I think Pat Dooley always does a good job of putting things into perspective.

 

 

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 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Jerry D. Belloit
Sent: Thursday, September 21, 2017 8:54 PM
To: GatorTalk
Subject: [gatortalk] Re: [gatornews] [SUN]: Dooley: UF offense will never be 
perfect

 

Perhaps I just skim through most of the Sun's articles, but this one was one of 
the best I have seen Dooley writer.

 

Jerry

Sent from my iPad


On Sep 21, 2017, at 8:25 AM, Shane Ford <[email protected]> wrote:


Dooley: UF offense will never be perfect


By

  <http://www.gatorsports.com/author/pat-dooley/> Pat Dooley (Gainesville SUN)  

- 

September 21, 2017 

 
<http://www.gatorsports.com/2017/09/dooley-uf-offense-will-never-perfect/#comments>
 6

171

 

 

<image1.jpeg>

Gator fans celebrate the final touchdown that beat Tennessee on Saturday at Ben 
Hill Griffin Stadium. Gator fans expect a more explosive offense, one that gets 
in the end zone more often. [Cyndi Chambers/Correspondent]

Here in Gainesville, we are known for many things. The alligators at Lake 
Alice, the sinkhole at Millhopper, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, one big 
prairie, midtown and downtown and uptown flunkies.

We have traffic like a big city at 5 p.m. and avoid I-75 on holidays like it 
was littered with landmines.

I was born here, brought home as a baby to a house on NW 39th Ave. and 
celebrated my 30th year at the Gainesville Sun this month. (Shouldn’t I get a 
gold watch or a free subscription or something?)

But what I didn’t know until the last few years is that Gainesville has more 
offensive coordinators per capita than any city in America.

They may argue that point in Knoxville and Auburn, but that’s my story and I’m 
sticking to it.

It seems that almost everyone with a pulse and a cellphone or a computer has an 
answer to what has been infecting the Florida football offense for almost a 
decade.

(They also had answers for the baseball team’s offensive struggles last year 
but that kind of worked out).

It’s useless to even try the argument that perhaps the coaches know more about 
their personnel and actually study opposing defenses frame by frame. Pshaw. We 
know better.

Everyone else knows how to fix things. Well, everyone else has an opinion on 
how to fix things.

On Sunday I went into a restaurant to pick up some to-go food and there was a 
waitress there talking to her boss about the Florida-Tennessee game.

“I don’t know what those coaches were doing but, man, everybody was madder than 
heck on Facebook.”

That’s a part of being a fan, whether you are a big-money booster or a couch 
critic. You have suggestions and in this day of multiple social media weapons, 
you can get them out there.

Some of the answers:

• Make Steve Spurrier the offensive coordinator.

• Make Kerwin Bell the offensive coordinator.

• Make my next-door neighbor the offensive coordinator.

• Start Luke Del Rio.

• Start Malik Zaire.

• Start Kerwin Bell.

• Use a fullback.

• Run more reverses.

• Run fake reverses.

• Run double reverses.

• Get the ball to Kadarius Toney more often.

• Give the ball to Malik Davis more than four times in a game.

• Go back to the Fun ‘N’ Gun.

• Does anyone know where we put it?

• Fire Doug Nussmeier.

• Fire Jim McElwain.

• Fire everyone.

• Get a new strength coach.

• Throw it deep more often.

• Drink more Gatorade.

• Or just drink more.

I could go on. And on. Believe me. And the suggestions are not all without 
merit. Florida has played two games and ranks at the bottom of the conference 
in almost every offensive category.

(Somehow, McElwain and his staff even get blamed for four years of Will 
Muschamp’s offense, but I digress).

The resolution to the malaise that is Florida’s offense is not as simple as any 
one answer. But if it was, it would be this — Florida has a young quarterback 
who has to get better if this offense is ever going to get out of the 100s.

I’m not laying the blame on Feleipe Franks. His struggles as a young man in a 
high-profile position with only six-plus quarters of football under his belt 
are understandable.

And he didn’t have the luxury of a couple of cupcakes to ease into it.

Franks has to see the field better. As McElwain pointed out Monday, Franks 
missed six big plays. (If McElwain truly is a quarterback whisperer, perhaps he 
needs to talk a little louder).

If Franks (and it’s not all on him but let’s start there) had seen the field 
better, maybe some of the disgruntled Gator fans would be enjoying the latest 
win over a rival instead of sucking all of the joy out of an amazing victory.

If Davis doesn’t fumble at the goal line and Franks sees Dre Massey wide open 
behind the defense and Mark Thompson’s TD against Michigan isn’t called back 
and Eddy Pineiro didn’t miss a field goal in the opener, we might be talking 
about a Gator offense that was finally fun to watch.

Or maybe not.

There is no doubt that expectations for a much-improved offense this season 
have been hamstrung by the suspensions of two of the team’s best offensive 
players, one of them just days before the opener with the game plan already in 
place.

But nobody can be surprised at the cantankerous mood of Gator fans who truly 
believe they are entitled to happier times.

Many of them don’t remember what it was like in the days before Spurrier when 
Florida offenses were often three-runs-and-a-punt. Sure, they have been 
spoiled, but who doesn’t want to be spoiled? What’s wrong with being spoiled 
anyway?

I saw a quote this week from a coach who said this:

“Everyone wants to panic because it doesn’t look pretty all the time. Winning 
is all that matters.”

It wasn’t Jim McElwain, although it could have been. It was Kentucky coach Mark 
Stoops last Saturday night.

But that’s the thing. Winning matters, but winning while you are cursing your 
TV isn’t asenjoyable.

Florida has won almost every close game it has played under McElwain, who is 
eight out of nine during his UF career in one-score games.

But that’s too stressful.

And I get that. In a perfect world, the offense is humming and you’re making 
dinner plans at halftime. You have a thick file of highlight plays to choose 
from every week instead of the one that decided the game.

So this team might not be for you. It’s going to struggle on offense. Maybe it 
gets better. Maybe it doesn’t.

I know this — it will never be perfect.

And if winning the way Florida won on Saturday made you cranky, consider this — 
the alternative.

You know, I don’t remember the Gator Nation being angry after James Jones’ 
catch or Chris Doering’s got a touchdown or Jacquez Green is behind the defense 
or Kerwin Bell limping into the end zone or Spurrier’s field goal or even Chris 
Chiozza’s shot in Madison Square Garden.

I guess it comes down to this. You have a flawed team that has more warts than 
a Disney witch. But if you don’t like the way the last game ended, it may be 
time to move on.

Contact Pat Dooley at 352-374-5053 or at [email protected]. And follow 
at Twitter.com/Pat_Dooley.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sent From Shane's iPhone 

Go Gators!   &   Skål Vikes!

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