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2022 Lacrosse Schedule Unveiled

2022 Lacrosse Schedule Unveiled
In the program's 13th season, the Gators will compete in 17 regular season contests and an exhibition against Scotland

GAINESVILLE, Fla. - With Florida lacrosse's 13th season on the horizon, the 2022 schedule has been announced by head coach Amanda O'Leary.

The Gators have 17 regular season games scheduled during the 2022 campaign, as well as an exhibition against the Scottish National Team.

Florida boasts nine home games this season at Donald R. Dizney Stadium. UF has gone 108-19 (.850) at The Diz in the 12-year history of the program.

The Gators are coming off a stellar 2021 season where the team finished 18-3 overall on its way to claiming its 10th-straight regular season conference championship. Florida also made its way to the NCAA Quarterfinals for the sixth time in program history.

During the 2022 season, the Gators will face 10 teams that qualified for the 2021 NCAA Tournament: Drexel, Jacksonville, Loyola, Maryland, Mercer, North Carolina, Stony Brook, Syracuse, Temple and Vanderbilt.

Florida kicks off its season at home on Feb. 12 against the Kennesaw State Owls, then follows that with an exhibition against the Scottish National Team on Feb. 15.

The Gators round out the three-game home stretch against North Carolina on Feb. 19.

UF then hits the road on Feb. 26 to take on the Maryland Terrapins in College Park, Md., before returning to The Diz on March 5 for a contest against Stony Brook.

The Gators are back-to-back on the road against the Liberty Flames and Loyola Greyhounds on March 9 and March 12, respectively. The squad then returns to Gainesville to take on Syracuse for a midweek matchup on March 16.

Florida closes the month of March with three-of-four on the road, beginning with Drexel on March 20. The lone home game in the stretch comes on March 23 against Stetson before the Gators head to Arizona State on March 27 ad Mercer on March 30.

The month of April kicks off American Athletic Conference play for Florida, with the team facing Cincinnati on April 3 in Cincinnati, Ohio. Florida then takes on Old Dominion on April 9 at The Diz before heading to the Music City to compete against Vanderbilt on April 16.

The Gators return home to face Temple on April 23 before taking a short break from conference play on April 27 for a midweek contest against Jacksonville.

Florida closes its regular season on April 30 against the ECU Pirates in Greenville. The AAC Tournament semifinals are scheduled for Thursday, May 5, followed by the championship on Saturday, May 7 - also in Greenville, N.C.

A full look at the schedule can be found below.
Date

Opponent

Location

Series Record

2/12

Kennesaw State

Gainesville, Fla.

2-0

2/15

Scotland (Exh.)

Gainesville, Fla.

N/A

2/19

North Carolina

Gainesville, Fla.

3-10

2/26

Maryland

College Park, Md.

1-5

3/5

Stony Brook

Gainesville, Fla.

7-1

3/9

Liberty

Lynchburg, Va.

1-0

3/12

Loyola

Baltimore, Md.

6-2

3/16

Syracuse

Gainesville, Fla.

4-8

3/20

Drexel

Philadelphia, Pa.

0-0

3/23

Stetson

Gainesville, Fla.

3-0

3/27

Arizona State

Tempe, Ariz.

0-0

3/30

Mercer

Macon, Ga.

1-0

4/3

Cincinnati

Cincinnati, Ohio

10-0

4/9

Old Dominion

Gainesville, Fla.

2-0

4/16

Vanderbilt

Nashville, Tenn.

12-2

4/23

Temple

Gainesville, Fla.

12-0

4/27

Jacksonville

Gainesville, Fla.

10-1

4/30

East Carolina

Greenville, N.C.

3-0

5/5-5/7

AAC Tournament

Greenville, N.C.

Thoughts of the Day: December 15, 2021

By Franz Beard

A few thoughts to jump start your Wednesday morning:

EARLY SIGNING DAY IS HERE … I LIKED THE OLD WAY BETTER

The early signing day which begins at 7 a.m. when the first faxes start rolling in wherever college football is played is a sign of progress. Not only do we still have the February signing date, but we’ve got one in December, too, and probably 80 percent of all the kids who will sign a Division I scholarship will sign today. Florida’s recruiting class was already lagging behind, but since Dan Mullen was fired and Billy Napier was hired, it is going to be a slim Wednesday for the Gators.

