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NFL Scouting Combine 4 Gators

The NFL published its list of 324 invitees to the March 1-7 Scouting Combine in Indianapolis. Included are four Gators: Dameon Pierce, Kaiir Elam, Jeremiah Moon and Zachary Carter. Here are the numbers from rivals, an upcoming opponent and other teams that recruit against us:
Georgia, 14
Alabama, 12
LSU, 9
Oklahoma, 8
Ole Miss, 8
Texas A&M, 8
Kentucky, 6
Arkansas, 5
Ohio State, 5
Auburn, 4
Clemson, 4
Tennessee, 4
Mississippi State, 3
Notre Dame, 3
Louisiana-Lafayette, 2
Texas, 2
Utah, 2
Florida State, 1

A few questions: 1) How did LSU so underachieve? 2) Why didn’t Ryan Day’s and Brian Kelly’s programs produce more perceived NFL prospects? 3) Was Utah just really young or was the Utes’ success significantly helped by playing soft competition?
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Gators Place 110 on SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll

Gators Place 110 on SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll

GAINESVILLE, Fla. - The University of Florida placed 110 student-athletes on the 2021 Southeastern Conference Fall Academic Honor Roll, announced Tuesday by league commissioner Greg Sankey.

The 2021 SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll is based on grades from the 2021 spring, summer and fall terms.

Florida's football team placed 54 honorees on the list - just one shy of the all-time league record set by the Gators a season ago.

Nine from the men's cross country team and 17 from the women's team earned spots on the SEC Academic Honor Roll.

The Gator volleyball team recorded nine honorees, while Florida's soccer team placed 21 on the SEC Academic Honor Roll.

Two earned 4.0 grade point averages - Joshua Tse (football) and Anna DeLeon (soccer).

To be recognized to the SEC Academic Honor Roll, each student-athlete must 1) have a GPA of 3.00 for either the preceding academic year or have a cumulative GPA of 3.00 or above at the nominating institution; 2) be on scholarship, a letterwinner or have participated on a varsity team for two years if non-scholarship; 3) have completed 24 semester hours of non-remedial credit at the nominating institution; and 4) have been a member of the varsity team for the sport's entire NCAA Championship segment.

University of Florida
Southeastern Conference Academic Honor Roll Recipients - Fall 2021

Name

Sport

Year

Major

Jack Anders

Football

JR

Marketing

Chief Borders

Football

SO

Biology

Demarkus Bowman

Football

SO

Education Sciences

John Brady

Football

JR

Marketing

Josh Braun

Football

JR

Classical Studies

Lacedrick Brunson

Football

GR

African American Studies

Amari Burney

Football

GR

Education Sciences

Zachary Carter

Football

SR

Education Sciences

Brenton Cox Jr.

Football

SR

Education Sciences

Jeremy Crawshaw

Football

SO

Sociology

Daniel Cross

Football

SR

Journalism

Coleman Crozier

Football

SR

Food & Resource Economics

Thaddeus Dean III

Football

SR

Education Sciences

Chase DeMichele

Football

SR

Tourism, Hospitality & Event Management

Kaiir Elam

Football

JR

Sport Management

Nick Elksnis

Football

SO

Social & Behavioral Sciences

Kyle Engel

Football

JR

Construction Management

Travis Freeman

Football

JR

General Business Administration

Richard Gouraige

Football

SR

Sociology

Fenley Graham Jr.

