Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

On Florida’s mind is top-dog Georgia

- TOM MURPHY

Tenth in a series previewing the 2020 SEC football season.

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Florida Coach Dan Mullen used a one-syllable grunt when asked to describe how the Gators operated in their first scrimmage of camp Friday night: Ugh.

“We have a ways to go,” Mullen said. “We haven’t played football in a while. We had missed tackles. We had too many balls on the ground, fumbling, because you’re going live football.”

Another potential factor in the sloppy scrimmagin­g: It had been a long day for the Gators, who put together an impromptu players’ march for social justice that day before meetings and the scrimmage.

Mullen said he got home between 1:30 a.m. and 2 a.m.

Despite the ragged beginning, the No. 8 Gators are considered the most likely

team in the SEC East to challenge Georgia’s three-year supremacy at the top of the division.

The high hopes center on Mullen’s track record — including a 21-5 record in two seasons at Florida — and a solid amount of returning starters, highlighte­d by senior quarterbac­k Kyle Trask.

Given his chance in the spotlight last year after Feleipe Franks’ season-ending broken ankle in the third week, Trask completed 237 of 354 passes for 2,941 yards and 25 touchdowns, the most scoring passes at Florida since Tim Tebow under Mullen as offensive coordinato­r in 2008.

Franks transferre­d to the University of Arkansas, whom the Gators host on Nov. 14. Trask, earning a starter’s job for the first time since his freshman year in high school, is now considered one of the top quarterbac­ks in the country.

His work was limited in last weekend’s scrimmage, but he led touchdown drives on both of his series.

“I thought he looked really sharp,” Mullen said. “I thought he handled that situation, being on the field, thought he had great leadership, led us to a couple of touchdown drives. I was really pleased with how Kyle did out there and what we’ll be able to do with him.”

Trask finished 15th nationally with a 156.09 passer rating to become the first Gator to land in the top 35 since Tebow’s 164.2 rating led the country in 2009.

He’ll have plenty of talent to distribute the ball to, including 6-6 tight end Kyle Pitts; big-play wideouts Trevon Grimes and Kadarius Toney; and top tailbacks Dameon Pierce and Malik Davis, who has had an injury ravaged couple of years. Pitts had 54 receptions — tops in the SEC among tight ends and fourth nationally — for 649 yards and 5 touchdowns while serving as Trask’s security blanket.

The Gators bring back three offensive line starters in tackles Stone Forsythe and Jean DeLance, and center Brett Heggie.

The unit struggled in the run game last season. Florida averaged 129.8 rushing yards per game to rank 13th in the SEC and 107th in the FBS. However, the Gators put up 300.8 passing yards per game, 15th in the nation, which led to a total offense rank of 45th, fourth in the conference.

Mullen offenses are traditiona­lly more balanced than that, and the Gators would like to trend toward a healthier run game.

Davis was a spark as a true freshman in 2017, filling in while tailback Jordan Scarlett served a suspension, before he suffered a knee injury against Georgia. Davis fumbled in last season’s opener and did not earn a ton of playing time. Now, he and Dameon Pierce project as the Gators’ top two backs.

“Malik Davis to me looked like the Malik Davis I saw when I got here before I became the head coach,” Mullen said Saturday. “I haven’t see that in a couple years. I’m thinking, boy, he’s really back to where he wants to be.”

On defense, the Gators bring back five starters in the base 4-2-5 coordinate­d by Todd Grantham.

The Gators have 49 takeaways in two years under Grantham, tied for the sixth most in the country in that span. Florida had a plus-12 turnover margin in 2018 and a plus-5 in that category last year.

The Gators were seventh nationally in scoring defense one year ago, allowing 15.5 points per game, helped by three shutouts (Tennessee-Martin, Towson and Vanderbilt). Florida had not posted three shutouts in a season since 1988.

Florida tied for ninth with 16 inceptions in 2019 and had a very sturdy red-zone defense, finishing third in opponent red-zone touchdown percentage at 40% (14 touchdowns in 35 trips).

Defensive tackles Tedarrell Slaton (6-5, 358 pounds) and Kyree Campbell (6-3, 304) should absorb a lot of blockers on the interior.

Returning starter Ventrell Miller leads the linebacker­s. Safety Shawn Davis and cornerback Marco Wilson return in the defensive backfield, where top-50 signee Kaiir Elam should find more playing time as a sophomore.

Mullen is a highly regarded coach, but his career SEC record — including nine years at Mississipp­i State — is 4444, with a high-water mark of 6-2 with the Bulldogs in 2014 and with the Gators last year.

Florida and Georgia are scheduled to meet at TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., on Nov. 7. Georgia has won three in a row in the series and owns a 52-43-2 edge overall.

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