College Football, Florida Gators

Billy Napier out of answers as Gators dominated by Texas A&M

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Billy Napier out of answers as Gators dominated by Texas A&M

When Dan Mullen lost to Missouri in November of 2021, here’s what I wrote:

“It’s pretty obvious that Dan Mullen is done. It’s not obvious because he’s lost the team. It’s obvious because he has lost the ability to generate hope within the fan base. Once you lose that, there isn’t anything you can do to get it back.”

You can substitute Dan Mullen for Billy Napier and that rings true after Florida’s loss to Texas A&M.

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The game against the Aggies was a repeat of the debacle from two weeks ago against Miami, but this time there aren’t any of the same excuses. A&M has a first-year coach and should be rebuilding much more than Florida in year three. A&M had a backup QB forced into action after a shoulder injury made starter Conner Weigman a late scratch. After playing conservatively and pinning A&M on their own one-yard line, the Aggies proceeded to embarrass the Gators defense with a 15-play, 99-yard touchdown drive that included 14 runs.

There’s not much more of a symbol of Napier’s failures than that drive. With reports that Ron Roberts is now calling defensive plays, this is the third straight defensive coordinator that Napier has brought in who hasn’t been able to get the defense to perform at even what we would call below average. The Gators are now ranked 122nd in yards per play (7.2) after ranking 124th last year (6.5) and 105th two years ago (5.9).

Napier is the common denominator.

And that’s without considering the failure on display at the most important position on the field. I was asked on last week’s Gators Breakdown about whether an every-other-drive rotation of D.J. Lagway and Graham Mertz would satisfy me and I said it would be worse than just starting Mertz and sticking with him. The reason wasn’t that I think Mertz is better. It’s that to be a successful CEO at any level, you have to make hard decisions. Alternating drives with each indicated that Napier couldn’t make the hard decisions necessary to be successful for the job.

And yes, Steve Spurrier rotated QBs, but he didn’t rotate them every other drive to make sure his QBs got equitable time. He played the guy who executed what he wanted to see on the field and yanked them off when they didn’t live up to his expectations. He certainly wasn’t interested in participation trophies and made being a QB in Gainesville hard.

But it’s the hard concept that is important here. That sort of environment develops the toughness necessary to succeed when things don’t go your way immediately on game day. It’s that sort of environment that builds leaders who will go hold teammates accountable when their level of play or effort doesn’t measure up. And it’s that sort of environment that pushes people out of the program who don’t have the toughness that’s necessary to win at the highest level.

And that’s really what we’ve found out about Billy Napier in the first three games this year and really, over the past two seasons as well. He may be a really nice guy, which means I’m happy he’ll have $26 million to figure out what to do next. But he’s also someone who has lost to backup QBs from Utah, FSU and now A&M in just the past two seasons. He’s someone who has lost to Vanderbilt once and Kentucky twice. He’s someone who is now 5-6 against Power-4 opponents in The Swamp.

And yet he still insisted in his post-game press conference that he sees a good team in practice. I know he was going to get killed for whatever he said afterwards, but I’d have preferred him attacking the fans to trying to tell us that his team is great when nobody is watching.

That means what we’re left with is a coach who puts a substandard product on the field, who doesn’t recruit any better than his predecessor, and who has made staffing changes that have had absolutely zero effect. For two-plus years now, this team has had no identity, other than to calmly receive the ass whippings in a way that reflects what we see from the head coach on the podium after each whipping.

There’s been a lot of chatter about the toxicity of the Florida fan base, but the reality is that this fan base isn’t toxic (excluding some bozos on twitter who go after players and families). It’s a fan base that knows what it takes to win at the highest level and holds its coaches to that standard, because if the coach wilts when the home-town fans amp up the pressure, they’re going to wilt against Alabama, Georgia, Ohio State, or in front of the booster whose buy-in is necessary to secure the key recruit.

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The fact that Napier wilted after a loss to Miami – calling out those fans for tweeting from their central Florida basements – isn’t an indication that you can’t win at Florida. It’s an indication that he can’t win at Florida.

That doesn’t mean that a panacea is on the horizon. When Mullen was let go in 2021, I also wrote the following:

“Are Mario Cristobal, Bily Napier, or even (gulp) Lane Kiffin going to do better? You don’t know and neither do I. They could crash and burn. That’s always the risk when you make a coaching change and you have to weigh that with the risk of keeping things the same.”

Napier has been objectively worse than Mullen. But that doesn’t mean making the change was the wrong move. It means that we have discovered that neither Billy Napier nor Dan Mullen had what it takes to win big in Gainesville.

Maybe the next guy won’t have what it takes either. Perhaps he’ll crash and burn just like Napier has, and Mullen has, and Jim McElwain and Will Mushchamp did. But at least we’ll have hope that he might turn things around, because if there was any ember of hope left that Napier might survive after the Miami loss, that was completely extinguished on Saturday against A&M. So bring on Lane Kiffin or Jedd Fisch or a redux of the Urban Meyer experiment. There will be plenty of time to debate and discuss exactly who should be the head coach of the Gators.