Football

SO

Social & Behavioral Sciences

Will Harrod

Football

JR

Criminology

Xzavier Henderson

Football

SO

Social & Behavioral Sciences

Chris Howard

Football

GR

Sport Management

Noah Keeter

Football

SO

Political Science

Jalen Kitna

Football

SO

Public Relations

Mordecai McDaniel

Football

SO

Social & Behavioral Sciences

Griffin McDowell

Football

SR

Sociology

Dylan Meeks

Football

SO

Anatomical Sciences Education

Jeremiah Moon

Football

GR

Sport Management

Daquan Newkirk

Football

GR

Sport Management Certificate

Jonathan Odom

Football

SO

Social & Behavioral Sciences

Marco Ortiz

Football

SR

Health Education & Behavior

Justin Pelic

Football

JR

Management

Mark Pitts

Football

SO

History

Antwaun Powell

Football

SO

African American Studies

Kingsley Eguakun

Football

JR

Criminology

David A Reese

Football

JR

Education Sciences

Stewart Reese

Football

GR

Tourism & Recreation Management

Daejon Reynolds

Football

SO

Sport Management

Isaac Ricks

Football

SR

Construction Management

William Sawyer

Football

JR

Mechanical Engineering

Justin Shorter

Football

SR

Education Sciences

Riley Simonds

Football

JR

Telecommunication

Nicolas Sutton

Football

GR

Management

Michael Tarquin

Football

JR

Criminology

Rashad Torrence II

Football

JR

Sport Management

Joshua Tse

Football

SR

Biomedical Engineering

Princely Umanmielen

Football

SO

Social & Behavioral Sciences

Tyler Waxman

Football

JR

Management

Chase Whitfield

Football

JR

Computer Science

Trent Whittemore

Football

SR

Sport Management

Derek Wingo

Football

SO

Social & Behavioral Sciences

Nay'Quan Wright

Football

JR

Sport Management

Jordan Young

Football

SO

Social & Behavioral Sciences

Matt Clark

Men's Cross Country

GR

Sport Management

Nick Deal

Men's Cross Country

GR

Management

Ethan Geiger

Men's Cross Country

SO

Mathematics

Josh King

Men's Cross Country

SO

Applied Physiology & Kinesiology

Reed Legg

Men's Cross Country

SO

Digital Arts and Sciences

Ryan Miller

Men's Cross Country

SO

Aerospace Engineering

Cade Monk

Men's Cross Country

JR

General Business Administration

Angel Vicioso

Men's Cross Country

SO

Economics

Cavan Wilson

Men's Cross Country

SR

Civil Engineering

Jackie Addy

Women's Cross Country

JR

Journalism

Imogen Barrett

Women's Cross Country

SR

Journalism

Grace Blair

Women's Cross Country

SR

Journalism

Payton Capes-Davis

Women's Cross Country

SR

Political Science

Emily Culley

Women's Cross Country

JR

Criminology

Gianna Forte

Women's Cross Country

JR

Applied Physiology & Kinesiology

Chloe Hyde

Women's Cross Country

JR

Journalism

Emily Jones

Women's Cross Country

SO

Public Health

Pamela O'Brien

Women's Cross Country

SR

Psychology

Stephanie Ormsby

Women's Cross Country

SO

Applied Physiology & Kinesiology

Rylee Pustilnik

Women's Cross Country

SO

Animal Sciences

Jordan Shapiro

Women's Cross Country

SO

Sport Management

Emma Solis

Women's Cross Country

SO

Applied Physiology & Kinesiology

Vasileia Spyrou

Women's Cross Country

SO

International Studies

Parker Valby

Women's Cross Country

SO

Sport Management

Liina Winborn

Women's Cross Country

SO

Psychology

Cheyenne Young

Women's Cross Country

SO

Psychology

Madison Alexander

Soccer

GR

Dietetics

Anna DeLeon

Soccer

SO

General Business Administration

Georgia Eaton-Collins

Soccer

SR

Sport Management

Francesca Faraci

Soccer

JR

Journalism

Ansley Frazier

Soccer

JR

Elementary Education

Alexa Goldberg

Soccer

SO

Astrophysics

Tori Grambo

Soccer

SO

Applied Physiology & Kinesiology

Cameron Hall

Soccer

JR

Tourism, Events & Recreation Management

Izzy Kadzban

Soccer

SO

History

Ashlyn Kane

Soccer

SO

Applied Physiology & Kinesiology

Syd Kennedy

Soccer

JR

Journalism

Kit Loferski

Soccer

GR

Management

Kouri Peace

Soccer

JR

Public Relations

Cece Price

Soccer

SO

Sociology

Maddy Rhodes

Soccer

SO

Sport Management

Shaye Seyffart

Soccer

SR

Education Sciences

Laney Steed

Soccer

JR

Sport Management

Delaney Tauzel

Soccer

SO

Applied Physiology & Kinesiology

Samantha Tobar

Soccer

SR

Psychology

Sydney Urban

Soccer

SO

Communication Sciences & Disorders

Nicole Vernis

Soccer

JR

Applied Physiology & Kinesiology

Merritt Beason

Volleyball

SO

Elementary Education

Lauren Dooley

Volleyball

SR

Linguistics

Lauren Forte

Volleyball

GR

Entrepreneurship

Thayer Hall

Volleyball

SR

Sport Management

Birdie Hendrickson

Volleyball

SO

Journalism

Elli McKissock

Volleyball

SO

Telecommunication

Marlie Monserez

Volleyball

SR

Marketing

Nnedi Okammor

Volleyball

SO

Communication Sciences & Disorders

Sofia Victoria

Volleyball

SO

Social & Behavioral Sciences
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Thoughts of the Day: February 9, 2022

By Franz Beard
A few thoughts to jump start your Wednesday morning:
GATORS HAVE TO AVOID THE BIG LETDOWN AGAINST GEORGIA

Having come from behind the last three games, all of them wins, the Gators (15-8, 5-5 SEC) can’t afford any sort of emotional letdown tonight when Georgia (6-17, 1-9 SEC) comes to the O-Dome (6:30 p.m., SEC Network). Georgia has a bad record and is probably a month away from Tom Crean pink-slipped, but the Bulldogs have pulled a shocker to beat Alabama this season and they came within a last second basket of knocking off No. 1 Auburn.

