-0 in the last 31 seconds.

Tuesday’s scores: FLORIDA (19-11, 9-8 SEC) 82, Vanderbilt (14-15, 6-11 SEC) 78; No. 13 Tennessee (22-7, 13-4 SEC) 75, Georgia (6-24, 1-16 SEC) 68; No. 7 Kentucky (24-6, 13-4 SEC) 83, Ole Miss (13-17, 4-13 SEC) 72; South Carolina (18-11, 9-8 SEC) 73, Missouri (10-20, 4-13 SEC) 69Wednesday’s games: Texas A&M (18-11, 7-9 SEC) at No. 25 Alabama; No. 5 Auburn (25-4, 13-3 SEC) at Mississippi State (17-12, 8-8 SEC); LSU (20-9, 8-8 SEC) at No. 14 Arkansas (23-6, 12-4 SEC)

GATORS WIN SIXTH STRAIGHT WITH 11-2 WIN OVER UNF

Josh Rivera led a 13-hit Florida attack with a homer and five RBI Tuesday night as the 14th-ranked Gators hammered North Florida, 11-2, for their sixth straight win. Six Florida pitchers combined to limit the Ospreys to four hits as Brandon Neely got the win with five strikeouts and one hit allowed in two scoreless innings.

This was the third straight game the Gators have scored at least 10 runs. Rivera had a 2-run single in the fourth, a bases-loaded walk in the fifth and 2-run homer in the ninth to pave the way. The homer was his second of the season. Also leaving the yard for the Gators were Sterlin Thompson (4th) with a solo homer in the seventh and freshman Deric Fabian, who had a two-run homer in the eighth. Fabian went 3-4 while brother Jud had two hits and an RBI single.

Colby Halter, who had an 8-13 weekend, continued his hot hitting with a 2-3 night to raise his batting average to .447.

The Gators have their final tuneup for their weekend series at Miami when they play host to Florida A&M tonight at the Florida Ballpark.
UF SOFTBALL: GATORS HOST SOUTHERN MISS
The 3rd-ranked Gators go for their 17th straight win this evening against Southern Miss (11-5) at Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium (6 p.m.). With Elizabeth Hightower (4-0, 0.69 ERA) potentially sidelined for awhile with back issues, Tim Walton might be using this game to get some innings and experience for Rylee Trlicek (1-0, 3.09 ERA) and Marissa Mesiemore (1-0, 5.00 ERA). Lefty Haley Pittman hasn’t seen any action in the circle all season.

Walton might need all three of these pitchers this weekend when the Gators play doubleheaders Friday, Saturday and Sunday as part of the Bubly Invitational.

KIKI SMITH MAKES FIRST TEAM ALL-SEC, ALL-DEFENSIVE TEAM
Kiki Smith, who averaged 14.9 points, 5.5 rebounds, 4.6 assists and 2.4 steals to lead Florida’s resurgent women’s basketball team to a 20-9 regular season finish, was selected first team All-SEC and to the All-Defensive Team Tuesday. Smith is the first Gator to make first team All-SEC since Ronni Williams did it in 2017. She is just the third Gator selected to the All-Defensive team.

Named to the All-Freshman team was Alberte Rimdal, who averaged 5.3 points and 1.1 rebounds per game in SEC play.

The Gators face the winner of the first round matchup between Texas A&M and Vanderbilt Thursday at 3 p.m. in the SEC Tournament in Nashville.

TRINITY THOMAS SEC GYMNAST OF THE WEEK
After a nation-leading 39.850 all-around and a perfect 10 on floor to help the 3rd-ranked Gators beat 2nd-ranked Oklahoma, who else but Trinity Thomas could have won SEC Gymnast of the Week? Thomas won or shared the title in all four events against Oklahoma with a 9.925 on vault, 9.950 on bars, 9.975 on beam and the final 10 that sealed Florida’s victory. The 10 was the fifth this season and the 13th of her career. It was the 16th time in her career that Thomas has won SEC Gymnast of the Week.

The Gators travel to No. 6 Auburn Friday with a chance to clinch the outright SEC championship. The Gators (10-0) already own a share of the championship, the fourth straight year they’ve been SEC champs.

SEC FOOTBALL/BASKETBALL NOTES
Alabama:
Former Auburn wide receivers coach Cornelius Williams is now an offensive analyst at Alabama.