I’m of the opinion that the early signing period stinks and is one of the root causes of much that is wrong with college football these days. Personally, I’d like to see the early signing period eliminated completely with one exception and go back to the way things used to be for the good of the game.

As I look back on the days when there was only one national signing day – the first Wednesday in February – I think college football was in a much better place than it is today. From a fan and personal standpoint, I liked the buildup of excitement leading up to the traditional NSD that we used to have. Once the college football season ended, we had the recruiting season which occupied the entire month of January. People used to take the entire day off work on National Signing Day because nothing was assured until the fax rolled in. We had master flippers (Will Muschamp was great at flipping recruits at the last minute when he was UF’s head coach) and signing day surprises. Florida fans used to panic because FSU held its football banquet on the Saturday night before NSD and for years Bobby Bowden landed one formerly uncommitted 5-star recruit after another that weekend.

We had February adventures that we no longer have that added to the excitement and kept people talking for months on end. One memorable example is the Wednesday morning of February 3, 1999. Early morning, Anquan Boldin called Steve Spurrier to tell him he was going to sign with Florida at 8:30 a.m., but when 8:30 rolled around it was announced that the announcement would be delayed for an hour. Allegedly, Boldin needed the time to pray about his decision with a pastor there in Pahokee. At 10 a.m. Boldin signed with Florida State after much prayer and supplication. There were hot and heavy rumors that a brand new garnet and gold Ford Explorer – obviously sent down from heaven from God himself during the prayer time – was a sign that (a) the Almighty himself wanted Boldin to sign with FSU and (b) that Steve Spurrier would never play a black quarterback but would switch him to wide receiver. Funny how Anquan was switched to wide receiver on either the second or third day of FSU’s August camp.

Boldin and running back Nick Maddox, another one who told Spurrier he was going to be a Gator an hour before he signed with FSU that morning, were part of a small FSU class that was going to set the world on fire. They didn’t. Florida’s far less heralded class was deemed a bust by the “recruiting gurus” because Boldin and Maddox pulled their signing day surprises.

That “bust” of a Florida class produced three first or second team All-Americas (Rex Grossman, Jabar Gaffney and Lito Sheppard), six first or second team All-SEC selections (Grossman, Gaffney, Sheppard, Daryl Dixon, Taylor Jacobs and Bobby McCray), nine who started at least two years (Grossman, Gaffney, Sheppard, Jacobs, McCray, Dixon, Bam Hardmon, Clint Mitchell and Mike Nattiel) and 11 who were either drafted by the NFL or signed as free agents (Grossman, Gaffney, Sheppard, Dixon, Jacobs, McCray, Nattiel, Hardmon, Mitchell, Tron LaFavor, Ran Carthon and Matt Farrior).

Anyone remember Lobster Willie’s Big Adventure in Tallahassee in 2001? FSU was never the same after Willie Williams spent the banquet weekend in Tallahassee and then signed three days later with Miami.

I actually miss those days. It was more fun, but I believe it was better for both coaches and kids that there was only one National Signing Day in February. When the early signing date in December was put in place, it seemed like a good idea at the moment. Like so many things the NCAA puts in place, there have been far reaching unintended consequences and this is even before we factor in the transfer portal and NIL.

For years it was argued that a December signing period would allow kids who had made up their minds to get their recruiting out of the way. One of the cornerstones of the argument was kids who had made up their minds became dazed and confused by all the pressure in February. So, we got an early signing period and instead of a few kids signing early, the bulk of every recruiting class at the higher levels of Division I has been almost completely filled, leaving only a few stragglers who perhaps hadn’t qualified academically in December to sign in February or got cold feet back and decided to wait.

I don’t have the exact percentages, but a lot more coaches are getting fired during the season since the early signing date was implemented and new coaches are hired quickly to come in and salvage the recruiting class. With rare exceptions, when a head coach is fired, nearly every assistant coach who’s been busting on the recruiting trail also gets canned.

