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Thoughts of the Day: February 14, 2022

By Franz Beard
A few thoughts to jump start your Monday morning:
TUESDAY MAY DETERMINE UF’S FATE IN THE POSTSEASON

We may only be halfway through February, but we’re already in the must-win section of Florida’s basketball schedule. The Gators (16-9, 6-6 SEC) got hosed at Rupp Arena Saturday by a Kentucky (21-4, 10-2 SEC) team that has a Final Four look about it. That was pretty much expected since the Wildcats are talented and deep and the Gators have had to wade through another season of injuries. It’s not so much the Gators were exposed by Kentucky since we already know UF has serious limitations, but it was painfully clear just how fragile the Gators are. They can play for stretches with just about anyone in the country, but it takes stars and planets aligning for the Gators to beat a ranked team.

Tuesday night in College Station, the Gators will be facing a team that in many respects bears a strong resemblance. Like the Gators, there are nights when Texas A&M (15-10, 4-8 SEC) can play with anyone but the Aggies do have limitations. They don’t shoot the ball very well, they turn the ball over a lot and they have problems rebounding since they typically play a 4-guard lineup. They’ve lost eight straight and have gone from a team that was on every bracket a month ago to one that needs to right itself to even make the NIT.

The Gators still can make the NCAA Tournament, but they can’t afford a slip-up on road trips to A&M, Vanderbilt and Georgia, three teams that the NCAA Net Rankings say UF should beat. Florida’s No. 49 NCAA Net Ranking puts the Gators squarely on the NCAA bubble and since neither Texas A&M (73), Vanderbilt (76) or Georgia (205) is a Quad 1 opponent, a loss would be devastating to UF’s chances. Lose one of those three and it might take a small miracle for UF to avoid playing in the Nobody’s Interested Tournament. Win those three and then score a win in one of the three remaining home games – No. 1 Auburn, Arkansas and No. 5 Kentucky – and the Gators should make the NCAA Tournament with room to spare.

SEC Basketball
Tuesday’s games: FLORIDA (16-9, 6-6 SEC) at Texas A&M (15-10, 4-8 SEC);
South Carolina (14-10, 5-7 SEC) at Ole Miss (12-13, 3-9 SEC); No. 5 Kentucky (21-4, 10-2 SEC) at No. 19 Tennessee (18-6, 9-3 SEC); Arkansas (19-6, 8-4 SEC) at Missouri (10-14, 4-7 SEC)
Wednesday’s games: Georgia (6-19, 1-11 SEC) at LSU (18-7, 6-6 SEC); Mississippi State (14-10, 5-6 SEC) at Alabama (16-9, 6-6 SEC); Vanderbilt (13-11, 5-7 SEC) at No. 1 Auburn (23-2, 11-1 SEC)

A WIN TONIGHT MOVES WOMEN’S BB ONE STEP CLOSER TO THE DOUBLE BYE
The 19th-ranked Gators (18-6, 8-3 SEC) have to be wary tonight when they face Auburn (9-13, 1-10) on the road. Although Auburn sits dead last in the SEC, their only win in league play was over Tennessee, which was ranked 4th nationally at the time. Since that win Auburn is 0-3 but the Tigers had lost seven straight when they beat Tennessee.

It’s coming down to crunch time for the Gators, who need to win three of their last five games to ensure they’ll have the double-bye at the SEC Tournament. So, a win tonight gets them one step closer, and to a place Florida women’s basketball hasn’t been in years. The last time a Florida women’s team had 10 SEC wins was 2016. Kelly Rae Finley also has the Gators within striking distance of the school record for wins in a season (24), achieved by Amanda Butler and twice by Carol Ross, and most SEC wins in a season (11 by Ross in 2001).

SEC Women’s Basketball
Sunday’s scores:
No. 13 Tennessee (21-4) 66, Vanderbilt (12-14, 3-9 SEC) 52; No. 1 South Carolina (23-1, 11-1 SEC) 72, No. 17 Georgia (17-7, 6-6 SEC) 54; Kentucky (10-11, 3-8 SEC) 67, Alabama (12-11, 3-9 SEC) 63; No. 14 LSU (21-4, 9-3 SEC) 74, Texas A&M (14-10, 4-8 SEC) 58; Arkansas (16-8, 6-5 SEC) 88; Missouri (16-9, 5-7 SEC) 71; Mississippi State (15-8, 6-5 SEC) 70, Ole Miss (18-6, 6-5 SEC) 59
Monday’s game: NO. 19 FLORIDA (18-6, 8-3 SEC) at Auburn (9-13, 1-10 SEC)