The Gators have had issues with emotions. They took then previously winless Texas Southern for granted back on December 6 and took a hosing, 69-54. The Gators lost to a below average Maryland team, 70-68, back on December 12. Florida’s January 24 loss to Ole Miss (70-54) was totally devoid of emotion and energy. All three of these losses could prove costly when the NCAA fills out its 68-team brackets. Texas Southern has a No. 173 NCAA Net Ranking while Maryland is No. 100 and Ole Miss is No. 104. Had the Gators won those three they would be 18-5 right now and either ranked or just outside the top 25.

What those three losses have done is take away any wiggle room the Gators might have with the NCAA selection committee. There are eight games remaining, four against teams with lower NCAA Net rankings than the Gators (No. 44) – Georgia (No. 207) twice, Texas A&M (No. 70) and Vanderbilt (No. 83). Consider those four must wins. If the Gators can win those four and then somehow score a win over Kentucky (No. 4), who they play twice, Auburn (No. 7) or Arkansas (No. 37), it would almost certainly put them in the 7-10 range for the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee.

The Gators are expected to go with the same starting lineup they used against Ole Miss: Colin Castleton, Anthony Duruji, Neils Lane, Phlandrous Fleming Jr. and Tyree Appleby. It’s unconventional in that Lane doesn’t even look to score, but he’s an outstanding defender who operates one of the points in Florida’s 2-2-1 press. Castleton came back from a three-week absence against Ole Miss with 17 points, seven rebounds, three blocked shots and a steal. Appleby had a double-double against Ole Miss, 10 points and 10 assists.

Beal out for the rest of the NBA season: Former Gator Bradley Beal will miss the remainder of the NBA season after undergoing surgery to repair ligament damage in his wrist. A three-time all-star, Beal was averaging 23.6 points and 6.6 assists per game for the Washington Wizards. He is eligible to sign a 5-year contract for $245 million next year.

SEC Basketball
Tuesday’s scores:
Arkansas (19-5, 8-3 SEC) 80, No. 1 Auburn (22-2, 10-1 SEC) 76; No. 5 Kentucky (20-4, 9-2 SEC) 86, South Carolina (13-10, 4-7 SEC) 76; LSU (17-7, 5-6 SEC) 76, Texas A&M (15-9, 4-7 SEC) 68; Vanderbilt (13-10, 5-6 SEC) 70, Missouri (9-14, 3-7 SEC) 62
Wednesday’s games: Georgia (6-17, 1-9 SEC) at FLORIDA (15-8, 5-5 SEC); Alabama (14-9, 4-6 SEC) at Ole Miss (12-11, 3-7 SEC); No. 19 Tennessee (16-6, 7-3 SEC) at Mississippi State (14-8, 5-4 SEC)

KIKI SMITH SEC WOMEN’S BASKETBALL PLAYER OF THE WEEK
For the second time this season, guard Kiki Smith has been named SEC Player of the Week. In leading the Gators to wins over then No. 7 Tennessee and then No. 14 Georgia, Smith combined for 35 points, 13 rebounds, seven assists and five steals. Against Tennessee, Smith had 25 points, five rebounds, five assists and four steals. The two wins helped the Gators crack the Associated Press Top 25 poll where they are ranked 19th.

The Gators (17-6, 7-3 SEC) are on the road Thursday night when they travel to Starkville to face Mississippi State (14-7, 5-4 SEC).

NAPIER BY THE NUMBERS AT HIS PREVIOUS JOB
Here are some key stats from Billy Napier’s four seasons as the head coach at Louisiana, where he was 40-12.

2018 (7-7): The Rajin Cajuns averaged 218.71 yards per game rushing and 205.6 passing. Trey Regas (Now with the Raiders) gained 1,181 yards and Elijah Mitchell (49ers) had 977 yards and 13 touchdowns. Louisiana threw 16 TDPs in 2017, 27 in 2018.

2019 (11-3): The Rajin Cajuns averaged 37.9 points per game and trimmed 15 points off defensively (19.7) from 2018. They ran for 257.43 yards with Mitchell running for 1,147 and 16 TDs, Raymond Calais (Rams) had 886 and six TDs, and Regas had 820 and 11 TDs. Louisiana averaged 236.7 per game passing with Levi Lewis throwing for 26 TDPs with only four picks.

