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Post by Deleted on Oct 22, 2015 22:40:23 GMT -5
I like Dallas Stubbs already. Will Muschamp didn't want him and Jim McElwain does:
By Zach Abolverdi Correspondent
Published: Thursday, October 22, 2015 at 2:53 p.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, October 22, 2015 at 2:53 p.m.
Dallas Stubbs is on his way to rejoining the Florida football team.
The Gainesville High alum competed in Wednesday’s walk-on kicker tryout and said he received word from UF that he had earned a roster spot.
“It was amazing,” Stubbs said Thursday. “I’m just so thankful and I hope to make everyone proud.”
UF has yet to announce Stubbs’ addition to the roster.
Stubbs walked on at Florida in 2013, but said he was cut after the season to make room for Jorge Powell and Virginia Tech transfer Brooks Abbott.
Abbott left the team last year but participated in Wednesday’s tryout.
“The last time I was on the team, I felt like I didn’t get much of a chance,” Stubbs said. “This is just a new opportunity, brand new coaching staff.”
A total of 216 students signed up for the tryout this week after the Gators announced they’re in need of a kicker following the season-ending injury to Powell last Saturday.
After UF compliance reviewed the eligibility, credit hours and class schedules of the students, 77 (including two women) made the cut for Wednesday’s tryout in the indoor practice facility.
But Florida took Abbott, Stubbs and another student to kick separately in The Swamp.
“We had a competition, three strikes and you’re out,” Stubbs said. “It came down to on-field performance and that’s what separated me.”
Stubbs made 42 of 50 field goal attempts at GHS and won the District 7 Kicker of the Year award as a senior. In his last home game at Citizens Field, Stubbs hit a 52-yarder to help the Hurricanes beat Lake Gibson 10-9 and advance to the Class 4A state semifinals.
He’s grateful for another chance to live out his childhood dream.
“I can’t even put it into words,” Stubbs said. “I went to games as a kid. Having been on the team in the past and not really having a shot, this is special for me.”
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Post by Deleted on Oct 25, 2015 16:15:42 GMT -5
BROADCAST INFORMATION - UGA vs. UF
CBS Play-by-Play: Verne Lundquist Analyst: Gary Danielson Sideline: Allie LaForce
Gator IMG Sports Network Play-by-Play: Mick Hubert Analyst: Lee McGriff Sideline: Brady Ackerman
MATCHUP AT A GLANCE Overall: 49-41-2, Georgia Last 10 Meetings: 6-4, UF In Jacksonville: 44-38-1, Georgia In Gainesville: 1-1 In Athens: 4-1, Georgia At Neutral Sites: 44-38-2
FLORIDA (6-1, 4-1 SEC) Head Coach: Jim McElwain Record: 28-17 overall (4th year) 6-1 at UF (1st year) Rankings: No. 11/12 2015 record: 6-1, 4-1 SEC
GEORGIA (5-2, 3-2 SEC) Head Coach: Mark Richt Record: 141-50 overall (15th year) same at UGA Rankings: No. NR/23 2015 record: 5-2, 3-2 SEC
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Post by Deleted on Oct 26, 2015 13:23:55 GMT -5
Vandy at UF = noon ET game:
Gators to host Vanderbilt for noon game
Special to Gatorsports.com
Published: Monday, October 26, 2015 at 12:45 p.m.
Florida’s Nov. 7 game against Vanderbilt is set for a noon start. The game will be televised on ESPN, ESPN2 or the SEC Network.
The No. 11 Gators play Georgia at 3:30 p.m. Saturday in Jacksonville. CBS will broadcast the game.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 26, 2015 14:41:29 GMT -5
Mac's Monday Presser:
1. The team is healthy coming off the open week. Alex Anzalone isn't even a mention so I'm through reporting on him as I consider his shoulder injury to be season ending regardless of what has been previously said.
2. Contrary to what was written about Daniel Stubbs last week, the Gators are taking 3 kickers into practice today. Mac commented he didn't know how the competition was going to play out as the players will be suited up and in live action today. He laughingly said he might end up with a short FG kicker, a long field goal kicker, and a KO guy who can boot it through the endzone. It seems perfectly settled to me.
3. Austin Hardin is still a question mark. I still think the kid is off in the head.
4. The team pressed too much against LSU. You win by playing for and trusting each other instead of doing things you don't normally do.