Auburn: Walker Kessler is a semifinalist for Naismith Defensive Player of the Year. Kessler is averaging 4.7 blocked shots per game, which leads the nation.

Georgia: Georgia has hired Stacey Searels from North Carolina to coach the offensive line. Searels was Georgia’s offensive line coach from 2007-10. Searels almost became Florida’s O-line coach in 2014 when Will Muschamp tried to hire him away from Texas.

Kentucky: Scott Woodward, who was an analyst last season, is the new wide receivers coach, replacing Jovon Bouknight. Bouknight, who had some off the field issues, has taken an off-the-field role with the UK staff … Oscar Tshiebwe, who leads the SEC and nation in rebounding (15.3 per game), is a semifinalist for Naismith Defensive Player of the Year. Tshiebwe had 18 points and two steals in Kentucky’s win over Ole Miss Tuesday night.

LSU: Tari Eason is a semifinalist for Naismith Defensive Player of the Year. Eason is averaging 16.5 points, 6.9 rebounds, 2.0 steals and 1.1 blocked shots per game.

ONE FINAL PITHY THOUGHT: Oh, the fun we’re about to have with college football’s version of No Child Left Behind. In other words, expansion, contraction and of course, court cases. We can’t have schools shuffling from one conference to another without some lawsuits, now can we?

Comparatively speaking, Texas and Oklahoma leaving the Big 12 for the SEC is Romper Room. Eventually, they’ll pay a whopping exit fee that the Big 12 will, in turn, use to help offset the exit fees Houston, Cincinnati and UCF have to pay the American Athletic Conference. Meanwhile, the AAC has compensated for its loss ty raiding Conference USA for UAB, Rice, North Texas, Texas-San Antonio, Charlotte and Florida Atlantic.

Conference USA probably could have handled losing those six schools but then Marshall, Southern Miss and Old Dominion bolted for the Sun Belt, which also added D1AA powerhouse James Madison. That left Conference USA with Florida International, Louisiana Tech and UTEP. Western Kentucky and Middle Tennessee flirted with joining the MAC only to decide to remain in Conference USA, which also has added Jacksonville State and Sam Houston State from D1AA, and New Mexico State and Liberty. Those four join in 2023.

This is when things get fun. The Sun Belt has released its schedule for 2022 with all four of the newbies playing eight league games. Marshall, ODU and James Madison are all in the Sun Belt East while Southern Miss will be in the Sun Belt West.

There is only one teensy little problem. Conference USA has requested a court injunction to keep Marshall, ODU and Southern Miss in the league at least for 2022. There is no doubt these three will be leaving Conference USA, but the question is when? Conference USA by-laws require a 14-month notification when teams wish to bolt and clearly, that has been ignored. There has been no attempt at arbitration by Conference USA to force the three departing schools to pay an exit. So far, courts seem to be siding with Marshall, ODU and Southern Miss.

The chaos that is ahead causes me to believe one of two things happening: (1) The Big Ten will raid the Big 12 for Kansas and Iowa State which will result in the Pac-12 cherry picking Baylor, Texas Tech, TCU and Oklahoma State from the Pac-12; or (2) what we now know as Division I contracts from more than 130 schools to somewhere between 80 and 96 with rules limiting the new Division I to football schools to those with stadiums that seat more than 30,000 that average more than 20,000 in attendance.

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Biden disapproval hits new high as voters give him bad grades

  • President Joe Biden’s overall disapproval rating reached a new high in December as more voters signaled their unhappiness with his handling of the economy and the Covid pandemic.
  • Results from a CNBC/Change Research poll show 60% of respondents said they disapprove of Biden’s handling of the economy as he nears the conclusion of his first year in office.
  • On personal economic issues, voters are even more likely to criticize the president. Some 72% disapprove of his handling of the price of everyday goods, while 66% disapprove of his efforts to help their wallets.

Let's Go Brandon!! :mad:

Insider's Thread: 2025 IMG DE Dylon Worthen on his Florida game-day visit

Dylon Worthen caught attention during his freshman year becoming one of the leaders on Georgia’s Dodge County defense. The end tallied 48 stops in nine games with 13 tackles for a loss and 11 QB hurries. When the lights come on fall of 2022, Worthen will be handing out headaches to offenses for Florida’s IMG Academy with college coaches watching.

Worthen (6-2.5, 230) is already drawing interest from top programs that includes Georgia, Florida State, Michigan and Florida. During the 2021 season, Worthen took game-day visits to Georgia, Florida, and Florida State.