But taking this loss – and Napier’s entire body of work – into consideration, it’s abundantly clear that a new answer at that position is needed.

14 Comments

  1. Buck Warren

    No thanks on Jedd Fisch. His mighty Huskies lost at home yesterday to Pac2 power Washington State. Jedd had one . . . one good season at Arizona. He definitely isn’t the guy.

  2. Clyde Wiley

    Outstanding assessment. We gave terrific fans who keep filling our grand stadium despite the losing. Florida is a place with the resources, history and willing support for a coach to win consistently and challenge annually for championships. Whether it’s Lane Kiffin or Lincoln Riley or…, someone’s going to step into a ripe opportunity. “Go Gators! “ remains in vogue.

  3. Mike scott

    Since 2016. When Strickland was hired the coaches he’s hired are 86 and 398. With zero national championships. Foley. Hired. Coaches are
    390!-38. With
    18 national championships!! Stricklin should I’ve been fired when he failed to protect the women’s basketball players from an abusive coach for over a year.. The local bought and paid for local media ( not this site ) have been pumping sunshine since 2016.

  4. I have fully supported Billy Napier for his entire tenure, with the exception of his insistence on black rather than orange or blue. I wanted to believe and I bought in to the hype. It is now evident that Napier was not what we hoped and perhaps the problem is repeatedly the selection process. The Athletic Director has made these many bad choices and I believe that replacing him is the first necessary step to correcting the problems that have continued after Meyer’s departure !

    • Larry McCorkle

      I wonder what Spurrier would have done if he rotated QB’s like he did in a world with NIL and the portal. ( or what the quarterbacks would have done). I am now expecting to see DJ Lagway head to Texas A&M as soon as the season ends. Instead of playing DJ more to encourage him to remain, I’m beginning to realize that all we are doing is giving him more experience for A& M as he makes those expected freshman mistakes. The big boys in recruiting can wait while we play freshman and swoop in and pluck who they want whenever they want. UF needs to get to that level so they can do the same plus, have strong NIL to keep the players . Meanwhile, I am struggling to maintain my love of UF and college football because the NIL and the portal has created an NFL like atmosphere .
      There appears very few coaches out there that have the cache to get the fan base excited. I can think of maybe 2-3. It will take whoever that is a couple years to sort out the roster . Hopefully UF finds a way to get out of the purgatory it has been in for 14 years.

  5. Rich Paxton

    Dave Waters made a great point last night (well, early this morning): this isn’t a firing problem, it’s a hiring problem. The Florida fans were reluctant to dismiss Mullen because he was a reminder of the glory days with Urban. I don’t know anyone that resisted McElwain getting the boot, and Muschamp seemed like the right guy since he was poised to inherent Texas whenever Mack Brown departed. Nobody can say for sure that the Napier experiment was going to fail. Were there concerns that he was known to have boring, predictable play calling since at least 2011? Sure. But folks around the industry said he was the most talented FCS coach, sorta like guy who is coaching the team in Tuscaloosa right now. It is a bit frustrating that Stricklin didn’t even talk to Kiffin, Brian Kelly or Lincoln Riley. And, his name may be on the chopping block at the emergency board of trustees meeting this morning for inking a outrageous contract with an up-and-comer coach. But, one thing is for sure: Florida has a hiring problem that can only be fixed by firing some folks.

    • Gator1996

      Not sure a run play on 3rd and 7 is predictable but it sucks for sure

  6. Michael scott

    Urban Meyer is a cancer , In. his own words He left the. Program. broken “ He protected a wife abuser and got suspended at Ohio at for lying about his knowledge of the problem. He protected. A mass. Murderer in Hernandez.He was fired at Jacksonville for kicking a player and abusing staff . To even mention his name as a possibility is obtuse.

  7. Roger Austin

    Amen. Stricklin first, tho

  8. Stuart

    Yep.

  9. Bruce A Eklund

    You have to trust the process. Choose to be patient. Look how much special teams have improved from year two to year three. Now we need to see the same for O and then D in years three and four.

  10. Dave

    New HC requirements:

    1. Ace recruiter, can relate well to HS and college kids
    2. Embraces the NIL and understands the importance of the portal
    3. Competitive nature, emotional, hates losing
    4. Won’t be intimidated vs. great coaches in big games and on the trail
    5. Offensive X’s-and-O’s specialist/QB guru who runs a fun, wide-open offense
    6. Knows the SEC grind and recruiting wars
    7. Ties to Florida and understands the importance of the rivalries
    8. Has consistently gotten more from less, coaching yields positive development
    9. Uses social media effectively for recruiting and mind-game battles
    10. Entertaining personality for boosters, pressers, etc.
    11. Has won a NC at least at the coordinator level

    Who else checks all those boxes other than Kiffin?

    No one.