5. Georgia is a rivalry game and it counts for more. I'm glad he realizes the importance to UF. He said you don't get mulligans on the rivalry games. When you lose, it hurts a long time. He said UF will have to continue to work hard and improve if the Gators are going to beat a very good and well coached Georgia team that will come in with guns blazing for the game.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 26, 2015 17:04:00 GMT -5
UF opened at -3 over UGALY, but it's already down to -2 1/2:
10/31 3:30 PM 151 Georgia 152 Florida -3 -10 -2½ -10 -2 -10 -2 -10 -2½ -10 -2½ -10 -2 -10 -2½ -10 -3 -05 GEO-RB-Nick Chubb-OUT | FLO-QB-Will Grier-OUT | TV: CBS
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Post by Deleted on Oct 27, 2015 9:50:20 GMT -5
UF's Depth Chart On 10/27/2015: www.gatorzone.com/football/stats/depth.pdfPlayers who have been playing offense or defense that aren't listed on the depth chart: Camrin Knight FR TE - Will likely see less PT with C'yontai Lewis back from broken hand Thomas Holley RFR DT - Added depth at DT - Nursing a hip injury that has limited his play Jeremi Powell RJR LB - Added depth at LB - Made an excellent one on one tackle against Leonard Fournette
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Post by Deleted on Oct 28, 2015 12:22:23 GMT -5
The Gators are ready. They plan to play loose and have fun:
By Robbie Andreu Staff writer
Published: Wednesday, October 28, 2015 at 12:17 p.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, October 28, 2015 at 12:17 p.m.
The consensus around college football is that the Florida Gators have exceeded expectations so far this season. UF coach Jim McElwain doesn’t see it that way.
“You know, no,” McElwain said Wednesday on the SEC coaches’ teleconference. “I think there isn’t a coach in America, doesn’t matter what they go into, you expect to be successful. I really like these guys. They’ve done what we’ve asked and they keep getting a little bit better. That’s what you hope as a coach.
“I know this, they’re a lot of fun to be around. They work hard, they enjoy competing. Every Saturday is a new opportunity to go out and see what you’re all about. This is another opportunity.”
McElwain said the players have seemed focused in practice and in meetings, and appear to be handling the hype that comes with the Florida-Georgia rivalry.
“These guys have done a really good job, and obviously, we slipped up a couple of weeks ago,” he said. “They’ve done a good job of investing in themselves and investing in each other. It’s fun to see.
“We’ll find out on Saturday. I think we’ll probably run out of the tunnel. I don’t know if they’re afraid or anything. At the same time, it should be a fun event.”
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Post by Deleted on Oct 28, 2015 13:09:33 GMT -5
Given Clayton's current listed size at 6'4"/218, he'll probably grow into a 240-250 pound Rush DE. If he has the skill set, he could play OLB dropping into coverage on passing downs like Alex McCalister does now. Clayton is a good fit with the type of defense UF plays. My guess is he'll need a redshirt year in UF's strength and conditioning program before he's ready for SEC play:
UF football lands 4-star recruit, defensive end Antonneous Clayton
Zach Abolverdi Correspondent
Published: Wednesday, October 28, 2015 at 1:31 p.m.
Days before their rivalry game with UGA, the Florida Gators got a big recruiting win in the state of Georgia.
Consensus four-star defensive end Antonneous Clayton committed to UF on Wednesday, announcing his decision on Twitter. He’s a top-100 overall recruit in the ESPN, Rivals and 247Sports Composite rankings.
Clayton chose Florida over Auburn and Florida State with 36 other offers, including Alabama, Clemson and LSU.
The 6-foot-4, 218-pounder from Vienna (Ga.) Dooly County visited UF for the Tennessee game and named the Gators his leader afterward.
“I look at Florida as kind of a defensive school where I can kind of fit in and be an impact player,” Clayton told The Sun. “I just have a good vibe about them.”
UF now has 21 members in its 2016 class, which is ranked No. 10 nationally by Scout and 12th by Rivals and 247Sports.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 29, 2015 22:23:06 GMT -5
Reverend Richt is playing mind games with UF or he's desperate to put pressure on his offensive players to perform better. He'll put Greyson Lambert in when the Gators D stuffs the poodles running game.
Faton Bauta to start at QB for Bulldogs
By Mike Huguenin on October 29, 2015
Florida will start its backup quarterback Saturday against Georgia, and as it turns out, so will the Bulldogs.
Sources tell gridironnow.com that Bulldogs junior Faton Bauta, who has been the third-stringer for much of the season, will start against the Gators in a game that seems likely to determine the SEC East title. Greyson Lambert had started Georgia’s first seven games.