UF SOFTBALL: GATORS 24, EVERYBODY ELSE 1

To be sure, Tim Walton already has a list that he’s checked more than twice, dissecting every single thing that could have been or should have been in Tampa this weekend. That’s what great coaches do, but you can also know that he’s not the least bit disappointed with the results at the Rawlings USF Tournament – a 4-0 record by the 5th-ranked Gators that includes a win over 16th-ranked Michigan, three shutouts, a near no-hitter by freshman Lexie Delbrey, a clutch game-winning grand slam by Cheyenne Lindsay, home runs by freshmen Kendra Dalby and Samantha Roe, and four errorless games.

Because it’s the first weekend of the season, Walton isn’t going to read too much into the outcome, but instead he’ll think of it as a really good start. In going 4-0, the Gators shut out Illinois State 3-0, knocked off Kansas City 7-1, took a 4-0 win over Michigan when Delbrey pitched her gem and Lindsey the grand slam, and then Sunday, got a third shutout and 12 hits when they blew the doors off host South Florida.

Here are a few highlights:
Falby, hitting in the 9-slot, went 6-11 with a double, a home run, four RBI and 4-4 on stolen bases.
Hannah Adams went 6-12 with a triple and two RBI.
Alabama transfer Skylar Wallace went 5-14 with an RBI and 3-3 on stolen bases.
Roe went 2-6 including a home run, two RBI and two sacrifices.
Delbrey gave up one hit, two walks and struck out five in her first career start against Michigan.
Elizabeth Hightower got three wins in 12-1/3 innings, giving up six hits, four walks and striking out 12.
Natalie Lugo pitched 3-1/3 innings, gave up three hits, two walks and struck out three.

Next up for the Gators is a road trip to Jacksonville Tuesday night followed by the Wednesday home opener against the same JU Dolphins on Wednesday.

UF GYMNASTICS: THIS COULD BE A VERY SPECIAL SEASON
Jenny Rowland has assembled a powerful Florida team and barring injuries, could be one that hoists a national championship trophy when the season ends. Florida’s heart-stopping win over 5th-ranked LSU on Friday showed the kind of talent Rowland has. The Gators overcame a bad day at the office by Sloane Blakely and a 9.7 on the balance beam that she absolutely owns by Trinity Thomas to go into the final rotation tied at 148.350. So all the Gators did was dial up a 49.800 finish with two 9.9s (Alyssa Baumann and Megan Skaggs), a 9.950 (Blakely), a pair of 9.975s (Leanne Wong and Thomas) and a 10 (Nya Reed) to score the win.

What’s amazing about what the Gators have done so far is that (a) Rowland still hasn’t settled in on the rotation that’s going to take her to nationals and (b) Wong, the 2021 World Championships silver medalist, is just now getting into a groove. By the time the Gators face Oklahoma (February 25, O-Dome) and Auburn (March 4 on the road), Rowland should have the Gators starting to laser in on the run to a championship.

OTHER UF SPORTS: With Fred Biondi tying the tournament record at 14-under par, the 29th-ranked Gators scored a 12-stroke victory over 4th-ranked Oklahoma State in the VyStar Invitational. It was Florida’s third straight win in the VyStar … With their win in the FAU Paradise Invitational last week, the Florida women’s golf team is now ranked 6th by GolfWeek ... Florida’s 7th-ranked lacrosse team opened its season with a 22-7 win over Kennesaw State behind six goals by Emma LoPinto ... The 13th-ranked Florida women’s tennis team (7-2) salvaged the weekend at the ITA Women’s Indoor Championships with a 4-0 win over 16th-ranked Washington. The Gators lost to 7th-ranked Virginia, 4-2, and 11th-ranked Ohio State, 4-3, in their matches Friday and Saturday … The 5th-ranked Florida men’s tennis team begins competition in the ITA Men’s Indoor Championships today ... The Florida men’s and women’s swimming teams will be competing at the SEC Championships starting Tuesday in Knoxville. The Florida men are ranked 5th nationally while the Florida women are ranked 17th … At the Tyson Invitational in Fayetteville, Arkansas, Florida’s 4X400 men’s relay team ran a 3:02.09 to win with the best time in the NCAA and the world this year. Talitha Diggs ran a 22.75 200 meters, best time in the NCAA and fourth fastest in the world this year. The Florida women are ranked No. 1 in the country while the Florida men are ranked 9th.

