This weekend the unranked (98) Virginia Cavaliers upset the #10 (17) North Carolina Tarheels 31-27. On paper, UNC should have won this game, but these games are played on grass and not on paper. Tarheel fans are calling this their most embarrassing and demoralizing program loss. This led me to unfortunately rehash some of the worst losses that Florida ever had. Here is my list of embarrassing losses, mostly to unranked teams.
- 2013 Georgia Southern, 20-26. Jeff Monken and Brent Davis are masters of the masters of the triple option and they were able to rally their FCS team to beat the Gators in a season where the Eagles went 5-4 (4-4 SoCon) before moving to the Sun Belt Conference the next year and switched to the spread option under a new head coach.
- 2008 Ole Miss, 30-31. The Gators had the talent and motivation to achieve the program's first undefeated season, but that fell apart in front of Houston Nutt's unranked Ole Miss Rebels (as they were called then). Ole Miss went on to beat #18 LSU in Death Valley 31-13 and #8 Texas Tech in the Cotton Bowl 47-34. The Rebels barely lost to #2 Alabama 20-24 in Bryant-Denny Stadium and they did get ranked six weeks after defeating Florida, so this loss was more excusable than the 2013 loss.
- 1998 Tennessee, 17-20 (OT). #2 Florida lost its first overtime game in history (after recent rule change) when Cooper Collins missed a 32-yard field goal and gave Tennessee their first victory over Florida in six years. This happened to occur in front of the largest crowd in college football history-- 107,653 fans packed into Neyland Stadium. The Volunteers went 13-0 that season and won a national championship. The Gators struggled a bit and had to alternate between QBs Doug Johnson and Jesse Palmer just to stay competitive in this game. The Gators finished the 1998 season 10-2 (7-1) and wrapped up the season with a 31-10 victory over #18 Syracuse in the Orange Bowl. To address the elephant in the room, the #4 Gators lost to the #5 Noles 12-23. The Noles overcame a loss to unranked NC State in September to earn a spot in the Fiesta Bowl where they lost to #1 Tennessee.
- 1994 FSU, 31-31 and 17-23. The Choke as the Doak was a matchup of 9-1 rivals ranked #4 and #6/7. The Gators were up 24-3 at the half, scored only once in the 3rd quarter, and failed to answer FSU's 28 points in the 4th quarter. The 28 points in the 4th quarter tied an NCAA record for largest 4th quarter comeback to win or tie. Nole fans celebrate the tie because it allowed them to earn a Sugar Bowl spot and then beat Florida; however, FSU's earlier loss to #13 Miami denied them the opportunity to defend their national title.
- 1984 Miami, 20-32. The #17 Gators lost to the defending national champion Hurricanes who went on to finish 8-5 under first-year coach Jimmy Johnson. Granted, that team was loaded with NFL talent (Bernie Kosar, Vinnie Testaverde, Alonzo Highsmith, et al), but so was Florida (Neal Anderson, Lomas Brown, Ricky Nattiel, et al). In a series of what-ifs, Florida had the opportunity to strengthen its claim to a national championship if the program were not slapped with NCAA sanctions, and if the Gators had beaten Miami or if Florida had been declared SEC champion and allowed to face Nebraska in the Sugar Bowl. BYU was declared the national champion by most authorities, but Florida did appear on some sources as the national champion.
- 1985 Georgia, 3-24. The 1985 Gators were ineligible for the SEC championship due to NCAA probation, but in an alternate universe where Florida were eligible, they were probably talented enough to beat #2 Miami in the Sugar Bowl to fight for a national championship title. Florida had beaten Miami 35-23 to open the season. Oklahoma was declared the national champion, where their only loss was to Miami in a battle of future Dallas Cowboys coaches. Oddly enough, Florida does appear on some sources as a national champion.
- 2006 Auburn, 17-27. The Gators still won the national championship, but it would have been nice to get that win in Jordan-Hare to get that undefeated season. The Gators needed help from other teams to earn a spot in the BCS championship, which they made the most of in a 41-14 rout of the Ohio State Buckeyes.
- 1980 Georgia, 21-26. Run Lindsay Run. It is so annoying having to listen to that sound snippet. The Gators were not very good in 1980, and losing to the #2 team in the nation is not a bad thing, but that snippet and the way the Gators lost is just annoying.
- 2003 Miami, 33-38. The 2003 Gators were not very good in an 8-5 (6-2) season. This loss sticks out because it was to former Gator QB Brock Berlin in a game where Florida failed to score in the 4th quarter and let the Hurricanes notch another win over Florida and FSU in the same season.