Bauta (6 feet 3, 215 pounds), a fourth-year junior who already has graduated, has received scant playing time as a Bulldog. He has played in 14 games in his career, but hasn’t run or passed the ball in seven games this season. Most of his action this season has come as the holder on kicks.
In his career, Bauta has 10 rushes for 46 yards and two touchdowns, and he is 4-of-5 for 48 yards as a passer.
His running ability is his biggest selling point, and he gives Georgia the ability to run the read-option. Florida had trouble with Tennessee quarterback Josh Dobbs, who rushed for 136 yards in the Vols’ 28-27 loss to the Gators. With Dobbs, there was the threat of the pass. Can Bauta provide that, too?
Expecting him to provide a spark in arguably Georgia’s biggest game of the season certainly is a bold coaching move. Bauta hasn’t played a meaningful down at quarterback since he was a senior in high school in the 2011 season.
Bulldogs coach Mark Richt hinted that his team would play more than one quarterback after Wednesday’s practice. “All I can tell you is we’ve been repping more than one guy with the ones, and we’re going to continue to do that,” Richt told reporters.
Tight end Jeb Blazevich also met with the media after Wednesday’s practice. “I don’t know how much I’m allowed to say,” Blazevich told reporters. “But (coaches are) definitely focusing on putting the pressure on guys, and everything like that. I’ll just kind of leave that open-ended. I don’t want to get in trouble.”
Bauta was a high school standout at Palm Beach Gardens (Fla.) Dwyer, where he preceded Jacoby Brissett as the starter. Brissett signed with Florida but eventually transferred to North Carolina State and is the Wolfpack’s starter.
Interestingly, Bauta was in the same recruiting class as Lambert, a Georgia native. Lambert had some interest in Georgia, but once Bauta committed to Georgia, that interest waned.
Sophomore Treon Harris became Florida’s starting quarterback two weeks ago when redshirt freshman Will Grier was suspended after he tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs. Harris started the Gators’ win over Georgia last season.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 30, 2015 13:52:18 GMT -5
UF has a backup kicker or two or three:
Attachment Deleted
By SCOTT CARTER GatorZone.com Senior Writer
GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- Neil MacInnes had to change his plans for Friday night.
The house party MacInnes and a couple of friends scheduled will go on, but MacInnes won’t be there.
He’ll be in Jacksonville at the team hotel preparing to serve as Florida’s backup kicker behind Austin Hardin when the No. 11-ranked Gators (6-1, 4-1) face Georgia (5-2, 3-2) in a pivotal SEC East matchup Saturday afternoon at EverBank Field.
“It’s pretty much a dream come true,’’ MacInnes said. “I wanted to kick in high school and obviously being part of this organization, and Gator Nation, is kind of cool.”
MacInnes was one of 216 people who responded to a Twitter announcement by the Gators during the bye week. Florida lost kicker Jorge Powell to a season-ending knee injury at LSU and with Hardin the only healthy placekicker on the roster, the Gators made the rare move of holding a midseason call for kickers.
Gators coach Jim McElwain quipped his biggest concern was whether those trying out knew how to put on a helmet and pads. Fortunately for the Gators, MacInnis has some experience.
A standout soccer player and track athlete at Chamberlain High in Tampa, one of his high school coaches suggested he try out for the football team entering his junior season after seeing MacInnes kick a football around one day.
The 6-foot-4, 219-pound MacInnes took up the offer and was Chamberlain’s starting placekicker for two years. He has not kicked a football in competition since making 48- and 43-yard field goals in a Hillsborough County all-star game at Raymond James Stadium in December 2011.
So, if by chance MacInnes does get his number called -- which is 34 by the way -- Saturday against Georgia, at least Florida fans can take solace in that he has made a field goal in an NFL stadium before.
“We have faith in Austin,’’ Gators defensive back Nick Washington said. “It is a little nerve-wracking when you have a tryout about kickers, a little like, ‘oh.’ I was kind of shocked by that, I’m not going to lie. It was kind of funny, too.”
The 21-year-old MacInnes, a senior studying to be a dental ceramist, is equipped to handle the pressure and uniqueness of trying to fit in with the Gators in the middle of the season.
He was Chamberlain’s valedictorian, drew interest from Harvard academically and athletically, and a member of the school’s record-breaking 4x100 relay team. He relied on his athletic experience during his valedictorian speech in June 2012.
