Driskel is the real deal: he's fated to be the face of "The New Gator Offense" (look for this future cover-story from SI)--and as early as next mid-season, possibly, if everything goes that way (although admittedly I think Weis would RATHER he had a year with Driskel first, letting him watch, learn and fill-out, preferably redshirting while Brantley holds the fort and the rest of the hybrid pro offense is installed).
I am COUNTING on CHOMP pulling in at least one SHUT DOWN DE--Chuckillo would fit the bill perfectly, but one way or another we HAVE to get one--and a PAIR of "bookends" would close the only major hole in our "D". It's just that really good ones are rare, we haven't had one in a while and it shows: good running teams have been able to wear us down and begin to break containment later in the game, able to drive, burn the clock and sometimes even score to take a close game. That should not happen--WE need to dominate the line of scrimmage from the first play-from-scrimmage, on BOTH sides of the ball.
The good news is that both CHOMP and Weis put that exact kind of domination at the top of their lists of philosophical and practical priorities. While each has his own unique, evolving and well-considered approach to this goal, not surprisingly both begin with a foundation of basics, of course: big strong fast guys getting it done in the trenches. They know it's the key to making all the rest work.
So I expect to see some HARD runs made at a few of the very best of these young giants, no matter WHAT their prior leanings or stated preferences--our staff is like an all-star recruiting team, PLUS they carry with them an image, the alluring power and attraction of the NFL implied in so much and so many of their backgrounds. These coaches don't even have to belabor the matter, it's "out there" in the media-at-large and in the "buzz", the awareness of recruits and family members talking among themselves and each other. Finally of course there's the well-established power and first-class reputation of the University of Florida and its Gator Football Program itself, the "branding" that Urban Meyer & Co. have further established and polished over the last 6 years as an annual player among the elite.
Even out here where I am in Longhorn Country folks are well-aware of the situation: I have a LOT of people telling me that "unless Coach Boom manages to raid US and take a few of his Texas-recruits over with him, it's late in the game" and his first REALLY BIG class will come NEXT year. I'm not so sure he and his guys can't still go "Top 5" this year--but I agree that they'll be damn near unstoppable with the next class. As I've said here, this time it's all about filling in certain particular "spaces" on either side of the ball.