Leakfan12
Going back to Urban Meyer... A lot of fans hated that Urban Meyer completely changed the offense so much that it had to be a gimmick that would never work. In 1970 Doug Dickey trashed the old offense leftover from the Ray Graves days of 1960-1969 and installed a wishbone offense. Yes, Dickey did give us two teams that were ranked in the top 20 (1973 #19, 1974 #12/#15), but his record at Florida was 58-43-2, and his SEC record was 28-28-1. In other words, Dickey was average, especially compared to his record at Tennessee earlier. To me, the highlight of the Dickey years was his hiring former Heisman QB, Steve Spurrier, as an assistant on his staff. Spurrier learned a little about poaching talent from other states and bringing them to Florida, having stolen a prized QB named Bobby Hewko from the University of Pittsburgh. If Dickey would not have been fired (which forced Spurrier to leave), who knows what Spurrier could have done with Hewko? Hewko stepped in for a struggling Wayne Peace and upset the #5 Seminoles. This is a team that was 4-7! Under a new head coach and QB coach, John Brantley III gets a lot of snaps at QB and the Gators go 0-10-1 in Pell's first year. Lesson: sometimes uncontrollable circumstances such as coaching changes and loss of assistants affects history. Urban Meyer was lucky that he and Dan Mullen were able to re-mold Chris Leak from Ron Zook's coaching staff, and that a top-ranked QB elected to come to Florida under its "gimmick offense".
Throughout history, the Gators have always been close to beating the powerhouses, but were always a little short. Part of it was that it was rare for big name talent to come to Florida until the Charley Pell days, unless that big name talent was from Florida. If you believe that a top-ranked football team needs a top-ranked QB, then look at Florida and you can see that it rarely had nationally, top-ranked QBs come to Gainesville until recently. The only Parade All American QBs that I know of that ever came to Florida were Bobby Sabelhaus (1994), Luke Bencie (1993), Tim Olmstead (1997), Rex Grossman (1998), Brock Berlin (1999), and Chris Leak (2003), and some kid named Tim Tebow (2006). Urban Meyer was able to attract a lot of Parade All Americans at other positions, which is one of his strengths as a head coach. Even Spurrier will admit that he failed at coaching up his Parade All American QBs--only Rex Grossman succeeded under his tutelage.
Going back to Urban Meyer... A lot of fans hated that Urban Meyer completely changed the offense so much that it had to be a gimmick that would never work. In 1970 Doug Dickey trashed the old offense leftover from the Ray Graves days of 1960-1969 and installed a wishbone offense. Yes, Dickey did give us two teams that were ranked in the top 20 (1973 #19, 1974 #12/#15), but his record at Florida was 58-43-2, and his SEC record was 28-28-1. In other words, Dickey was average, especially compared to his record at Tennessee earlier. To me, the highlight of the Dickey years was his hiring former Heisman QB, Steve Spurrier, as an assistant on his staff. Spurrier learned a little about poaching talent from other states and bringing them to Florida, having stolen a prized QB named Bobby Hewko from the University of Pittsburgh. If Dickey would not have been fired (which forced Spurrier to leave), who knows what Spurrier could have done with Hewko? Hewko stepped in for a struggling Wayne Peace and upset the #5 Seminoles. This is a team that was 4-7! Under a new head coach and QB coach, John Brantley III gets a lot of snaps at QB and the Gators go 0-10-1 in Pell's first year. Lesson: sometimes uncontrollable circumstances such as coaching changes and loss of assistants affects history. Urban Meyer was lucky that he and Dan Mullen were able to re-mold Chris Leak from Ron Zook's coaching staff, and that a top-ranked QB elected to come to Florida under its "gimmick offense".
Throughout history, the Gators have always been close to beating the powerhouses, but were always a little short. Part of it was that it was rare for big name talent to come to Florida until the Charley Pell days, unless that big name talent was from Florida. If you believe that a top-ranked football team needs a top-ranked QB, then look at Florida and you can see that it rarely had nationally, top-ranked QBs come to Gainesville until recently. The only Parade All American QBs that I know of that ever came to Florida were Bobby Sabelhaus (1994), Luke Bencie (1993), Tim Olmstead (1997), Rex Grossman (1998), Brock Berlin (1999), and Chris Leak (2003), and some kid named Tim Tebow (2006). Urban Meyer was able to attract a lot of Parade All Americans at other positions, which is one of his strengths as a head coach. Even Spurrier will admit that he failed at coaching up his Parade All American QBs--only Rex Grossman succeeded under his tutelage.