The Gators impressed the rising talent.

“It was great,” Worthen stated. “They were playing Tennessee; it was really hyped. There was a lot of enthusiasm.”

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Thoughts of the Day: March 1, 2022

By Franz Beard
A few thoughts to jump start your Tuesday morning:
KELLY RAE FINLEY HAS THE INTERIM LABEL REMOVED!

Kelly Rae Finley has shed the interim label. Florida athletic director Scott Stricklin made her the head coach of the Florida women’s basketball program moving forward Monday. The decision to remove the interim label was made weeks ago, but not announced until Monday. The timing couldn’t have come at a better time.

Having lost the final three games of the regular season, the Gators needed an emotional lift and seeing Finley named as the permanent head coach might be just what they needed. They’ve been putting far more pressure on themselves lately than necessary.

“I think we got here by being ourselves,” Kiki Smith said after the Gators lost to Missouri Sunday afternoon. “One thing we talk about a lot is when we have fun we play our best basketball and I do think because we are who we are, we forget about the fun side of it. Now, to us [lately] it’s business but I think once we get back to the fun part – and you know still keep in the back of our minds we’re trying to get somewhere – we’ll get back to playing the basketball that as a team we know we can play and that we’ve played before. So we’ve just got to bring that fun back that we were playing with before we were in this position. Once we get back to that, we’ll shock a lot of people once we get into the tournaments.”

Making basketball fun is just one reason Finley earned the job. She took over a toxic situation when Cam Newbauer was fired and instantly began the process of winning this team over, one kid at a time. Finley believes it’s not a one-size-fits-all profession but it takes each individual giving up something to be a part of a team. So from a potential full scale mutiny, which was what was about to take place prior to Newbauer’s dismissal, Finley healed the team one player at a time and instilled a winning attitude. Remember, this is a program that suffered through five straight losing seasons and now the Gators head into the SEC Tournament ranked 23rd nationally and with a 20-9 record that includes wins over five ranked teams.

“I want to say there’s some magical thing, but there is not,” Finley told me last week in an interview. “It’s a people-centered business. Sport is fun at its core and we try to keep it that way. It’s not always going to be like that. It’s hard. There are disappointments. There are expectations. There are games that you will lose that you didn’t want to lose but that’s part of it.”

Now they have to regroup before Thursday when they face the winner of Vanderbilt-Texas A&M in the second round of the SEC Tournament. By removing the interim label on Monday when he made the announcement in the UF locker room, Stricklin probably took all the pressure off the Gators moving forward this year and after. Finley, after all, is considered a dynamic recruiter.

“Kelly Rae is such a talented young coach, whose natural poise, intelligence and relational abilities have all been on display during this remarkable Gators’ women’s basketball season,” Florida athletic director Scott Stricklin said a statement released to the media. “I’m excited that she’ll have the opportunity to build off this year’s success and that future Gators will be able to benefit from her leadership the way this team has.”

Associated Press 25: 1. South Carolina 27-1; 2. Stanford 25-3; 3. North Carolina State 26-3; 4. Louisville 25-3; 5. Baylor 23-5; 6. LSU 25-4; 7. UConn 22-5; 8. Iowa State 24-4; 9. Texas 21-6; 10. Michigan 22-5; 11. Maryland 21-7; 12. Iowa 20-7; 13. Ohio State 22-5; 14. (Tie) Indiana 19-7 and Arizona 20-6; 16. North Carolina 23-5; 17. BYU 25-2; 18. Tennessee 22-7; 19. Oklahoma 22-6; 20. Notre Dame 21-7; 22. Florida Gulf Coast 26-2; 23. FLORIDA 20-9; 24. Georgia 20-8; 25. Georgia Tech 20-9

NET RANKINGS MAKE VANDY GAME EVEN MORE IMPORTANT FOR UF
The latest NCAA Net Rankings moved Vanderbilt (14-14, 6-10 SEC) to No. 74, which increases the need for Florida (18-11, 8-8 SEC) to score a win tonight at Memorial Gym (8:30 p.m., SEC Network). Under the Net Rankings system a road win over a top 75 team counts as a Quad 1 win, something that has been in short supply for the Gators, 2-8 in Quad 1 with their only wins over No. 20 Ohio State and No. 11 Auburn.

