The 80’s would prove to be a decade of breakthroughs and heartaches for the Gators. After doing a great deal to unite, organize and expand the booster network as well as upgrade facilities and regain UF’s #1 status with in-state recruits, Charley Pell brought in an excellent class of recruits and the Gators pulled off the (at the time) biggest single season turnaround in college football history going 8-4 in 1980. Under the leadership of highly accurate freshman QB Wayne Peace, the Gators exploded out of the gate defeating Cal and Georgia Tech, Louisville and Auburn with only a loss to LSU in the first seven games setting up a huge contest against the undefeated poodles in Jacksonville. Behind Peace’s passing, the running of Fullback James Jones, the Gators held a slim lead late in the game and had Georgia backed up near its own endzone with time running out. Then some WR for Georgia made a play when the Gator safety slipped and UGA won at the last minute 26-21. The Gators were rewarded with a Tangerine Bowl invitation where they defeated Maryland 35-20 behind a big game from Chris Collinsworth.
The 1981 season would be somewhat of a disappointment ending with a 7-5 record and ending with a sound beating by West Virginia in the cold of Atlanta’s peach bowl. The highlight of the season was a 35-3 whipping administered to fsu ending fsu’s 4 game winning streak and starting what would turn out to be a 6 game winning streak for the Gators. 1982 was slightly better at 8-4 and including thrilling victories over Miami (17-14 won on a spectacular one handed catch late in the game by star Fullback James Jones) a 17-9 victory over USC in which OLB Wilbur Marshall had one of the most dominating days for any Defensive player in Gator history, as well as victories over Auburn and fsu. Wilbur Marshall was named as the national defensive player of the year.
1983 marked a turning point. Led by Senior Quarterback Wayne Peace and Senior Fullback James Jones and with Pell’s recruits now experienced, the Gators were one of the strongest teams in the country finishing 9-2-1 and a #6 national ranking – at the time the Gators’ highest finish since the start of the AP poll in 1936. The season included a 28-3 shellacking of eventual national champion miami, a 53-14 demolition of fsu and a 14-6 Gator Bowl victory over Iowa.
The 1984 season started out with a loss to miami and a tie to LSU. Charlie Pell had been operating under the cloud of an NCAA investigation and agreed to resign at the end of the season. After UF was charged with 107 NCAA infractions (later dropped to 67), university president Marshall Criser fired Pell and named Offensive Coordinator Galen Hall as interim coach. The very talented Gator squad now led by surprising Freshman QB Kerwin Bell – a former walk-on from tiny May, FL proceeded to rattle off 8 straight victories. The Gators relied on the running of star backs Neal Anderson, Lorenzo Hamption and John L. Williams (all of whom were later to be first round NFL draft choices. The way was paved by an Offensive Line so powerful it was dubbed “the Great Wall of Florida” and the running game was complemented by a talented receiver corps led by WR Ricky Nattiel and TE Walter Odom. The Defense was talented and deep as well with linebackers Ron Moten, Alonzo Johnson, Clifford Charlton and Mark Korff. Alonzo Mitz and Tim Newton were dominant Defensive Linemen. The secondary was patrolled by star players Adrian White and Jarvis Williams among others. Victories included a 24-3 drubbing of Auburn including star Tailback Bo Jackson, a 27-0 shellacking of Georgia, 43-30 in an exciting shootout over a dangerous Tennessee squad and a 27-17 victory over fsu.
With their 5-0-1 conference record the Gators had finally delivered a long awaited SEC championship to Gainesville. After the successful run, Galen Hall was named as the permanent head coach. Several notable selectors including the DeVold System, the Dunkel System, Mathews Grid Ratings, the New York Times, Rothman Fact, the Sporting News and Sagarin all named Florida as national champions that year. The news was not all good however. NCAA sanctions handed down at the end of the season meant that Florida would be ineligible for a bowl game for two years and scholarship sanctions were particularly severe. In a surprising move in the following Spring the SEC athletic directors voted not only to adopt a new rule banning teams on probation from claiming the conference title but to then apply the new rule retroactively in order to strip Florida’s 1984 SEC championship. The university refused to return the championship trophy earned under the rules in place at the time and it still rests in Gainesville.
In 1985 the Gators repeated their 9-1-1 mark from the prior season including key victories over miami, LSU, Tennessee, Virginia Tech, Auburn and fsu. The lone loss was a stunning 24-3 defeat to Georgia in Jacksonville. Sagarin again named Florida as national champions for that season.
1986 marked the beginning of a downturn in Florida’s fortunes as the effect of NCAA scholarship sanctions took hold. With star backs Neal Anderson and John L. Williams as well as the Great Wall which cleared their way gone, Florida had great difficult running the ball. The passing game was still very potent but a knee injury to star Quarterback Kerwin Bell led to 4 straight losses early in the season. With Florida trailing Auburn 17-0 at home in the 4th quarter, the injured Bell was finally inserted back into the lineup. What followed was one of the most dramatic 4th quarter rallies in Gator history culminating in the gimpy Bell limping into the Endzone for the winning 2 point conversion. Bell would lead the Gators to an equally surprising upset victory over Georgia the following week. An upset loss to Kentucky ended any bowl hopes for that season but Bell’s magic was not done as he engineered a dramatic game winning touchdown drive late in the 4th quarter hitting receiver Ricky Nattiel in the back of the endzone in a driving rainstorm in Tallahassee to upset fsu. The Gators finished the season with a 6-5 mark.