ONE FINAL PITHY THOUGHT: Writing for Saturday Down South, Dave Hooker compared the hire and subsequent soap opera that involves Auburn’s Bryan Harsin with Mike Price, the former Alabama coach who never actually coached a game after an infamous outing at a Pensacola strip joint where he partied with a debutante named Destiny. Writes Hooker, who was assigned to write about the 10 worst coaching hires in SEC history, “Price is simply the GOAT of bad hires and it’s not even close.” Harsin might be a truly bad fit for Auburn, but you can blame Auburn for that. After spending $21.7 million to make Gus Malzahn go away, most of the good coaches wouldn’t give Auburn a sniff. Desperate times call for desperate measures and Harsin, who actually can coach football, was willing to say yes when Auburn threw a bunch of money at him. But, that doesn’t make him the worst hire ever or even one of the top 10 worst in SEC history.

Hooker gave a few bad hire examples, but didn’t elaborate on a top 10 worst, so I’ll offer my list of the 10 worst:

1. Mike Price, Alabama: Hooker is right. Second place isn’t even close.
2. Ears Whitworth, Alabama: He went 4-24-2 and that was WITH Bart Starr as his QB. He was so bad they had to go hire Bear Bryant.
3. Robbie Caldwell, Vanderbilt: He went 2-10 in 2010. He was really bad.
4. Curley Hallman, LSU: Couldn’t coach, couldn’t recruit in a talent-rich state where kids essentially recruit themselves to the school.
5. Derek Dooley, Tennessee: Prior to Tennessee, where he had three straight losers, Dooley had two losing seasons out of three at Louisiana Tech. They must have thought that because his last name is Dooley he could actually coach.
6. Ed Orgeron, Ole Miss:
Yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, football! He had never been a head coach or a coordinator and it showed.
7. Jack Crowe, Arkansas: He got fired one game into his third season for losing to The Citadel.
8. John L. Smith, Arkansas: He took over plenty of talent left behind after Bobby Petrino’s infamous motorcycle encounter of the closest kind and ran the program in the ground. That was 2012 and Arkansas hasn’t recovered yet.
9. Will Muschamp, Florida:
Great guy. Knows his defense, but should have spent three or four years beating the bushes and learning how to be a head coach. That he was a bad hire at Florida is as much or more on the administration as it is on Will. Florida is not a place for on the job training.
10. Ray Goff, Georgia:
He had two decent seasons in seven years after taking over for Vince Dooley. Georgia fans will always remember him for going 0-7 against the Gators and giving up 52 points to UF between the hedges in 1995.

Recruiting Thread

Since tomorrow is National Signing Day, I figured some would be posting about who we did and didn't sign. I'll start things by reporting that Texas wide receiver D J Allen, who was down to choosing between Florida and TCU, committed to TCU today. https://theathletic.com/news/tcu-tops-florida-for-4-star-wr-dj-allen/Uu7S4ORNGMFH/

Meanwhile Jacksonville Bolles DE/OLB Jack Pyburn became the first Bolles player in a long time, if ever, coming to Gainesville by committing to the Gators this afternoon, choosing UF over Miami & Auburn.

CNN's Jake Tapper calls out Biden's rejection of Army report "insulting"

Tapper nailed him good.

Biden our perfect president. Has not made a single mistake.

Pro-Style or Dual-Threat?

Pro-Style or Dual-Threat?

I did a ton of digging over the last week or so regarding what direction we can expect to see us go with QB’s. Yes, are people trying to find the biggest, fastest cannon of an arm type of signal-callers – you better believe it. Where do we stand on the Pro-Style vs. Dual-Threat QB’s? Billy does not need a QB to tuck and run the ball 25+ times a game.

Florida wants a guy who can make all the throws all over the field. They believe there are 6-8 times a game where the QB must beat the defense with his legs in crucial situations. Florida is not looking for a statue in the pocket or a guy who runs the second the pocket collapses. It sounds like an accurate football passer with the “ability” to beat you with his legs.
If you like watching QB film, that is the guy you need to look for.