“Now, we didn’t run that fast by just showing up in our uncomfortably close-fitting and somewhat showy track tights,’’ he told his fellow graduates. “It actually took hours of hard work and practice.”
MacInnes decided to try out after several friends sent him the Gators’ tweet about their kicker search on Oct. 19. Three days later he was at Florida’s practice getting tips from special-teams coach Greg Nord.
“I had a lot of support from my friends. ‘Dude, you should try this. We know you can do this even though it’s been four years,’ ’’ MacInnes said. “I had no idea of what was going to happen.”
MacInnes, former Sebring High kicker Donovan White, a past member of Florida’s equipment and training staff, and former Gainesville High kicker Brooks Abbott were the final three standing in the competition.
MacInnes learned Friday he had made the travel squad for the Georgia game. Based on what McElwain has said, the backup kicker situation is fluid and all three could still be involved as the season progresses, but MacInnes’ time is here.
He watched the LSU game at a friend’s house. Two weeks later he’ll be on the sidelines at EverBank Field as the Gators try to maintain their grip on the SEC East lead.
“I saw Powell get hurt,’’ he said. “It didn’t register. I expected them to have a third-string kicker.”
MacInnes said his body continues to adjust to restarting a kicking routine. The first couple of days his muscles ached.
At the initial tryout, MacInnis started by booting three kickoffs. He then to attempted three field goals.
That’s when Nord stepped in to provide a tip. He told MacInnes to lean the ball forward more on his attempts.
“It was a much better ball,’’ MacInnes said. “My mindset going into it was, ‘if I was in high school, and they were recruiting me right now, like do any of these other guys have the potential to do it? Would they have had the potential to do it in high school?’ I felt like I did.”
The mentality paid off. And if MacInnes, who had contact with Miami and Tennessee on the recruiting trail, is called into action his outlook will be the same as when he showed up that day for tryouts.
“Make my kicks,’’ he said. “They are trying to tweak my form. I’m still working on form and getting everything right. That’s my main focus.”
Meanwhile, the party goes on. MacInnes won’t be there, but you can bet his name comes up.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 31, 2015 21:41:50 GMT -5
By Chris Harry GatorZone.com Senior Writer
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Atlanta is 331 miles from Gainesville, but it's looking awfully close right about now.
Kelvin Taylor rushed for 121 yards and two touchdowns, Antonio Callaway caught a 66-yard scoring pass and the Florida defense swarmed all over Georgia and its first-time starting quarterback, forcing five turnovers in a 27-3 smashing Saturday at EverBank Field that placed the 11th-ranked Gators in total command of the Southeastern Conference East Division.
In winning a second straight in the storied 95-game rivalry for the first time in five years, Florida (7-1, 5-1) needs only to defeat Vanderbilt next week or South Carolina a week later to clinch its first SEC Championship Game berth since 2009.
With the victory, the Gators matched their win total of last season on Halloween night -- with at least four games remaining -- and has been eliminated from nothing relative to the big picture of the 2015 college football season.
"It’ll be interesting to me if we have become mature enough to handle the position we’re in," said UF coach Jim McElwain, who took over a program that went a combined 11-14 the last two seasons. "I don't have the answer to that, but to me, that’s going to be the key to what kind of ball squad we have."
If it continues to resemble the one that showed up against Georgia (5-3, 3-3) -- with a downhill running game and ferocious defense -- McElwain figures to be pleased.
"There’s a good vibe on this team," said junior cornerback Vernon Hargreaves III, whose second-quarter interception and return set up UF's third touchdown of the half. "We still know we have more to accomplish, but we’re going to enjoy this win then see how the rest plays out."
Florida opened a 20-0 first-half lead and staved off any hope of a Dogs comeback by intercepting quarterback Faton Bauta three times in the second half. UF rolled to 413 yards of total offense, compared to Georgia's 258. As is so often the case in this series, the team that ran the ball ruled. Florida, which came into the game ranked 12 in the SEC at just 99 yards per game in league play, cranked out 258 yards on the ground. UGA was held to just 69.
"It’s nice to have an offense that can score the ball and have a tremendous defense like we do. It’s one of the things we’ve been missing the past few years -- offense," senior guard Trip Thurman said. "With any team, if one side of the ball is not doing their job correctly, it puts a burden on the other side of the ball and you end up pointing fingers. Obviously, we weren’t able to score last year at times and we ended up losing a couple games the way we did."