1987 marked the emergence of one of the brightest stars in Gator history as Freshman Tailback Emmitt Smith broke Red Bethea’s school single game rushing record of 209 yards set against Amos Alonzo Stagg’s Chicago team in 1930 with a 39 carry 224 yard effort against Alabama in his first start. Smith would go on to rush for a school single season record 1341 yards and be named as Freshman of the Year. Star Quarterback Kerwin Bell also returned but the young wide receiver corps was not up to the task and the passing game struggled. The Offensive Line and the Defense were plagued by a lack of depth due to the loss of so many scholarships and the team struggled to a 6-6 finish after losing a very close 20-16 contest against UCLA in the Aloha Bowl in Hawaii on the games’ final play as a Kerwin Bell pass fell incomplete in the endzone.
The 1988 season got off to a fast start with the Gators coming out 5-0 led by freshman Quarterback Kyle Morris. A series of injuries to key players including Emmitt Smith, star receiver Stacey Simmons and at one point seven Offensive starters however combined with Florida’s lack of depth due to a depleted roster led to a 6-5 finish and an All-American Bowl berth against Illinois led by talented Quarterback Jeff George. Emmitt Smith was named the game’s MVP after rushing for 159 yards and scoring the winning score late in the 4th quarter in a tight 14-10 contest. Outside Linebacker Huey Richardson led a fierce Gator front which limited Ilinois to 55 yards rushing and harassed Quarterback Jeff George all night. With the bowl victory, the Gators finished the season at 7-5.
The 1989 season started out promisingly with a 6-1 record, but the suspension of starting Quarterback Kyle Morris for a gambling scandal crippled the passing game and the team finished by losing 4 of its last 5 games to finished 7-5. Despite the mediocre record, there were some highlights to the season such as the excellent play of Tailback Emmitt Smith (1599 yards) and a solid young Defense. Unfortunately, Galen Hall had his own brush with the NCAA involving paying assistant coaches out of his own pocket and an allegation of paying the child support-related legal expenses of one of his players. Despite the lack of any eyewitnesses or any documentary or other indeed any evidence to support this allegation, Florida was assessed a bowl ban for the following season and Galen Hall was fired by university president Robert Bryan after the 5th game of the 1989 season. Hall ended his career with a 40–18 record (good for a 69.167 winning percentage) at Florida. Defensive Coordinator Gary Darnell was named interim coach and finished the 1989 season.
Florida finished the decade with a 76-38-3 record for a winning percentage of 66.24%. On December 30 1989, Florida named Steve Spurrier as head coach. The following year the state legislature adopted a law requiring the NCAA to obey due process and to show any evidence it had for allegations of NCAA rules violations for any future infraction actions in the state of Florida.
The 1981 season would be somewhat of a disappointment ending with a 7-5 record and ending with a sound beating by West Virginia in the cold of Atlanta’s peach bowl. The highlight of the season was a 35-3 whipping administered to fsu ending fsu’s 4 game winning streak and starting what would turn out to be a 6 game winning streak for the Gators. 1982 was slightly better at 8-4 and including thrilling victories over Miami (17-14 won on a spectacular one handed catch late in the game by star Fullback James Jones) a 17-9 victory over USC in which OLB Wilbur Marshall had one of the most dominating days for any Defensive player in Gator history, as well as victories over Auburn and fsu. Wilbur Marshall was named as the national defensive player of the year.
1983 marked a turning point. Led by Senior Quarterback Wayne Peace and Senior Fullback James Jones and with Pell’s recruits now experienced, the Gators were one of the strongest teams in the country finishing 9-2-1 and a #6 national ranking – at the time the Gators’ highest finish since the start of the AP poll in 1936. The season included a 28-3 shellacking of eventual national champion miami, a 53-14 demolition of fsu and a 14-6 Gator Bowl victory over Iowa.
The 1984 season started out with a loss to miami and a tie to LSU. Charlie Pell had been operating under the cloud of an NCAA investigation and agreed to resign at the end of the season. After UF was charged with 107 NCAA infractions (later dropped to 67), university president Marshall Criser fired Pell and named Offensive Coordinator Galen Hall as interim coach. The very talented Gator squad now led by surprising Freshman QB Kerwin Bell – a former walk-on from tiny May, FL proceeded to rattle off 8 straight victories. The Gators relied on the running of star backs Neal Anderson, Lorenzo Hamption and John L. Williams (all of whom were later to be first round NFL draft choices. The way was paved by an Offensive Line so powerful it was dubbed “the Great Wall of Florida” and the running game was complemented by a talented receiver corps led by WR Ricky Nattiel and TE Walter Odom. The Defense was talented and deep as well with linebackers Ron Moten, Alonzo Johnson, Clifford Charlton and Mark Korff. Alonzo Mitz and Tim Newton were dominant Defensive Linemen. The secondary was patrolled by star players Adrian White and Jarvis Williams among others. Victories included a 24-3 drubbing of Auburn including star Tailback Bo Jackson, a 27-0 shellacking of Georgia, 43-30 in an exciting shootout over a dangerous Tennessee squad and a 27-17 victory over fsu.
