NCAA Football

Gut Check: Gators Not A Top 5 Team

Text Size A A A
There. I said it.

Don't get me wrong. Lord knows I love my team more than a grown man should. The coaching is excellent and the kids are talented. They're tougher this year. They're better.

And the timing may seem odd. The Gators are ranked #5 in the country, and just beat a tenacious Alabama team in the Swamp. Florida is undefeated at 5-0 and leads the SEC East. Since Meyer came on board they haven't lost in Ben Hill Griffin Stadium, nursing a 12-0 home winning streak. The future of Gator football is blindingly bright.

But...

I made it clear at the beginning of the season that I felt this would probably be a 2 to 3 loss team, if luck is on our side. The Gators' schedule is too brutal, and this team has not improved sufficiently since the start of the season, for me to revise my assessment. And a 2 to 3 loss season with this year's schedule will mean that Meyer's '06 team is markedly better than last season's, even if the final tally is similar or even one loss worse.

The problem areas:

  1. Indecisive and erratic quarterback play, particularly in the first half. Five games into the season and it's apparent to all that Chris Leak is still, well, Chris Leak. He's good -- at times very, very good -- but he's not a great quarterback and likely never will be. He's still locking on to receivers, still sliding short, still missing wide-open players downfield. Yes, he makes key third-down coversions and generally gets better throughout the game, but he's just not good enough across the board to take this team to a national championship. That is in no way an indictment of Chris Leak's talent or effort, both of which are superb. He is 95% of the package. The problem is, you need that other 5% to be a great QB.
  2. Kicking. Go figure, we can't kick a field goal this year. I'm hopeful that the problem can be corrected, but not optimistic. We're five games in, and the kicking unit has three missed FGs and surrendered two blocked extra points. That's enough to get into a kicker's head and wreak some mental havoc. I'm not sure what happened to Hetland this year but we need the young walk-on with a chip on his shoulder back in action. This scholarship kicker is struggling. Florida will not win a championship without decent kicking.
  3. Slow starts and sluggish scoring capability. Florida keeps winning on the backs of the defense. We need more offense and we need it in the first half. With the exception of the UCF game, Florida has started slow all year long. We need 60 minutes of productivity. One good half per game will not cut it. Florida also needs a more explosive offensive attack capability to put more points on the board using less time. Mark my words, the Gators will find themselves in a hole this season and be unable to climb out of it due to their downtempo mindset.
  4. Still too many penalties. False starts, holding, delays of game. Every team suffers from them, but the Gators are, at least in theory, a disciplined team which knows how to handle crowd noise, adversity, defensive stunts, and so on. But they're not. Florida recovered from several of their penalty setbacks against Alabama, but at least two contributed directly to drive-ending 4th downs.
  5. Flag-football tackling. I'm seeing a lot of fingertip and anklebiting tackles. Our linebackers and defensive linemen appear to be out of position on most run-stopping plays and easily juked out of their shoes by an athletic tailback. While Florida only allowed 88 yards of rushing to Alabama, it seemed that the Tide's Kenneth Darby could run up the middle at will against the Gators, particularly in the seocnd half, ripping off 10 to 12 yards at a time. (Not sure why Shula didn't commit to the run a bit more, because it was working.)

So, it may take a gut check, but these Gators aren't, in my opinion, contenders right now despite the perfect W/L record. Please prove me wrong, gentlemen. A dish of salty crow served hot would be a delicious meal to eat after watching a successful outcome in the SEC Championship game. You send the bird, I'll provide the nachos.

Related Articles

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)

Add your comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments.

When you enter your name and email address, you'll be sent a link to confirm your comment, and a password. To leave another comment, just use that password.

To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and we will make it a live link for you. You can put up to 3 URLs in your comments. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br /> tags.

Featured Writers