It happened at Florida. Dan Mullen was fired the Sunday before the Gators’ final game. The following Sunday, Billy Napier was hired from Louisiana for seven years and $51.4 million after taking the Ragin Cajuns to an 11-1 regular season. Napier wasn’t introduced until the Sunday after Louisiana beat Appalachian State for the Sun Belt Conference championship on December 4. He’s had 10 days to dismiss all of Dan Mullen’s assistant coaches, hire four new assistants, and deal with recruiting. Most of the kids who were committed to Mullen such as quarterback Nick Evers (to Oklahoma), wide receiver CJ Smith (to Georgia) and wide receiver/athlete Isaiah Bond (to Alabama) have de-committed the Gators for other destinations.

Unless Napier is a recruiting magician capable of pulling proverbial rabbits out of a hat, this will be the kind of December signing class that is going to make a lot of Gators nervous. We were warned of this back on December 5 when Napier said Florida’s recruiting class would really take shape in January after he had a full coaching and an “army” of support staffers in place to sign kids that didn’t put their signature on an LOI and transfers. More than a few Gator fans are already writing off the 2022 recruiting class.

Florida’s situation isn’t all that unusual. There are currently 130 schools in Division I. Twenty-eight coaches were fired in 2021, one before the season even began (Les Miles, Kansas), most during the season and a couple after the regular season concluded. The ripple effect is enormous when you add the number of recruits affected by coaching changes to the number of assistant coaches, strength and conditioning staff, recruiting coordinators and other staffers who are now in limbo.

Another unintended consequence of all the firings is record salary inflation. Concerned that LSU would come after Mel Tucker, Michigan State gave him a 10-year deal worth $100 million. Jimbo Fisher, who signed a contract extension that added 10 years to his existing deal and raised his pay to somewhere between $9-10 million, turned down $125 million to leave Texas A&M for LSU. Lincoln Riley was offered the same deal. LSU ended up hiring Brian Kelly from Notre Dame with a 10-year $95 million deal. LSU fans are likely to boast about the $30 million saved by hiring Kelly.

When Southern Cal showed interest in James Franklin, Penn State gave him a 10-year deal that has $70 million guaranteed. Southern Cal interviewed several other coaches but ended up hiring Lincoln Riley away from Oklahoma for eight years at $13 million a year with unheard of perks such as USC buying his two houses, giving him a $6 million mansion in LA and unlimited use of a private plane. Miami fired Manny Diaz while he was out recruiting and on the same day hired Mario Cristobal away from Oregon for 10 years and $80 million.

All this just to have a coach in place before the early signing period.

An unintended consequence of the College Football Playoff is the bowls have been neutered. Kids who aren’t playing for the four playoff teams, are opting out of bowl games. Mullen had to endure a flogging at the hands of Oklahoma in last year’s Cotton Bowl when Kyle Trask’s three top receivers – All-Americans Kyle Pitts and Kadarius Toney plus Trevon Grimes – were among several Gators who opted out, claiming they were fearful of injuries that could hinder their NFL Draft status. C.J. Henderson did the same thing the year before when he opted out of the Orange Bowl. The playoff has made bowls dinosaurs whose only hope of survival is an expanded playoff with lesser bowls becoming the equivalent of the NIT.

The bowls are traditional but traditions seem to have no place in the game these days. When you add in the transfer portal and NIL, it’s not difficult to surmise that college football is in a very bad place. We’ve seen kids entering the transfer portal during the season, which was never intended. Last year’s record total of 2,626 transfers will likely pale in comparison to the number who are looking for a new place to play this year. How many of the transfers are leaving because of coaching changes? How many are freshmen or sophomores who aren’t willing to hang around and compete for a job, figuring it’s easier to simply go somewhere else? How many of the transfers are leaving for a new school because they (a) didn’t get an NIL deal at their current school or (b) have heard that kids at another school are making big bucks off NIL?

We’re not going to eliminate the transfer portal nor is NIL going to be cut off, but here are five practical solutions that could bring some measure of sanity back to college football before it literally destroys itself.

1. Seriously reduce the number of kids who can sign early: You do this by allowing only those who (a) are academically qualified to enroll in January and (b) have been accepted. It’s rare that more than 9-10 kids enroll early leaving the bulk of the recruiting class to sign in February.

2. Make December a dead period for high school/juco recruiting except to sign early enrollees: This would go a long way toward eliminating the in-season firings. Athletic directors who have dismissed their head coaches would have an entire month to find a new head coach without rushing one in place for the ESP. The new coach would have time to hire his staff and spend January recruiting kids who are going to sign in February.