2020 (10-1): The Cajuns upset then No. 12 Iowa State in the season opener of the COVID year. They threw for 208.5 yards per game with Lewis throwing 19 TDPs while running for five more. Louisiana ran for 213 per game with Mitchell running for 878 and eight TDs and Regas getting 758 and 10. The defense gave up 22 points per game but picked off 16 passes and allowed only 10 TDPs.

2021 (12-1): The Cajuns threw for 218.5 yards per game with Lewis throwing 20 TDPs (only four picks) while running for five more. On the ground, the Cajuns averaged 194 yards per game with 34 rushing TDs led by Chris Smith with 856 yards and eight TDs and Montrell Johnson getting 838 and 12 TDs. The defense gave up only 18.5 points and 340.9 yards per game. Louisiana forced 23 turnovers and only turned it over eight times all year.

SEC FOOTBALL/BASKETBALL NOTES
Alabama:
Former Alabama running back Santonio Beard, who once scored five touchdowns in a game against Ole Miss, was shot and killed in Lithonia, Georgia. Beard ran for 1,526 yards and 16 touchdowns in his Alabama career … Alabama shoots more 3-pointers than any Division I team in the country but the Crimson Tide is shooting only 30.5 percent, which ranks 321st out of 358 teams.

Arkansas: When the Hogs (19-5, 8-3 SEC) beat Auburn (22-2, 10-1 SEC), 80-76, in overtime Tuesday night at Bud Walton Arena it marked the first win over a No. 1 ranked team since 1984 when Arkansas upset Michael Jordan and North Carolina. The win was Arkansas’ ninth in a row and their eighth straight in SEC play after an 0-3 start.

Auburn: While Auburn’s high-powered boosters and the administration debate on his future, head football coach Bryan Harsin continues to vacation outside the country … A substantial gift by Auburn power booster Bill Neville will result in an upgraded basketball practice facility and Neville getting his name on the outside of Auburn Arena ... In their 80-76 overtime loss to Arkansas at Bud Walton Arena Tuesday night, the Tigers shot 8-32 from the 3-point line and 8-17 from the foul line.

Georgia: Kirby Smart has targeted Auburn secondary coach Zac Etheridge to replace Jahmile Addae, who left to coach the secondary at Miami.

Kentucky: Kentucky’s indoor football practice facility is shared with the track team. That is about to change as UK will build Mark Stoops a 100 percent football only indoor facility ... Shaedon Sharpe, a 5-star recruit who left high school to enroll early in January, will not play this season … Oscar Tshiebwe had 18 points and 14 rebounds in Kentucky’s 89-76 win over South Carolina. Tshiebwe is the nation’s leading rebounder.

LSU: In beating Texas A&M on the road Tuesday night, LSU (17-7, 5-6 SEC) broke a 3-game losing streak. LSU got 11 points from point guard Xavier Pinson, back in the lineup for the first time since an early January knee injury … While declaring that he would never resume his coaching career on Nick Saban’s staff at Alabama, former LSU coach Ed Orgeron said he wants to coach again either in the college ranks or NFL. Smart money is that he will be joining buddy Lane Kiffin on the staff at Ole Miss either as an assistant or in a well-paid support position.

Mississippi State: Mississippi State and Southern Miss will play home-and-home in 2030-31 with the 2030 game in Hattiesburg.

South Carolina: Jody Wright, who spent the last two seasons as an assistant with the New York Giants, is expected to be named tight ends coach … Former Gamecock DeVonte Holloman, a key player for Steve Spurrier’s 2009-10 teams, has taken a position on Shane Beamer’s support staff.

Tennessee:
Forward Olivier Nkamhoua, who has started 22 games this season while averaging 8.6 points and 5.6 rebounds, will miss the rest of the season with an ankle injury.

Texas A&M: Back on January 15, the Aggies were 15-2 and off to a 4-0 start in SEC play. Since then, they’ve lost seven in a row.

Vanderbilt: To replace defensive coordinator Jesse Minter, who left to become the defensive coordinator at Michigan, HBC Clark Lea promoted Nick Howell. Howell was hired from Virginia after Bronco Mendenhall retired.

ONE FINAL PITHY THOUGHT: If a lawsuit filed Tuesday by the National College Players Association that claims unfair labor practices against Southern Cal, UCLA, the Pac-12 Conference and the NCAA succeeds then every Division I athlete playing men’s and women’s college basketball and college football will be considered employees of their schools. As Dan Murphy of ESPN writes, “The NCAA would no longer be able to place limits on how much schools pay their athletes.” In other words, stipends would be out and contracts and salaries would be in.