All of that aside – which type of QB do you prefer? If you had to pick between Pro or Dual, which way are you leaning? Are you leaning with Danny W or Tim T? Both great at what they do, both won National Titles - which QB do you prefer IF forced to pick. I mean more of the styles of each not really having to pick one of Danny or Tim over the other......

Tesla has a racial/sexual issue?


Wtf is going on with Tesla! I hope this isn't true. I'm a fan of Elon Musk.

OT - A Couple Olympic Thoughts

THE feel good story this far for the Olympics - 36 year old Lindsey Jacobellis and 40 year old Nick Baumgartner (who had never medaled) win snow boarding gold:
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15 year old Russian phenom Kamila Valieva tested positive for a banned substance. This is just one man's opinion but I think she had no idea she took it. I think it's a result of the Russian "system". I want to see a generational talent. LET HER SKATE!
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Bump class recruiting timelines - only 10 months until ESD

Going to post the timing of commits for Jimbo's bump class (in 2019) below as a sort of comparison for what we should be targeting in terms of timing for a bump class. It gets old REALLY fast when people start saying "It's only April" or "It's only June" or whatever those goalposts move to, so this should be useful as a tracker to see if we are keeping pace or not. Note that this leaves off the guys who ended up flipping later, so there are a couple of guys ranked around 100th overall that are left off from the Summer commit list along with a few different 3 star players.

Commitments by the end of Spring

  • 11 total
  • 6 composite bluechips
  • 4 ranked composite .9500 or higher
Commitments in the Summer

  • 9 total
  • 4 composite bluechips
  • 3 ranked composite .9500 or higher
Commitments in the Fall

  • None
Commitments in the Winter

  • 7 total
  • 4 composite bluechips
  • 0 ranked composite .9500 or higher
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bottom Line: We need to start landing some of our elite and higher-ranked targets by the time summer ends and football season starts up. [Edited this based on some discussions in the comments, and I agree that putting a hard line on April isn't as big of a requirement]. Jimbo had 11/15 of his bluechips and both of the composite 5 stars committed to TAMU by June 2nd for his bump class.

Recruiting is a zero-sum game. If you miss on an elite player, that means somebody else gets him while you have one less elite target to choose from. I'm not saying that people need to start firing the staff if we don't have some top-100 type dudes committed by the Spring game, but it would be fair for people to start getting concerned if we aren't somewhat tracking along this timeline.

Gators in the Super Bowl

I apologize if this is posted, and I missed it. The Gators are tied with LSU for the most players in Sunday's Super Bowl:

FLORIDA GATORS | 5​

10807079.jpg

Van Jefferson | WR | Rams
Brandon Powell | WR | Rams
Vernon Hargreaves III | CB | Bengals
Fred Johnson | OT | Bengals
Evan McPherson | K | Bengals
It’s not often that a kicker gets highlighted as a player to watch in the Super Bowl, but that is definitely the case for Evan McPherson. In each of Cincinnati’s last two playoff wins, McPherson has kicked them to victory on the final play of the game. He certainly hasn’t looked like a rookie kicker to this point. Van Jefferson is always a big play waiting to happen, so look for Matthew Stafford to target him downfield at some point in the Super Bowl.

Gators in the Super Bowl

Gators in the NFL: Super Bowl LVI

For the 20th year in a row, Florida will be represented in the Super Bowl


LOS ANGELES - Super Bowl LVI is set to kickoff Sunday in Los Angeles and for the 20th year in a row, Florida will be represented at the big game as five former Gators are set to compete for a world championship.

The Gators have had a player in each Super Bowl since 2003, the third longest active streak in the nation. Overall, Florida has been a part of 23 Super Bowl-winning teams, with 63 players making 77 appearances.

Florida's five players in this year's Super Bowl is tied for most among college programs.

All five Gators will make their Super Bowl debuts Sunday.

For the second year in a row, a Gator rookie special teamer will compete in a Super Bowl as Evan McPherson is set to start at kicker for the Cincinnati Bengals.

Joining McPherson is third-year tackle Fred Johnson and sixth-year cornerback Vernon Hargreaves III.

The trio aims to bring Cincinnati its first Super Bowl victory. They'll face the Los Angeles Rams and a pair of former Gator wide receivers.

Second-year Van Jefferson and fourth-year Brandon Powell will look to bring a Lombardi Trophy to Los Angeles for the first time since 1984. The Rams have a chance become the second team in NFL history to win a Super Bowl on their home field.