But this team bears virtually no resemblance to last year's team. Or any in recent years, actually. This UF team does not beat itself. Case in point: In forcing five turnovers, the Gators pushed their giveaway-takeaway ratio to plus-13 this season, with just one turnover the last five games. It came Saturday and helped give Georgia its lone points of the game -- the Bulldogs' three points were their fewest in the series since 1984 -- and proved to be merely a footnote versus the ball-hawking UF defense.
Faton Bauta, the fourth-year senior, had not attempted a pass this season yet found himself dodging Gators all day. He finished just 15 of 33 for 155 yards, no touchdowns, the four interceptions and was sacked twice.
"They whipped us up front," Georgia coach Mark Richt said. "After a while, the dam is going to break when you have to keep going back out there after a three-and-out or a turnover."
The Gators got on the board first when Bulldogs return man Reggie Davis muffed a Johnny Townsend punt inside the UGA 5-yard line in the first quarter. The ball bounced into the end zone, where UF's Nick Washington recovered it for a touchdown on the final play of the first quarter.
UF kicker Austin Hardin, who missed a 45-yard field on the game's opening possession, had his point-after blocked to keep the score 6-0.
The Gators punted on three straight possessions before quarterback Treon Harris struck for the big play to Callaway, the spectacular true freshman from Miami who made woke up his team -- and the orange-and-blue side of the stadium -- from a listless first quarter and a half. It came after Harris open with incompletions on nine of his first 11 pass attempts.
"At times it looked like they were right in the middle of our playbook," McElwain said. "But Treon made some plays when we had to."
Harris was under pressure when he rolled to his left and -- against his body -- lofted a perfectly thrown ball down the sideline. Callaway left Wednesday's practice with a foot injury, but seemed to moving just fine. He took the ball in stride, shook a Georgia defensive back, tight-roped the chalk and zipped into the end zone. Hardin's PAT made it 13-0.
Callaway finished with three catches for 110 yards, making him UF's first true freshman wideout with three 100-yard games in a season since Reidel Anthony in 1994.
"Guess he was faking it," Thurman joked of Callaway's injury earlier in the week. "No, he's a great player. For a freshman to come in and be as productive as he's been, it's just incredible."
On the Bulldogs' ensuing possession, junior defensive end Alex McCalister hit Bauta as he was attempting to throw. The ball popped high in the air downfield and UF cornerback Vernon Hargreaves III caught it and returned the ball to the Georgia 5.
Taylor scored two plays later to make the score 20-0, giving UF two touchdowns just two minutes and 27 seconds apart.
Georgia kicker Marshall Morgan got his team on the board in the third quarter with a 27-yard field goal that followed a Harris fumble, but that would be it for the Bulldogs. They had a chance to make it a 10-point game early in the fourth quarter, driving from their own 11 to the Florida 3. But Bauter, under pressure, had a tipped pass intercepted in the end zone by safety Keanu Neal.
The Gators took over and true freshman tailback Jordan Scarlett took off for a 60-yard run that set up Taylor's second TD of the game, a 16-yard run with 7:10 that gave Taylor his third career 100-yard game -- his second against UGA -- to slam the door.
And move the Gators that much closer to the Georgia Dome.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 31, 2015 22:09:50 GMT -5
By SCOTT CARTER GatorZone.com Senior Writer
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- The No. 11-ranked Gators ensured head coach Jim McElwain's first taste of the Florida-Georgia rivalry was a sweet one with a 27-3 victory over SEC East rival Georgia.
Historians won't recall the 2015 edition of this heated rivalry a classic, but McElwain won't care. The Gators won and they won big.
Florida (7-1, 5-1) forced five turnovers and held Georgia (5-3, 3-3) scoreless until a field goal in the third quarter.
The Gators took a 20-0 lead into halftime, their first score coming when defensive back Nick Washington, a Jacksonville native, recovered a muffed punt by Georgia's Reggie Davis on the final play of the first quarter.
Gators sophomore quarterback Treon Harris wasn't always on target, but he was on a 66-yard touchdown pass to freshman Antonio Callaway that provided Florida a 13-0 lead midway into the second quarter and seemed to take some life out of the Bulldogs.
Here is our instant analysis from the Gators' second consecutive victory over the Bulldogs and 20th in 26 years:
WHAT IT MEANS: Florida rebounded nicely from its first loss of the season to move within a victory over Vanderbilt next week to clinch the SEC East title. The Gators control their own destiny toward a likely trip to Atlanta during a most unlikely season.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Harris made his second consecutive start against the Bulldogs and improved to 2-0 in the rivalry. However, he was asked to do a lot more than a season ago when he passed only six times as Florida rolled up 418 yards rushing. On Saturday, Harris finished 8 of 19 for 155 yards and a touchdown. He added 39 yards rushing, and other than a second-half fumble, took care of the football.