3. Set windows for kids to enter the transfer portal: Coaches admit they are spending way too much time re-recruiting players on their current rosters throughout the season. One way to solve this is to set a 10-day period in December and a 30-day period in May for kids to transfer. If a kid doesn’t use the designated transfer portal windows, he has to sit the next year. The only exceptions should be legitimate health concerns of a parent or family member that can be documented.

4. Set academic standards for kids who want to transfer: Any kid who wants to transfer out who doesn’t have at least a 2.5 GPA will have to sit a year. No exceptions.

5. You can’t eliminate NIL, but you can eliminate NIL deals from August until the College Football Playoff is over: This doesn’t change a kid’s ability to make money off his name, image or likeness, but it eliminates the kid doing business during the season then using it as a reason to transfer out.

There are probably other solutions out there that make every bit as much sense, but it’s time for very smart people to put their heads together to come up with a plan that can save college football from destroying itself. Eliminating or seriously tweaking the early signing period would be a good place to begin.

Burning the candle at both ends..........I am out for the night

and we will see what happens. There are positive vibes right now. Shemar James, Julian, Devin, Kamari all these kids are in play. Shone is tough to read right now. The thing that is nuts to me is when you have a kid cold call you out of the blue the night before NSD to ask for the UF commit edit and he gets it done after supplying the pictures he wants to use and he still might not end up at UF...whew....tough to read that deal. Either way it will all be over soon and we can openly discuss each and every single situation and I can provide a TON of information that went on behind the scenes....I am looking forward to CLOSING the book on some of these kids Wed after they announce......I did hear from Zion tonight he will sign tomorrow and it will be between Missouri and Michigan State.....See you all in the morning.....I will start a new thread in the morning and the front page that we will update as NLI come in......Look for the school to tweet those as they are official. Remember some kids will send them in early BUT will announce later in the day. In that situation I will not report it until the school does as you can imagine the hot water that would get me in.......

Hoops Recruiting Mike White comments on Florida's trio of 2022 signees

UF welcomed the addition of three high-profile signees on Wednesday, adding the consensus top-25 recruiting class of Malik Reneau, Denzel Aberdeen and Jalen Reed.

Here is what Mike White had to say about the latest additions to the program.

“All three of these Gators come from great families and outstanding programs, which is really important to all of us within the Florida basketball family.,” head coach Mike White said. “Our staff and I have all enjoyed the opportunity to get to know them and look forward to having them here in Gainesville next year.”

Below are signing day stories for each player.

Rivals150 PF Malik Reneau: https://florida.rivals.com/news/sig...ospect-malik-reneau-makes-it-official-with-uf

Rivals150 PF Jalen Reed: https://florida.rivals.com/news/signing-day-capsule-rivals150-pf-jalen-reed-is-a-florida-gator

6-foot-4 PG Denzel Aberdeen: https://florida.rivals.com/news/sig...4-pg-denzel-aberdeen-locks-in-with-the-gators

Has there been a single mention of current OLs?

Gouraige, White, Equakun, Braun, Tarquin? Or the Redshirts? Mugharbil, Barber?
Can’t recall a single word, muchless mod thread or article?

Who is practicing? have they met with Napier??
Is Gouraige (foolishly) going pro?
Are the rest staying or looking to transfer?

This is one area (even though many of them have under-performed and/or been hampered by injury) that could quite literally save our program from a complete and utter embarrassing bowl game, as well as 2022 season.

If those five upperclassman all return and commit to a vigorous off-season with the new staff we could have a very big, very strong, very experienced, veteran line (I know we’ve heard that before)

Obviously, Gouraige is key, if for no other reason, there basically are no true left tackles on our entire team. (Even he really isn’t ) although this past fall was his first starting at tackle and if he did come back and have a very good year he actually could make himself a decently high draft pick.

  • Locked
Rules for ESD….

1. If we get no one, we wanted no one its all part of the “process”, Billy is the GOAT

2. If current Commits leave, we didn’t want them anyway, its part of the “process”, Billy is the GOAT

3. if we add anyone they are underrated and the “process” is obviously proving effective, Billy is the GOAT

Bottom line, no matter how tomorrow goes it is exactly how we wanted it to because Billy is the GOAT. Question nothing, assume its all just a part of the process.

Enjoy ESD
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