This is the second major lawsuit filed with the National Labor Relations Board since the NCAA got clobbered at the United States Supreme Court in the infamous NCAA vs. Alston ruling. Although that ruling pertained to name, image and likeness, the door was opened for athletes to be declared employees. And, once they are deemed employees, they will have the right to unionize, which essentially will be the end of college sports as we know them. Sure, sports will go on, but it’s never going to be the same again. Players will have rights that they’ve never had, but don’t think for a second that they will have all the power.

Nobody seems to be talking about the fact that players as employees can be fired on the spot. A coach, who is the CEO of his sport, will be able to randomly cut players to get his roster under control. Imagine, if you will, a head coach whose roster is right at the 85-scholarship limit. He gets contacted by a productive wide receiver who wants to transfer in. Instead of saying there’s no room at the inn to the transfer wide receiver, he simply calls in an unproductive player to tell him he’s been cut from the team. There is the issue of taxation, too. If athletes are employees, then they will have to pay taxes on salaries, but perhaps on scholarships and other benefits received.

For every plus the athletes will have there will indeed be a minus. The biggest minus of all may be that college athletics might end up being an independent entity that rents the stadiums, etc.

Writing for Sports Illustrated, Ross Dellenger quotes Kansas City-based attorney Mit Winter with this very chilling statement about how colleges and universities may respond to employee-athletes replacing the student-athlete:

“I don’t know if universities and conferences and the NCAA want to participate in a system where they are collectively bargaining with the athletes. It remains to be seen,” he said in an interview in October. “There are different models that have been kicked around where athletic teams are spun off from the school and are their own standalone entities.”

If Winter is correct, get ready for the Chico’s Bail Bonds Georgia Bulldogs or the Yella Wood Auburn Tigers or the Publix Florida Gators.

Gators Post Combined 18-Under, Sit Tied for Second

Gators Post Combined 18-Under, Sit Tied for Second
Round two was suspended due to darkness as the Gators trail two strokes from the lead.

BOCA RATON, Fla. - The Florida women's golf team currently sits 18-under in a tie for second after the second round of the FAU Paradise Invitational was suspended due to darkness on Monday.

The spring opener was originally delayed an hour and half due to fog in the morning.

The Gators started the spring strong with a round one combined score of 278 (-10) for the lowest round of the season as the previous (279) was in the opening round of The Ally in the fall. Florida last recorded the mark at the 2021 Gators Invitational as it was only four strokes off the program record (274) set at the Stanford Collegiate in 2019.

Annabell Fuller led the lineup with a bogey free 66 (-6) in round one, tying her collegiate best she set at last year's Gators Invitational. She sits in second at 10-under and is 4-under through 16 with 11 birdies and only one bogey.

Four other Gators recorded low rounds in the first round of the spring in Jenny Kim (-4), Clara Manzlini (-2), Marina Escobar (-1) and Maisie Filler (-1). Kim's round set a new career-best as her previous was a 70 at the Pat Bradley Invite in 2019.

After round one Florida was five strokes from the lead and began to cut into the Mississippi State advantage in the second round before it was stopped. Round two will resume tomorrow at 7:30 a.m. ET followed by the final round.
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Follow the science? Never was. Follow the politics.

Follow the science will go down as one of the biggest bs expressions regarding covid as we heard.
Follow the politics is certainly in play as several blue states, almost at the same time, have announced relaxing mandate/mask requirements. Not a coincidence. They all read the memo coming from democrat headquarters on better do something quick or the blood bath in November will be even worse.

Jamarrien Burt signed with Oklahoma

I know he was committed to Dan but wasn’t recruited by the new staff. Seemed there were a lot of posters that weren’t happy when we took his commitment.
Recruiting: Oklahoma commit Jamarrien Burt holds signing ceremony at Ocala Forest

Recruiting Help

So just to give some of you my background. I've been in basketball for 20+ years coaching HS, training HS, college & pros in the offseason and now I run a post graduate basketball program (a program for graduated HS players that had either no offers or ones that weren't happy with). So I coach essentially a JUCO basketball program but I'm also heavily involved in recruiting year round. I still also help train player at various levels in the offseason. If any member wants to reach out for advice at anytime about the recruiting process I have no problem answer questions or helping out in any capacity. I know it can be overwhelming for parents at times, they may not know the right questions to ask, or they don't know how to get their kids recruited. Anyway, I just wanted to make a post to let members know you can reach out & I'm more than willing to help in anyway that I can. The only reason I posted this is because a member a few months ago had some questions, I answered, but then others were a little upset because it overran the original thread. So I told the board I'd post something down the road. Anyway, just wanted to help any parents out there that may have some questions. And feel free to DM me here if you don't want to post on this thread also

How to tell if a dem is still asleep

First of all, if you are a dem and still asleep, it's ok, as long as you eventually WAKE UP. And you likely will. Those of us who have woken up are frustrated that it's taking some of you so long, but I get it.