STAGGERING STATISTIC: The Gators scored 20 points off five Georgia turnovers on Saturday and have now outscored opponents 80-23 in points off turnovers this season.
SUBPLOT: Florida junior running back Kelvin Taylor, who rushed for a career-high 197 yards in last season's victory over the Bulldogs, spoke this week of having a chip on his shoulder. He was determined to provide the rushing game a boost after picking up only 25 yards on 15 carries in the loss at LSU. Taylor delivered, rushing for a season-high 121 yards on 25 carries and two touchdowns.
UP NEXT: The Gators came as close as they could to clinching their first SEC East title since 2009 by beating the Bulldogs. However, they can officially clinch next weekend at home when Vanderbilt comes to town. The Commodores (3-4, 1-3) entered Saturday night's nonconference game at Houston as the only team in the East that could theoretically earn a tie-breaker against the Gators.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 31, 2015 22:17:58 GMT -5
As badly as UF played at times, the Gators dominated the stats and the score. The poodles have imploded. Reverend Richt has to be on thin ice with the poodle nation.
Team Statistics (Final) University of Florida Football 2015 Georgia vs #11 Florida (Oct 31, 2015 at Jacksonville, Fla.)
Team Totals UGA UF FIRST DOWNS 12 15 Rushing 3 11 Passing 8 4 Penalty 1 0 NET YARDS RUSHING 69 258 Rushing Attempts 22 48 Average Per Rush 3.1 5.4 Rushing Touchdowns 0 2 Yards Gained Rushing 77 272 Yards Lost Rushing 8 14 NET YARDS PASSING 154 155 Completions-Attempts-Int 15-34-4 8-19-0 Average Per Attempt 4.5 8.2 Average Per Completion 10.3 19.4 Passing Touchdowns 0 1 TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS 223 413 Total offense plays 56 67 Average Gain Per Play 4.0 6.2 Fumbles: Number-Lost 1-1 2-1 Penalties: Number-Yards 3-20 8-74 PUNTS-YARDS 5-217 5-189 Average Yards Per Punt 43.4 37.8 Net Yards Per Punt 43.2 38.6 Inside 20 0 2 50+ Yards 1 0 Touchbacks 0 0 Fair catch 2 1 KICKOFFS-YARDS 2-118 5-335 Average Yards Per Kickoff 59.0 67.0 Net Yards Per Kickoff 46.5 42.0 Touchbacks 0 2 Punt returns: Number-Yards-TD 2--4-0 1-1-0 Average Per Return -2.0 1.0 Kickoff returns: Number-Yds-TD 3-75-0 2-25-0 Average Per Return 25.0 12.5 Interceptions: Number-Yds-TD 0-0-0 4-20-0 Fumble Returns: Number-Yds-TD 0-0-0 0-0-1 Miscellaneous Yards 0 0 Possession Time 23:09 36:51 1st Quarter 4:39 10:21 2nd Quarter 7:59 7:01 3rd Quarter 5:59 9:01 4th Quarter 4:32 10:28 Third-Down Conversions 2 of 12 7 of 16 Fourth-Down Conversions 0 of 2 0 of 1 Red-Zone Scores-Chances 1-2 2-4 Touchdowns 0-2 2-4 Field goals 1-2 0-4 Sacks By: Number-Yards 2-7 1-3 PAT Kicks 0-0 3-4 Field Goals 1-1 0-1 Points off turnovers 3 20
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Post by Deleted on Oct 31, 2015 22:40:48 GMT -5
UF trails UGALY all-time 42-49-2. Since 1990, the Gators have won 20 of 26. The Gators have won two in a row, 38-20 last season and 27-3 today. The future looks bright for UF to continue to erode UGALY's all-time lead. Poodle nation has to be demoralized. Life is sweet.
It's Great To Be A Florida Gator!
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Post by mscott59 on Oct 31, 2015 22:52:11 GMT -5
Congrats to UF on a thorough win. You wonder what might have been had uga's receivers been able to hold onto passes (I counted at least 3 1st half drops, and thought for being thrown into a fire that their qb threw well), but the gator d scored a td, set up a couple others, and was relentless all day long. Impressive.
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mark scott tosu 81
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