He won a heck of a lot more at Mississippi State than any previous coach did. 

And, he beat Nick Saban at Alabama twice. 

And, he developed at least four future NFL quarterbacks.

 

Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI

Real Estate Broker

PARKS

305B Indian Lake Blvd

Suite 220

Hendersonville TN 37075

Phone: 615-826-4040

Mobile: 615-972-4239

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

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Foley Santamaria
Sent: Friday, July 13, 2018 2:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [gatortalk] Fwd: [gatornews] REQUIRED READING!! A closer look at 
Florida's slow recruiting start, and why it's complicated

 

I'm not ready to throw in the towel or anything, but he certainly didn't win 
much at Miss State!

 

On Fri, Jul 13, 2018 at 10:10 AM Woody <[email protected]> wrote:

Yes.  There are people who are freaking out waaaaaayyyyyyyyyyyyy too much about 
recruiting and not taking everything into context.  Including some podcasters.

 

On Fri, Jul 13, 2018 at 9:01 AM, Oliver Barry <[email protected]> wrote:

I read this yesterday and it makes sense. Mullen is shifting the offense from 
pro style to spread. So, he needs spread players. That’s why we ended up with 
Emory Jones instead of Matt Corral. 

These players who are dumping us for other teams were not on our radar before 
Mullen. 

The article goes on to say Mullen needs time, win some games, and prove to 
recruits he can win. 

If he could win at Mississippi State he can win anywhere. 

 

Oliver Barry CRS, GRI

Real Estate Broker

PARKS Real Estate Services

305 B Indian Lake Blvd 
<https://maps.google.com/?q=305+B+Indian+Lake+Blvd+Suite+220+Hendersonville+TN+37075+Office:+615&entry=gmail&source=g>
 

Suite 220 
<https://maps.google.com/?q=305+B+Indian+Lake+Blvd+Suite+220+Hendersonville+TN+37075+Office:+615&entry=gmail&source=g>
 

Hendersonville TN 37075 
<https://maps.google.com/?q=305+B+Indian+Lake+Blvd+Suite+220+Hendersonville+TN+37075+Office:+615&entry=gmail&source=g>
 

Office: 615 
<https://maps.google.com/?q=305+B+Indian+Lake+Blvd+Suite+220+Hendersonville+TN+37075+Office:+615&entry=gmail&source=g>
 -826-4040

Mobile: 615-972-4239

[email protected]


Begin forwarded message:

From: Woody Bass <[email protected]>
Date: July 13, 2018 at 7:18:16 AM CDT
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatornews] REQUIRED READING!!  A closer look at Florida's slow 
recruiting start, and why it's complicated
Reply-To: [email protected]

This is a must read and you must pass it along to other Gators to read. Then 
close your eyes. Have a drink or 10. Then breathe again.  Relaaaxxxx


https://www.saturdaydownsouth.com/florida-football/a-closer-look-at-floridas-slow-recruiting-start-and-why-its-complicated/amp/?__twitter_impression=true


A closer look at Florida’s slow recruiting start, and why it’s complicated


22 hours ago

Dan Mullen hasn’t even taken the podium at his first SEC Media Days as 
Florida’s head coach, let alone coached his first game, and already there is 
noise in the system in Gainesville.

Fans and  
<https://www.readandreaction.com/2018/06/24/recruiting-revisit-is-panic-or-patience-needed-for-the-2019-recruiting-class/>
 writers alike are on edge about Florida’s sluggish start to the 2018-2019 
recruiting cycle, with many already moving past “on edge” and into full-on 
“panic mode.” Rival fans have taken to calling Florida “3-Star U,” with one 
notable podcaster comparing the notoriously poor recruiter Jim McElwain 
favorably to the affable, engaging Mullen.

There were rumblings from as early as the spring, when Florida hosted several 
big names without securing commitments or future official visits. The rumblings 
became louder in late June, when longtime Mullen 4-star DE target Nathan 
Pickering opted to commit to the in-state Mississippi State Bulldogs instead of 
the Gators, despite a lengthy recruiting relationship with the Florida coaching 
staff.

The rumbles turned to roars last week, when a pair of consensus 4-stars long 
considered Florida leans — Jahleel Billingsley (Alabama) and DB Chris Steele 
(USC) — committed elsewhere. The Gators also lost former 4-star WR commit John 
Dunmore, the Hollywood (Fla.) Chaminade product, who committed to Penn State. 
Another 4-star WR, Mycah Pittman, appears set to buck his mother’s wishes and 
pick Oregon over Florida.