At No. 51 in the Net Rankings, the Gators are squarely on the bubble for the NCAA Tournament. A win over Vandy might not be that impressive but a loss, would be devastating to Florida’s shaky tournament chances.

When Florida beat Vanderbilt 61-42 in January, the Gators were without Colin Castleton but Jason Jitoboh filled in nicely with six points, 10 rebounds, an assist, a block and a steal. Jitoboh is out for the season but Castleton is back, playing the best basketball of his career. Potentially out, however, is Anthony Duruji, who had eight points and seven rebounds in the first game while spearheading the best defensive effort of the season. Duruji has a lower leg injury that prevented him from playing in the Gators’ 84-72 win over Georgia.

Tuesday’s games: FLORIDA (18-11, 8-8 SEC) at Vanderbilt (14-14, 6-10 SEC); No. 13 Tennessee (21-7, 12-4 SEC) at Georgia (6-23, 1-15 SEC); Ole Miss (13-16, 4-12 SEC) at No. 7 Kentucky (23-6, 12-4 SEC); Missouri (10-19, 4-12 SEC) at South Carolina (17-11, 8-8 SEC)
Wednesday’s games: Texas A&M (18-11, 7-9 SEC) at No. 25 Alabama (19-10, 9-7 SEC); No. 5 Auburn (25-4, 13-3 SEC) at Mississippi State (17-12, 8-8 SEC); LSU (20-9, 8-8 SEC) at No. 14 Arkansas (23-6, 12-4 SEC)

Associated Press Top 25: 1. Gonzaga 24-3; 2. Arizona 25-3; 3. Baylor 24-5; 4. Duke 25-4; 5. Auburn 25-4; 6. Kansas 23-5; 7. Kentucky 23-6; 8. Purdue 24-5; 9. Providence 24-3; 10. Wisconsin 23-5; 11. Villanova 21-7; 12. Texas Tech 22-7; 13. Tennessee 21-7; 14. (Tie) Houston 24-4 and Arkansas 23-6; 16. Southern Cal 25-4; 17. UCLA 21-6; 18. UConn 21-7; 19. Saint Mary’s 24-6; 20. Illinois 20-8; 21. Texas 21-8; 22. Murray State 28-2; 23. Ohio State 18-8; 24. Iowa 20-8; 25. Alabama 19-10

Coaches Top 25: 1. Gonzaga 24-3; 2. Duke 25-4; 3. Arizona 25-3; 4. Baylor 24-5; 5. Auburn 25-4; 6. Kentucky 23-6; 7. Kansas 23-5; 8. Providence 24-3; 9. Purdue 24-5; 10. Wisconsin 23-5; 11. Villanova 21-7; 12. Texas Tech 22-7; 13. Tennessee 21-7; 14. Houston 24-4; 15. Arkansas 23-6; 16. Southern Cal 25-4; 17. Illinois 20-7; 18. UCLA 21-6; 19. UConn 21-7; 20. Saint Mary’s 24-6; 21. Texas 21-8; 22. Murray State 28-2; 23. Ohio State 18-8; 24. Alabama 19-10; 25. (Tie) Iowa 20-8 and Michigan State 19-9

HALTER SEC CO-PLAYER OF THE WEEK
All Colby Halter did last week was go 12-22 at the plate (.545) with two doubles, three home runs, six RBI and a stolen base as the 14th-ranked Gators won five straight games to improve to 6-2 on the season. Halter was also selected as one of the National Players of the Week by Collegiate Baseball. For the season, Halter is hitting .429 with three homers and seven RBI.

The Gators travel to Jacksonville to face North Florida tonight. Last week, Brandon Sproat struck out eight in five innings as the Gators beat UNF 3-1 at the Florida Ballpark.

D1Baseball Top 25: 1. Texas 8-0; 2. Ole Miss 6-0; 3. Arkansas 4-2; 4. Oklahoma State 4-2; 5. Vanderbilt 5-2; 6. Stanford 6-1; 7. LSU 7-1; 8. North Carolina State 8-0; 9. Mississippi State 4-3; 10. Florida State 5-2; 11. Arizona 7-1; 12. Notre Dame 5-1; 13. Oregon State 7-0; 14. FLORIDA 6-2; 15. Georgia 7-0; 16. TCU 6-1; 17. Tennessee 7-0; 18. Georgia Tech 7-1; 19. Texas Tech 5-2; 20. Liberty 6-1; 21. Maryland 7-0; 22. Miami 7-1; 23. Sacramento State 7-0; 24. North Carola 6-1; 25. Long Beach State 2-4