Jefferson has been a focal point for one of the league's most electric offenses. In his first year as a full-time starter, the former second-round pick has 50 receptions for 802 and six touchdowns on the season.

Meanwhile, Powell has found a role on the Rams' special teams as a returner. His 22.2-yard punt return average this season is the most in the NFL (minimum six returns). He's one of only two players to return a punt for a touchdown this season. Powell also added 208 kick return yards in 2021, good for a 26-yard average.

For Cincinnati, they wouldn't be here if not for the leg of McPherson. "Money Mac" has nailed game-winners in back-to-back games, sending home the Tennessee Titans and Kansas City Chiefs. McPherson was named AFC Special Teams Player of the Month for December.

McPherson is a perfect 12-for-12 on field goals in the playoffs. He's 12-for-14 on kicks beyond 50 yards this season. His 12 field goals from 50-plus are the most in NFL history.

Super Bowl LVI will kick off at 6:30 p.m. ET inside SoFi Stadium, and it will be televised on NBC.

Thoughts of the Day: February 11, 2022

By Franz Beard

A few thoughts to jump start your Friday morning:
SEC REVENUE DISTRIBUTION: EACH TEAM GETS $54.6 MILLION

The Southeastern Conference announced Thursday that its revenue (from television contracts, postseason games, the SEC Championship Game in football, SEC Basketball Tournament, NCAA championship tournaments) increased by $120.1 million during the 2020-21 fiscal year to $777.8 million. The 14 schools in the league will each receive a little more than $54.6 million and this is BEFORE the new contract with ESPN kicks in after the 2023 football season and BEFORE Texas and Oklahoma leave the Big 12 to join the SEC.

The new 10-year contract with ESPN will provide each SEC school with an additional $17 million and that doesn’t include bowl revenue or championship events. It is also expected that when Texas and Oklahoma join the league – could be soon but possibly not until 2025 – ESPN will tear up the old contract and the new one should result in every SEC school receiving in excess of $80 million per year for its media contract.

This should set off alarm bells at every other Power Five conference including the Big Ten. While SEC revenue was up substantially, documents obtained by USA Today Network in New Jersey show the Big Ten distributed $157 million less for 2021. The Big Ten’s media rights contracts expire in 2023. The Big 12 hasn’t released new numbers but for 2020 the league distributed $37.7 million, a figure that will drop like a rock when Texas and Oklahoma leave the league. The Big 12 is hoping to broker a new deal with ESPN in exchange for allowing Texas and Oklahoma to leave soon but it won’t be anything close to what it’s making now. The ACC distributed $33.2 million and it’s locked into a media contract with ESPN that won’t expire until 2036. The Pac-12, which distributed $33.6 million, is already projecting a big cut in revenue. It’s media contract expires in 2024 and nobody is beating a door to George Kliavkoff’s door to make a new deal.

With lawsuits that figure to change the entire landscape of college sports by making athletes employees, the commissioners of the Big Ten, Pac-12 and ACC ought to be taking the first flight to Birmingham to beg Greg Sankey’s forgiveness for standing in the way of College Football Playoff expansion. With or without expansion, the SEC is going to have the most money by a wide margin. Expansion won’t put the other four power conferences in the SEC’s league when it comes to money, but they’ll find it tough to survive if they don’t have the added millions each league will get from a 12-team playoff.

NO. 19 UF WOMEN IMPROVE TO 18-6, 8-3 IN THE SEC
Florida’s dynamic guard duo of Zippy Broughton and Kiki Smith proved too much for Mississippi State Thursday night as they led the Gators to an 73-64 win over the Bulldogs in Starkville. Broughton led the Gators with 21 points, seven rebounds and four assists while Smith chipped in with 12 points, nine rebounds, seven assists and a steal.

The Gators trailed 36-33 at the half, but outscored Mississippi State (14-8, 5-5 SEC) 40-28 in the final two quarters to register their first win in Starkville since 2013. The win also marked the first time since the 2015-16 season that the Gators have won eight SEC games.

The win was the third straight for the Gators, their eighth in the last nine games and kept Florida tied with LSU for third in the SEC. Coach Kelly Rae Finley and the Gators will travel to Auburn for a Monday night encounter (7 p.m., SEC Network).