There’s no question that’s a tough few weeks for the Gators, 
<https://247sports.com/Season/2019-Football/CompositeTeamRankings>  who 
currently sit at No. 31 in the 247Sports Composite Team Rankings for 2019 
(behind Duke!). But is it a cause for panic? And what exactly is behind 
Florida’s slow recruiting start?

Fan is short for “fanatic,” and reason and facts aren’t often considered when 
it’s easier to just pile on the panic bandwagon and criticize the new Florida 
coaching staff, who are tasked with rebuilding a program that for the second 
time in less than a decade has a broken culture to go along with personnel 
issues.

But even fanatics aren’t entitled to their own facts, and the facts of Florida 
recruiting are these.

First, it isn’t all doom-and-gloom.

Mullen signed the best transition class in Florida history last fall, rescuing 
a class ranked in the 20s with a host of signing day commitments, including 
coveted 4-star QB Emory Jones, who chose Florida over rival Florida State, and 
4-star WR Jacob Copeland, who ended years of Gator recruiting futility in 
Pensacola by picking Florida over Alabama.

Mullen’s 2019 class, with 4 top 300 players currently committed, also rates 
comparably, at this point in the cycle (early July), to Gus Malzahn’s second 
class at Auburn (4 top 300 commits), Mark Richt’s second class at Miami (4 top 
300 commits), and Willie Taggart’s second class at Florida State (5 top 300 
commits). It is also twice as good, as of July 11, as Jim McElwain’s second 
class was at this point (2 top 300 commits), which seems to suggest that at the 
very least, Mullen isn’t making McElwain look like “Bear Bryant on the trail.” 
And while Mullen’s second class certainly behind Urban Meyer’s second class at 
Florida as of July (10 top 300 commits), it isn’t terribly behind Kirby Smart’s 
pace (6 top 300 commits), although it is entirely fair to suggest that Florida 
needs a quality Friday Night Lights event this July to bolster the class, stem 
the negative flow of publicity and build momentum for the fall.

Further, while the losses of players like Steele, Pittman and Dunmore seem 
permanent, Pickering and Billingsley are among the players who have openly 
indicated they’ll take recruiting visits, giving Florida at least a chance at 
recouping those losses. And even with Dunmore gone, there are a host of 
analysts projecting 4-star WR Elijah Higgins, a 6-2 221-pound NFL prototype, 
will commit to Florida before the end of the month.

Second, Mullen is also dealing with a host of structural challenges his rivals 
simply don’t face.

To begin with, he inherited a program that has had two 4-win seasons in four 
years, and  
<http://www.gatorcountry.com/feature/recruiting-analysis-dan-mullens-first-eight-months/>
 hasn’t fielded an offense ranked in the top 50 nationally since most recruits 
were in elementary school. The Gators stitched together two 10-win seasons this 
decade, but did so on the shoulders of elite defenses, and even in the seasons 
when Will Muschamp recruited well, Florida’s classes tended to be unbalanced, 
with a high-number of blue chips (4- or 5-stars) on defense, not offense.

"Maybe it’s a longer rebuild, like Clemson. But Dan will get it built, if they 
let him.”
-- Power 5 assistant coach on Dan Mullen's recruiting ability 

Florida’s roster contains 36 blue-chip recruits, only 3 of whom were consensus 
5-star players. That’s more blue-chips than at SEC East rivals South Carolina 
(23) and Tennessee (34), but it’s well-behind Georgia (61) and FSU (56). Much 
of that is due to unbalanced classes under Muschamp and the general aloofness 
of McElwain, who deferred much of Florida’s recruiting process to associate 
head coach Randy Shannon. But some of it is about success on the field too, 
according to one longtime SEC assistant.

“Kirby inherited a 10-win roster at Georgia, and schematically, they didn’t 
want to reinvent much offensively, which people forget,” the SEC assistant told 
me. “That meant Kirby could go and target certain areas where he felt upgrades 
were critical, notably on the offensive line and on the defensive perimeter. 
But Smart also knew Richt already had a roster that was close. It’s why he 
waited on that job. Dan gets a 4-win culture and probably an 8-win roster. 
Those challenges are almost entirely different, and that’s before you discuss 
scheme.”

Another challenge Florida faces is consistent coaching turnover, which impacts 
recruiting in two ways.

The first is the obvious one. It’s hard to play catchup against other staffs 
when they’ve cultivated longstanding relationships with kids. The usual 
rebuttal to this is that “other staffs in transition manage to do it.” But 
another longtime Power 5 assistant says it’s more complicated than that.