USA Today Top 25: 1. Texas 8-0; 2. Ole Miss 6-0; 3. Stanford 6-1; 4. North Carolina State 8-0; 5. Vanderbilt 5-2; 6. Arkansas 4-2; 7. LSU 7-1; 8. Oklahoma State 4-2; 9. Oregon State 7-0; 10. Arizona 7-1; 11. Tennessee 7-0; 12. Notre Dame 5-1; 13. Georgia 7-0; 14. TCU 6-1; 15. Mississippi State 4-3; 16. FLORIDA 6-2; 17. Florida State 5-2; 18. Texas Tech 5-2; 19. Liberty 6-1; 20. Georgia Tech 7-1; 21. Maryland 7-0; 22. Virginia 7-0; 23. Miami 7-1; 24. North Carolina 6-1; 25. Sacramento State 7-0

FALBY SEC FRESHMAN OF THE WEEK
For the second straight week, Kendra Falby was named SEC Co-Freshman of the Week. Falby hit .476 for the week with 10 hits including a home run, six stolen bases and five RBI. For the season, Falby leads the 3rd-ranked Gators (16-0) with a .519 batting average, 27 hits, 22 runs scored and 17 stolen bases in 18 attempts.

Next up for the Gators is a Wednesday encounter with Southern Miss (11-5) at Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium.

D1Softball Top 25: 1. Oklahoma 15-0; 2. Alabama 15-0; 3. FLORIDA 16-0; 4. UCLA 12-3; 6. Virginia Tech 11-2; 7. Duke 13-3; 8. Arkansas 8-3; 9. Oklahoma State 10-4; 10. Washington 11-4; 11. Northwestern 10-4; 12. Missouri 12-4; 13. Clemson 10-3; 14. Kentucky 13-1; 15. Oregon 11-3; 16. Michigan 8-5; 17. Tennessee 9-6; 18. Arizona 10-4; 19. Georgia 14-2; 20. Auburn 15-1; 21. Louisiana 10-2; 22. LSU 12-5; 23. South Florida 10-3; 24. Arizona State 9-4; 25. Oregon State 12-3

ONE FINAL PITHY THOUGHT: Writing at Saturday Down South, Matt Hayes quoted an NFL scout who had the following to say about former Gator running back Dameon Pierce: “Here’s the thing with Pierce – he showed out so well at the Senior Bowl, he eliminated all hesitation about his part-time role [at Florida]. He’s not the fastest guy, but he’s solid, strong, a big back with twitch. He doesn’t have the tape that Najee Harris had from his college career, and he’s not at that 1st-round level, but I can’t stop thinking of Harris when I was [Pierce] play. He has those Harris jump cuts, and the strength to shed tackles. He’s dangerous in the pass game, too. He’s going to be a player in this league.”

In four years at Florida, we saw Dameon Pierce do things like break a 75-yard run against South Carolina, run over tacklers, pick up blitzing linebackers and put them on their backs, catch passes and score lots of touchdowns. What we didn’t see was Pierce getting a chance to be the featured back.

Ever.

Why was that? It is understandable that he was the third back as a freshman in 2018 when the Gators had Jordan Scarlett and Lamical Perine who combined for 1,602 yards and 12 touchdowns. Pierce averaged 5.65 yards per carry in 2019 but he only carried the ball 54 times. In 2020, he carried 106 times for 503 yards. The Gators had an elite passing game but the way the Gators were able to fling it all over the field, Pierce should have gotten more carries against defenses that were dropping seven and eight to protect against the pass. He got 100 carries in 2021 but it wasn’t until the final two games that he got more than 10 in a game.

Pierce finished his UF career with 329 carries for 1,806 yards and 23 rushing touchdowns. He caught 45 passes for 422 yards and five TDs. In 2020 when Alabama won the national championship, Harris had 251 carries for 1,466 yards and 26 touchdowns while catching 43 passes for 425 yards and four more TDs. What comparing the numbers tells us is that Dameon Pierce was severely under-used during his Florida career.

The good news? He will have fresh legs and a healthy body as he begins his NFL career. Good for him, but it still doesn’t explain how Dan Mullen and running backs coach Greg Knox couldn’t figure out they had a tremendous running back who should have had the ball in his hands far more often.
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