SEC Basketball
Thursday’s games: No. 19 FLORIDA (18-6, 8-3 SEC) 73, Mississippi State (14-8, 5-5 SEC) 64;
No. 1 South Carolina (22-1, 10-1 SEC) 59, Kentucky (9-11, 2-8 SEC) 50; No. 13 Tennessee (20-4, 9-2 SEC) 76, Missouri (16-8, 5-6 SEC) 62; Texas A&M (14-9, 4-7 SEC) 76, Vanderbilt (12-13, 3-8 SEC) 58; Arkansas (15-8, 5-5 SEC) 68, Auburn (9-12, 1-9 SEC) 66; No. 14 LSU (20-4, 8-3 SEC) 73, No. 17 Georgia (17-6, 6-5 SEC) 67
Sunday’s games: No. 1 South Carolina (22-1, 10-1 SEC) at No. 17 Georgia (17-6, 6-5 SEC); Vanderbilt (12-13, 3-8 SEC) at No. 13 Tennessee (20-4, 9-2 SEC); Kentucky (9-11, 2-8 SEC) at Alabama (12-10, 3-8 SEC); No. 14 LSU (20-4, 8-3 SEC) at Texas A&M (14-9, 4-7 SEC); Arkansas (15-8, 5-5 SEC) at Missouri (16-8, 5-6 SEC); Ole Miss (18-5, 6-4 SEC) at Mississippi State (14-8, 5-5 SEC)
Monday’s game: No. 19 FLORIDA (18-6, 8-3 SEC) at Auburn (9-12, 1-9 SEC)

CAN THE GATORS KNOCK OFF KENTUCKY AT RUPP?

To beat the 5th-ranked Wildcats (20-4, 9-2 SEC) at Rupp Arena is a tall order, particularly since Florida lacks depth on the inside with backup center Jason Jitoboh out for the rest of the season after eye surgery. For Florida (16-8, 6-5 SEC) to do what seems to be next to impossible Saturday afternoon (4 p.m., ESPN), they’ll have to keep Colin Castleton (15.4 points, 8.9 rebounds, 2.8 blocked shots) out of foul trouble in his head-to-head battle with 6-9, 260-pound Oscar Tshiebwe (15.9 points, 15.1 rebounds), the nation’s leading rebounder and a prime candidate for national player of the year.

Castleton has had two very good games since coming back from an injury-induced 6-game absence. He had 13 points, nine rebounds, four blocked shots and a steal in the Gators’ win over Ole Miss Wednesday night. When he’s in the game, the Gators have a rim protector. When he’s out of the game, Florida doesn’t have a physical presence capable of handling Tshiebwe.

The Gators got a 7-11 shooting night from the 3-point line by Myreon Jones in the win over Ole Miss. Jones and freshman Kowacie Reeves were 9-15 on 3-balls while the rest of the team was a miserable 3-20. The Gators can expect the Wildcats to focus their defense on Castleton in the middle and making sure Jones doesn’t get it going from the perimeter. They’ll take their chances that nobody else can heat it up from the outside like Jones.

SEC Basketball
Saturday’s games: FLORIDA (16-8, 6-5 SEC) at No. 5 Kentucky (20-4, 9-2 SEC);
Texas A&M (15-9, 4-7 SEC) at No. 1 Auburn (22-2, 10-1 SEC); Arkansas (19-5, 8-3 SEC) at Alabama (15-9, 5-6 SEC); South Carolina (13-10, 4-7 SEC) at Georgia (6-18, 1-10); Vanderbilt (13-10, 5-6 SEC) at No. 19 Tennessee (17-6, 8-3 SEC); Mississippi State (14-9, 5-5 SEC) at LSU (17-7, 5-6 SEC); Ole Miss (12-12, 3-8 SEC) at Missouri (9-14, 3-7 SEC)

NO. 4 GATOR GYMNASTS HOST NO. 5 LSU

This is the biggest meet in the country this weekend when the 4th-ranked Gators (7-0) host 5th-ranked LSU at the O-Dome (5:45 p.m., SEC Network). The Gators have posted the second highest score in the nation so far (198.250) and average 197.535. LSU’s highest score is 197.975 with an average of 197.258.

Florida has five perfect 10s in its rotation: three by Trinity Thomas (floor, beam and vault) and one each by Leanne Wong (uneven bars) and Nya Reed (floor). Thomas leads the nation in average beam score (9.975) and is second in floor (9.975) and ninth in vault (9.910). Reed ranks third in average floor score (9.962).