“At Florida, you want to recruit against everybody. You go into a living room 
and sell Florida, but you’re doing it in a place where Dabo (Swinney) has been, 
where (Nick) Saban has been, where Kirby Smart is or Clay Helton,” the Power 5 
assistant told me last week. “That’s fine, but then even if you catch up 
relationship-wise, you’re behind culturally, you aren’t winning. So, the most 
interested kids may make you wait.”

The second challenge of consistent turnover is the more fascinating one, and 
far less talked about. Not all staffs want to recruit the same kids, especially 
when there is dramatic scheme change, which there certainly is at Florida as it 
moves away not just from McElwain’s pro-style offense to Mullen’s run-dominant 
spread, but also from Shannon’s vanilla 4-3 to Todd Grantham’s Pittsburgh 3-4.

That poses significant recruiting challenges that are compounded by the 
relationship issue, according to Florida-based national recruiting analyst 
Corey Long, who for over a decade has covered college football and recruiting 
for the New York Times, ESPN and Saturday Down South, among other publications.

“Mullen and this coaching staff have a plan and they are going after the 
players they are comfortable with and feel like they fit into the scheme and 
the culture,” Long told me last week.  “Maybe they will look to fill the ‘top 
end’ of the class during the season and get some bigger names in before the 
first signing day, but for now, it’s about crafting their target list.”

Long is sympathetic to the criticism among some writers and fans alike, 
however, that Florida doesn’t seem to have a specific recruiting strategy 
established yet under Mullen. He says a good amount of that has to do with 
turnover.

“I think the problem with four coaches in just over eight years is they have 
four different players (they have targeted),” Long said.  “Gator football was 
different under McElwain than it was under Muschamp and will be different under 
Mullen. McElwain’s staff, headed by Randy Shannon, was very active in South 
Florida whereas Mullen’s staff doesn’t seem to be recruiting as much there. So 
where will their in-state focus be? Tampa? Orlando? Jacksonville? The 
Panhandle? What about out of state? Are they strong in Georgia or better along 
the Gulf Coast and Mississippi JUCOs? They need to figure out where they can 
establish significant inroads at and start aggressively recruiting in those 
areas.”

Long’s point here is supported by the reality that Florida is one of only 8 
Power 5 programs that have had four head coaches since 2010. The others? Pitt, 
Minnesota, Illinois, Kansas, Oregon, USC and Arkansas. Of those nine programs, 
only Florida, USC and Oregon are considered bluebloods, and both Oregon and USC 
hired their fourth coach (Cristobal and Helton, respectively) from within their 
prior staff. Of the nine, Pitt made the largest recruiting improvement from a 
transition class to second class, when Pat Narduzzi improved Pitt from 46th to 
30th in 2016. The difference? Pitt won 8 football games under Narduzzi after a 
losing season under Paul Chryst. 

Winning matters, according to the Power 5 assistant.

“Helton and (Mario) Cristobal already had ideas as to who they wanted to 
recruit, and an offer list they didn’t need to reshape. That allowed for 
immediate momentum. Helton had to win more games, but USC was never in a 
situation like Florida where they had multiple losing seasons. Mario is at a 
program that has been to a College Football Playoff Championship. He and 
(Willie Taggart) made the offer list. Mullen’s situation is a lot more like 
Dabo’s was at Clemson, even though Dabo came from (Tommy) Bowden’s staff. Dabo 
had a different idea about how he wanted Clemson to play football. Clemson 
hadn’t won a conference title in forever. They had to win. It took awhile to 
sell that to kids.”

Long is less sure.

“In the era of the Early Signing Day period, there’s not really wait-and-see,” 
Long said. “I just think there’s too much turnover and coaching changes in the 
past few years to establish a consistent pattern of recruiting. The target list 
in the 2019, 2020 and 2021 classes changed with the coaching change, so there 
are kids that the Shannon-led group of assistants were targeting over the next 
three years that Mullen’s staff has decided not to pursue and in turn they have 
a whole new group of targets, some brought over from their evaluations while at 
Mississippi State. That and the schematic changes just means they start from 
behind.”

Still, it’s Florida, the Power 5 assistant told me. Kids will respond if 
Florida plays better football.

“I don’t know if it happens in this class,” the assistant said. “But the way 
they are upgrading things, the whole package of tradition and facilities and 
the NFL pipeline and academics: maybe it’s a longer rebuild, like Clemson. But 
Dan will get it built, if they let him.”

 

 

Woody

 

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National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 National 
Football Champions | Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny 
Wuerffel (1996), Tim Tebow (2007)
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Wuerffel (1996), Tim Tebow (2007)
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(1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996), Tim Tebow (2007)
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