If you're still asleep, the first thing you want to do is deny that you're snoring. So you get defensive, and blindly defend and parrot dem talking points.

Anyone that calls you out is the idiot. THEY are the ones falling for 'disinformation'.

You hunker down, you only listen to sources telling you what you want to hear. Have you noticed that the sleepy ones have adopted a new phrase? "I listen to the experts'. That's a blanket excuse for not thinking for themselves.

Another giveaway; Notice many of them said they voted for Hiden cause he wasn't Trump? We voted for mccain then mittens simply because he wasn't obama.

They are asleep, just like we used to be.

Stuff like Hiden and @CFAGator bragging about how good the economy is will actually help wake people up. When we saw a disconnect between what the pubs were telling us and what reality was, that opened our eyes. When I saw john mccain show up at 3am to officially kill a repeal of obamacare, breaking his key campaign promise in the process, that told me I'd been lied to.

So to my still snoozing Americans, here's how you can tell when you are fully awake: When you realize there is no democratic party, and there is no republican party.

There's just US vs THEM. See you on the other side.

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Suggested research for some of you

Go start around the year 2000. Go through all of our classes (especially Urbans outside of the Lakeland crew) and just get a good feel for where the studs from each class are from. Then do yourself a favor and start at 2000 and look at the state of FL rankings and see where the top kids go.

After you’ve done all that, relax and let Billy do his damn job the way he sees fit.

Top 2025 QB will be visiting for spring practice

I just finished exchanging messages with Ryan Montgomery’s dad. Florida is one of four spring practice stops they plan on making. I believe it says a lot about his interest in the program as the other three stops are at Notre Dame, Michigan and Ohio State who have already offered. He is the younger brother of four-star OL Luke Montgomery for those who are not familiar with him.
This kid is special and should be in the running for the top ranked QB in the 2025 class. Take a look at the film if you haven’t already…

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Thoughts of the Day: February 8, 2022

By Franz Beard
A few thoughts to jump start your Tuesday morning:
WAS DAMEON PIERCE THE VICTIM OF COACHING MALPRACTICE?

Eric Edholm, who writes for Yahoo Sports, spent last week observing practices at the Senior Bowl where he came away shaking his head when it comes to former Gator running back Dameon Pierce. In four seasons at Florida, Pierce ran for 1,806 yards on 329 carries, averaged 5.5 yards per carry and scored 23 touchdowns. He also caught 45 passes for 422 yards (9.4 per carry) and five more TDs.

Just for the sake of comparison, Pierce’s productivity per touch isn’t that far off Alabama’s Najee Harris. Harris had double the carries and receptions in his four years at Alabama, gaining 3,843 yards (6.0 per carry, 46 TDs) while catching 80 passes for 781 yards (9.8 per catch, 11 TDs).

Why Pierce wasn’t given more carries and receptions has boggled the minds of Gator fans for the last four years. Eric Edholm was wondering the same thing after seeing Pierce at Senior Bowl practice.

“The question I came away with from this week: Why didn’t Dan Mullen and the Gators feature Pierce more? The Senior Bowl is seldom a place where backs can impress significantly but Pierce bucked that trend.

“All week long he looked assertive as a runner and pass blocker and facile as a receiver. Watching his burst, vision and yards-after-contact ability, Pierce looked more like a big fish in a small pond rather than someone who averaged fewer than 100 touches over his four seasons in Gainesville.

“How the 5-9, 220-pound back never received more than 17 touches in his 48 college games feels like coaching malpractice.”

The Gators had very productive offenses all four years that Pierce played. Sure, that 2018 team had Jordan Scarlett and Lamical Perine, so there weren’t many carries to be had for a true freshman, but there is no question Pierce should have been more involved in the offense the other three years. He showed the kind of speed he had in 2019 when he broke off a 75-yard TD run that led the comeback win over South Carolina. How is it a back with that kind of speed who could run through tacklers only carried the football 54 times that year? How is it that Pierce never had more than 13 carries in a game in 2021 when every time he touched the ball it seemed he broke at least one tackle or flattened the poor soul attempting to bring him down?

Mullen typically was too involved in the play calls so he left the rotation at each position to his assistant coaches, but he’s the head coach. He watched the film. He saw what was going on. He should have grabbed Greg Knox by the lapels and told him either Pierce is in the game and more involved in the offense or you can find a new job somewhere else, words Mullen should have shared with a few other assistant coaches to whom he was far too loyal.