SOFTBALL GATORS OPEN THE SEASON IN TAMPA
Tim Walton gets a first look at his 2022 Gators today when they face Illinois State at 5:30 in the USF-Rawlings Tournament on the University of South Florida campus in Tampa. The Gators will play Kansas City Saturday morning (10:30) and 16th-ranked Michigan Saturday at 1 p.m., concluding the tournament Sunday with a noon game against host USF.

The Gators return All-Americans Charla Echols, Hannah Adams and Elizabeth Hightower from a team that went 45-11 last season. They’ll be joined in the lineup by some fresh new faces who are expected to provide a serious jolt to an offense that was stagnant at times last year. Newbies expected in the lineup are outfielder Kendra Falbey, shortstop Reagan Walsh, first baseman and Alabama transfer Skylar Wallace and catcher Samantha Roe. The infield should be as good as there is in the country with Echols at third, Adams at second, Walsh at shortstop and Wallace at first base.

Hightower (17-6, 1.61 ERA) and Natalie Lugo (17-3, 1.74 ERA) are a strong 1-2 pitching punch but they’ll be joined in the rotation by freshman Lexie Delbrey, one of the hardest throwing pitchers that Walton has brought to Florida.

The Gators will face Jacksonville on the road Tuesday before opening the home portion of their schedule with the same JU Dolphins Wednesday.

SEC FOOTBALL
Alabama:
Former Georgia and LSU quarterback Zach Mettenberger has joined the Alabama staff as an analyst. Mettenberger spent the last two years coaching high school football in Tennessee. He threw for 5,783 yards and 35 TDs at LSU … Eleven Alabama players, led by expected first round OT Evan Neal, have been invited to the NFL Combine.
Arkansas: Five Razorbacks were invited to the NFL Combine.
Auburn: The Bryan Harsin watch continues without resolution although it is being reported that Harsin met with Auburn officials investigating the problems within the football program Thursday in a meeting held at Southeastern Conference headquarters in Birmingham ... Three Auburn players were invited to the NFL Combine.
FLORIDA: Four Gators were invited to the NFL Combine – corner Kaiir Elam, defensive tackle Zachary Carter, running back Dameon Pierce and linebacker Jeremiah Moon.
Georgia: Fourteen Bulldogs were invited to the NFL Combine, most in the country. Among those invited were expected first round DT Jordan Davis and first round LB Nakobe Dean.
Kentucky: Seven Kentucky players were invited to the NFL Combine, second most in school history, led by offensive lineman Darrian Kinnard and wide receiver WanDale Robinson.
LSU: Nine LSU players, headed by corner Daryl Stingley Jr., were invited to the NFL Combine.
Mississippi State: Three Bulldogs were invited to the NFL Combine.
Missouri: Two Mizzou players including running back Tyler Badie were invited to the NFL Combine.
Ole Miss: Less than a month after leaving the Cleveland Browns to become the defensive line coach and co-defensive coordinator for brother Lane at Ole Miss, Chris Kiffin has returned to the NFL, citing having more family time in the pro game than in college. Expectations are that Lane Kiffin will turn to old buddy and former LSU head coach Ed Orgeron to take over as the D-line coach ... Eight Ole Miss players, led by quarterback Matt Corral, were invited to the NFL Combine.
South Carolina: Three Gamecocks were invited to the NFL Combine.
Tennessee: Four Vols were invited to the NFL Combine.
Texas A&M: Nine Aggies, led by All-American defensive tackle DeMarvin Leal, were invited to the NFL Combine.

ONE FINAL PITHY THOUGHT: Revenue distribution is only one indicator that the Southeastern Conference commissioner Greg Sankey has insight while the other four power conference commissioners are wearing bifocals. The other big indicator is invitations to the NFL Combine in Indianapolis, clear evidence that the most talented football players in the country play in the SEC.

The NFL invited 324 players to the Combine, 82 or 25.3 percent from the SEC. The Big Ten had 54 while the Pac-12 had 36, the Big 12 35 and the ACC 34. Take a moment and absorb those numbers – the SEC had only eight fewer players invited than the Big Ten and Pac-12 COMBINED. The SEC had more players invited than any combination of two of the Pac-12, Big 12 and ACC.

There is not going to be a fundamental shift in either revenue or recruiting for years to come. If anything, the gap between the SEC and all the other leagues is going to grow wider. The kids are going to go where the three Cs are most prevalent – Coaching, Competition and Cash. That is the Southeastern Conference, but a wide margin.
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