OK--that (Sticking it in the face of my Aggie neighbors) was fun...and THAT victory IS what they call "a signature win", turning it all around on-the-road in the 2nd half...However, I'd feel a WHOLE lot better about the team we "might be about-to-be" if we hadn't LOST so many players, KEY players on offense AND defense, in the course of this contest--and that was AFTER what seemed like a damaging enough game LAST week. Think about it, it's a Q of both quantity (how MANY injuries, of unknown but sure-to-be at least into-mid-season seriousness) AND quality (Gillissley on offense, Jelani Jenkins on defense, each leaders of their respective squads, in terms of talent AND influence). That will cost us, possibly turn close ones into losses and close losses into blow-outs down-the-line if they're out for long and their back-ups don't really STEP UP. We just don't yet have the depth OR the EMOTIONAL toughness to absorb and weather those kinds of losses--how else to explain how soft we are as a team for long stretches of the games we've watched so far, or indeed HOW SO MANY SUCH INJURIES ARE OCCURRING IN THE FIRST PLACE?!! Are we to believe there is NO relationship between those injuries and everything else, the missed tackles, the shrugging play for long portions of game time, confusion and especially underachievement in the very areas that were supposed to be our strengths? Is it ALL really supposed to be "bad luck", not part of a PATTERN of selfishness, ill-preparedness, and lax self-discipline?
Well, I'm gonna ramble on here in my inimitable manner for a while--though it's probably a big mistake considering the combo of pain-pills and alcohol I've ingested here this aft:
I AM happy and relieved at the win here today, no doubt about it--and I know that the team that showed up in the 2nd half is not only a decent one, it's actually itself just a shadow of what a healthy, together and smoothly running version of the currently stocked Gator team is truly capable of being. We'll have to get guys back, the back-ups playing over-their-heads until we do, our quarterback (while he showed a few of the things with his legs that the coaches were counting on as among his advantages) will HAVE to grow quickly as a passer AND a "field general", taking LARGE steps in the process of recognizing defenses, who is where and how you work through your reads and get it to the open guy, OR taking off when none of THAT is open--and working THRU' those "reads" quickly before time runs out on YOU, all the while having full awareness of where the protection weaknesses are in front of and/or behind you once you move from the pocket, avoiding the rush and the collapsing pursuit even while you're doing all the rest...I'm not saying Jeff can't do it, can't get there, and fairly soon (like a matter of 2 or 3 games)--but that assumes he has done ALL of it before under the MUCH slower and less challenging pressures of the prep-school level in which he developed, and just needs to apply his intuitive knowledge and muscle-memory at a whole new speed and intensity--and realize that only trusting that "prior practice and awareness" and "letting it fly" will get him there in anything LIKE the timeframe that he will have to show what he can do. They're not going to give you time to "figure it all out, think it all through, THEN start to try and apply the right lessons in the right places", Jeff. You are just going to HAVE to "GO FOR IT!", kiddo.
I don't know WHAT we'll do for a running game until Gilly is 100% again. We got some traction mixing things up late, but he was and IS our true "power RB", the one we've been looking for the last, oh, I don't know, 6, 7, 8 or 9 years, depending how you define the requirements and assess the intervening "candidate"/"stand-ins". We're back to "running by committee" and hoping one of the others blossoms (and quickly) until he returns. Once he was hurt, even Joyer seemed to fold in on himself, run more self-protectively rather than with the shredding abandon we've seen from him before now.Let's just hope that next year Taylor is not only everything he seems, but the tough and rugged, near-unbreakable as WELL as unstoppable RB his Dad was. Until then I just can't tell how much is just "physical fragility", and how much is the kind of example and precedent none of these players seem to show--only Gilly showed any kind of "suck-it-up-and-go" late despite his clear difficulties.
These look to be our two major hurdles, moving forward, then:
(1) Driskill HAS to grow into the QB he presumably CAN be, reach down inside and bring out all the natural and developed skills he made work for him getting here--one way or another, there has to be some kind of "break through", with help from a good coach he trusts or from within himself, he has to reach down and take that next step, and (2) Even missing some first-string guys, this defense MUST play tough for 60 minutes--more than ever now, this is the heart of our team, and if we are to get to the 2nd half of this season with ANY of our dreams and goals intact it is the defense that will preserve our shot at them.
Considering the first game and a half, and everything that happened in the course of those 6 qrtrs before finally showing something in the last 2, I'm left both happy to be 2-and-0, AND more uncertain than ever as to where we are in our road-back-to-Gator-greatness.
Just watch the SEC-teams that TRULY have their pieces assembled and functioning in the intended fashion, teams like Alabama and LSU: There's a "feeling", a rhythm on offense and a tough, calm determination on defense that together amount to well-fitting parts in each team's unique "character of domination" that we just don't have yet--no way, no how. These Gators have a choppy, uneven "feel" in everything they do--even when they manage to get something done, it doesn't seem part of a larger "flow"...Again: we have the parts, but one way or another we constantly find ways to fail to get or KEEP them working together.