Of course, there is a silver lining in Dameon’s favor. Because he’s had less wear and tear on his body the last four years, he should have a longer NFL career. Still, if he had carried the ball more often and been on the receiving ends of more passes, he might have earned a bigger signing bonus than the one he will get when he is drafted in April.

ANOTHER FIRST FOR KELLY RAE: GATORS CRACK AP TOP 25

It took awhile, but the rest of the country is finally catching on to a couple of things: First off, Kelly Rae Finley should be on everybody’s short list for both SEC and national coach of the year, and secondly, the Gators (17-6, 7-3 SEC) are that hot team nobody in the Southeastern Conference wants to play. Florida’s 54-51 win over Georgia was the fifth over a ranked team in the last month and it earned the Gators their first national ranking since 2015.

Finley has the Gators playing with a whatever it takes to win mentality, especially on the defensive end where Florida’s guards proved way too quick in last week’s wins over then No. 7 Tennessee and No. 14 Georgia.

The 19th-ranked Gators have six games remaining in the regular season, all of them winnable including 14th-ranked LSU in Baton Rouge. Florida’s last 20-win season was 2015-16 when the Gators finished 22-9. At their present pace, the Gators have a chance to either match or exceed the school record for wins in a season (24), which has been achieved four times.
The Associated Press Top 25 poll: 1. South Carolina 21-1; 2. Stanford 18-3; 3. Louisville 21-2; 4. Michigan 20-2; 5. North Carolina State 20-3; 6. Arizona 17-3; 7. Indiana 16-3; 8. UConn 15-4; 9. Iowa State 20-3; 10. Baylor 17-5; 11. Georgia Tech 18-4; 12. Oklahoma 20-3; 13. Tennessee 19-4; 14. LSU 18-4; 15. Maryland 17-6; 16. Texas 15-6; 17. Georgia 17-5; 18. Notre Dame 18-5; 19. FLORIDA 17-6; 20. BYU 19-2; 21. Ohio State 16-4; 22. Florida Gulf Coast 21-1; 23. North Carolina 18-4; 24. Oregon 14-7; 25. Iowa

APPLEBY HAS BECOME FLORIDA’S GLUE GUY
Perhaps we’re seeing the Tyree Appleby we always thought we were getting when he transferred to UF after two standout seasons at Cleveland State. It’s not that Appleby was a disappointment prior to these last seven games, it’s just that he’s blossoming into the kind of point guard the Gators have lacked since Andrew Nembhard took his game to Gonzaga.

When Colin Castleton went down with a shoulder injury that kept him out of six games, Florida’s season seemed on the brink, but that’s when Appleby stepped up his game. On both ends of the court, Appleby has become Florida’s take charge guy. Offensively, he’s averaging 14.7 points and 4.87 assists per game in the last seven. He’s only hitting 32.8 percent from the 3-point line for the season, but he’s hitting 38% (19-50) in the last seven games. He’s also Mr. Clutch at the foul line, hitting 36-39 to bring his season total to 86.6 percent. When Castleton was out, the Gators had to rely heavily on quickness and full court pressure. Appleby has been outstanding both in the press and handling his guy man-to-man.

Appleby had his first bad shooting game in awhile (1-10 from the field overall, 1-6 from the 3-point line) this past Saturday, but he compensated with 10 assists and going 7-8 from the foul line in overtime as the Gators won their third straight game, 62-57.

SEC Basketball
Tuesday’s games:
No. 1 Auburn (22-1, 10-0 SEC) at Arkansas (18-5, 7-3 SEC); No. 5 Kentucky (19-4, 8-2 SEC) at South Carolina (13-9, 4-6 SEC); LSU (16-7, 4-6 SEC) at Texas A&M (15-8, 4-6 SEC); Missouri (9-13, 3-6 SEC) at Vanderbilt (12-10, 4-6 SEC)
Wednesday’s games: Georgia (6-17, 1-9 SEC) at FLORIDA (15-8, 5-5 SEC); Alabama (14-9, 4-6 SEC) at Ole Miss (12-11, 3-7 SEC); No. 19 Tennessee (16-6, 7-3 SEC) at Mississippi State (14-8, 5-3 SEC)