With their 5-0-1 conference record the Gators had finally delivered a long awaited SEC championship to Gainesville. After the successful run, Galen Hall was named as the permanent head coach. Several notable selectors including the DeVold System, the Dunkel System, Mathews Grid Ratings, the New York Times, Rothman Fact, the Sporting News and Sagarin all named Florida as national champions that year. The news was not all good however. NCAA sanctions handed down at the end of the season meant that Florida would be ineligible for a bowl game for two years and scholarship sanctions were particularly severe. In a surprising move in the following Spring the SEC athletic directors voted not only to adopt a new rule banning teams on probation from claiming the conference title but to then apply the new rule retroactively in order to strip Florida’s 1984 SEC championship. The university refused to return the championship trophy earned under the rules in place at the time and it still rests in Gainesville.
In 1985 the Gators repeated their 9-1-1 mark from the prior season including key victories over miami, LSU, Tennessee, Virginia Tech, Auburn and fsu. The lone loss was a stunning 24-3 defeat to Georgia in Jacksonville. Sagarin again named Florida as national champions for that season.
1986 marked the beginning of a downturn in Florida’s fortunes as the effect of NCAA scholarship sanctions took hold. With star backs Neal Anderson and John L. Williams as well as the Great Wall which cleared their way gone, Florida had great difficult running the ball. The passing game was still very potent but a knee injury to star Quarterback Kerwin Bell led to 4 straight losses early in the season. With Florida trailing Auburn 17-0 at home in the 4th quarter, the injured Bell was finally inserted back into the lineup. What followed was one of the most dramatic 4th quarter rallies in Gator history culminating in the gimpy Bell limping into the Endzone for the winning 2 point conversion. Bell would lead the Gators to an equally surprising upset victory over Georgia the following week. An upset loss to Kentucky ended any bowl hopes for that season but Bell’s magic was not done as he engineered a dramatic game winning touchdown drive late in the 4th quarter hitting receiver Ricky Nattiel in the back of the endzone in a driving rainstorm in Tallahassee to upset fsu. The Gators finished the season with a 6-5 mark.
1987 marked the emergence of one of the brightest stars in Gator history as Freshman Tailback Emmitt Smith broke Red Bethea’s school single game rushing record of 209 yards set against Amos Alonzo Stagg’s Chicago team in 1930 with a 39 carry 224 yard effort against Alabama in his first start. Smith would go on to rush for a school single season record 1341 yards and be named as Freshman of the Year. Star Quarterback Kerwin Bell also returned but the young wide receiver corps was not up to the task and the passing game struggled. The Offensive Line and the Defense were plagued by a lack of depth due to the loss of so many scholarships and the team struggled to a 6-6 finish after losing a very close 20-16 contest against UCLA in the Aloha Bowl in Hawaii on the games’ final play as a Kerwin Bell pass fell incomplete in the endzone.
The 1988 season got off to a fast start with the Gators coming out 5-0 led by freshman Quarterback Kyle Morris. A series of injuries to key players including Emmitt Smith, star receiver Stacey Simmons and at one point seven Offensive starters however combined with Florida’s lack of depth due to a depleted roster led to a 6-5 finish and an All-American Bowl berth against Illinois led by talented Quarterback Jeff George. Emmitt Smith was named the game’s MVP after rushing for 159 yards and scoring the winning score late in the 4th quarter in a tight 14-10 contest. Outside Linebacker Huey Richardson led a fierce Gator front which limited Ilinois to 55 yards rushing and harassed Quarterback Jeff George all night. With the bowl victory, the Gators finished the season at 7-5.
The 1989 season started out promisingly with a 6-1 record, but the suspension of starting Quarterback Kyle Morris for a gambling scandal crippled the passing game and the team finished by losing 4 of its last 5 games to finished 7-5. Despite the mediocre record, there were some highlights to the season such as the excellent play of Tailback Emmitt Smith (1599 yards) and a solid young Defense. Unfortunately, Galen Hall had his own brush with the NCAA involving paying assistant coaches out of his own pocket and an allegation of paying the child support-related legal expenses of one of his players. Despite the lack of any eyewitnesses or any documentary or other indeed any evidence to support this allegation, Florida was assessed a bowl ban for the following season and Galen Hall was fired by university president Robert Bryan after the 5th game of the 1989 season. Hall ended his career with a 40–18 record (good for a 69.167 winning percentage) at Florida. Defensive Coordinator Gary Darnell was named interim coach and finished the 1989 season.
Florida finished the decade with a 76-38-3 record for a winning percentage of 66.24%. On December 30 1989, Florida named Steve Spurrier as head coach. The following year the state legislature adopted a law requiring the NCAA to obey due process and to show any evidence it had for allegations of NCAA rules violations for any future infraction actions in the state of Florida.