The Associated Press Top 25 poll: 1. Auburn 22-1; 2. Gonzaga 19-2; 3. Purdue 20-3; 4. Arizona 19-2; 5. Kentucky 19-4; 6. Houston 20-2; 7. Duke 19-3; 8. Kansas 19-3; 9. Texas Tech 18-5; 10. Baylor 19-4; 11. Providence 20-2; 12. UCLA 16-4; 13. Illinois 17-5; 14. Wisconsin 18-4; 15. Villanova 17-6; 16. Ohio State 14-5; 17. Michigan State 17-5; 18. Marquette 16-7; 19. Tennessee 16-6; 20. Texas 17-6; 21. Southern Cal 19-4; 22. Saint Mary’s 19-4; 23. Murray State 22-2; 24. UConn 15-6; 25. Xavier 16-6
The Coaches Top 25 poll: 1. Gonzaga 19-2; 2. Auburn 22-1; 3. Purdue 20-3; 4. Kentucky 19-4; 5. Arizona 19-2; 6. Duke 19-3; 7. Houston 20-2; 8. Kansas 19-3; 9. Texas Tech 18-5; 10. Baylor 19-4; 11. Providence 20-2; 12. UCLA 16-4; 13. Illinois 17-5; 14. Wisconsin 18-4; 15. Villanova 17-6; 16. Ohio State 14-5; 17. Michigan State 17-5; 18. Tennessee 16-6; 19. Marquette 16-7; 20. Texas 17-6; 21. Southern Cal 19-4; 22. Saint Mary’s 19-4; 23. UConn 15-6; 24. Murray State 22-2; 25. Wake Forest 19-5

SEC FOOTBALL NOTES
Georgia:
Secondary coach Jahmile Addae has departed for Miami, which gave him a 2-year contract.

Mississippi State: Backup quarterback Jack Kristofek is in the transfer portal.

Missouri: Defensive coordinator Steve Wilks has interviewed for the vacant New York Giants defensive coordinator position.

Texas A&M: Commenting on the “Pat McAfee Show,” ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit addressed Jimbo Fisher’s recent rant. “I have no idea what’s true and what’s not in this world of NIL,” Herbstreit said. “There are always rumors that A&M has a bunch of money and a bunch of boosters that are throwing big money into a pot and then just divvying it up to players and recruits.”

ONE FINAL PITHY THOUGHT: What’s going on at Auburn should be entitled, “The Dysfunction at the Junction.” But, then again, it is Auburn. What do you expect?

There is every good chance that Auburn is going to fire football coach Bryan Harsin. They would love to find some speck of dust that they could say taints the whole program. Then the power brokers who are behind this latest palace coup, wouldn’t have to write buyout checks, but again, this is Auburn. If buying out Bryan Harsin’s contract after just 13-1/2 months on the job is what it takes for them to hire a new coach then that’s what they’ll do. Count on it.

Buying out Harsin would set the boosters back $18.3 million. Sounds like a lot but it pales in comparison to the $21.7 million it cost them to buy out Gus Malzahn even though he’s the only man on the planet that’s beaten Nick Saban three times since 2007. Gus is making $2.3 million a year now at UCF, which not only affords him a rather nifty lifestyle but allows him to keep that $21.7 million earning interest every day.

Before Gus, the Auburn boosters paid Gene Chizik $11.09 million to go away two years after he had put together one of the greatest unbeaten national championship runs in 2010 when former Gator Cam Newton led the way and won the Heisman Trophy. Before Chiz there was now Senator Tommy Tuberville, who they paid $5.1 million to leave even though he had an unbeaten season to his credit and had bushwhacked Alabama seven straight years.

Tubs is perhaps the poster child for just how dysfunctional they are at Auburn. Two days before Tubs and Auburn beat Alabama 28-23 in the 2003 Iron Bowl, Bobby Lowder, Auburn president William Walker, athletic director David Housel and a few cronies capable of writing big checks boarded a jet for Louisville where they made a verbal hire of Bobby Petrino. Somehow word leaked out and the rank-and-file Auburn boosters rallied behind Tubs, forcing Lowder and his henchmen to back off. Tubs went 13-0 the next season. Eventually, these same people bought out Tuberville after he went 5-7 in 2008, with the misfortune of losing to Vandy and 36-0 to Alabama, but the damage was done five years earlier. Despite the great season in 2004, it was only a matter of time before the big money boosters ran Tubs off.

So absorb this number: $62.39 MILLION. That’s what Auburn will have paid to buy out every single coach dating back to Terry Bowden if the boosters succeed in firing Bryan Harsin.

And, do you want to know it is rumored the money boosters want to replace Harsin, a good football coach, with? Kevin Steele. The same Kevin Steele who got buyout money when Gus was fired (Steele was DC), buyout money from Tennessee for serving as interim coach for one month when Jeremy Pruitt was fired, and who spent four days as the DC at Maryland only to take the DC job at Miami.

Firing Harsin will be stupid. If Kevin Steele is the replacement coach, then stupid has just been taken to a level lower than anything we could dream or imagine.
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