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While the Gators finished with a relatively disappointing 9–4 record and #13 final ranking, Tim Tebow's records-setting season earned him many post-season awards, including the [[Heisman Trophy]]. A sophomore, he was the first underclassman to receive the award.
While the Gators finished with a relatively disappointing 9–4 record and #13 final ranking, Tim Tebow's records-setting season earned him many post-season awards, including the [[Heisman Trophy]]. A sophomore, he was the first underclassman to receive the award.


The Gators responded in 2008 as an improved defense led by linebacker Brandon Spikes helped to rekindle the championship passion. Florida won their fourth straight game over Tennessee 30-6 and then followed it up with a 31-30 loss to Ole Miss. Florida responded with dominant play on both sides of the ball the rest of the season on their way to a second national championship game berth in three years. Along the way, they crushed the LSU Tigers 51-21, achieved revenge on SEC Rivals Georgia, handed former coach Steve Spurrier his worst loss in his career and thumped Florida State in Doak Campbell Stadium 45-15. Florida earned the #2 slot in the BCS poll by knocking off a resurgent and then undefeated Alabama 31-20 for the SEC Championship. The Gators won the BCS National Championship on January 8th, 2009 over the Oklahoma Sooner and former Gator defensive coordinator Bob Stoops 24-14 and became the first program to win two BCS championships with the same coach (LSU has won two BCS titles, but with different coaches).
The Gators responded in 2008 as an improved defense led by linebacker Brandon Spikes helped to rekindle the championship passion. Florida won their fourth straight game over Tennessee 30-6 and then followed it up with a 31-30 loss to Ole Miss. Florida responded with dominant play on both sides of the ball the rest of the season on their way to a second national championship game berth in three years. Along the way, they crushed the LSU Tigers 51-21, achieved revenge on SEC Rivals Georgia, handed former coach Steve Spurrier his worst loss in his career and thumped Florida State in Doak Campbell Stadium 45-15. Florida earned the #2 slot in the BCS poll by knocking off a resurgent and then undefeated Alabama 31-20 for the SEC Championship. The Gators won the 2008 BCS National Championship on January 8th, 2009 over the [[Oklahoma Sooners]] and former Gator defensive coordinator Bob Stoops 24-14 and became the first program to win two BCS championships with the same coach (LSU has won two BCS titles, but with different coaches).


==Rivalries==
==Rivalries==

Revision as of 14:23, 2 February 2009

Florida Gators football
2008 Florida Gators football team
File:FloridaGators.png
First season1906
Head coach
4th season, 44–9 (.830)
StadiumBen Hill Griffin Stadium
(capacity: 88,548)
Field surfaceGrass
LocationGainesville, Florida
DivisionEast
All-time record641–373–40 (.627)
Bowl record18–19 (.486)
Claimed national titles3
Conference titles8
Heisman winners3
Consensus All-Americans138
ColorsOrange and Blue
   
Fight songOrange and Blue
MascotAlbert E. Gator
Marching bandPride of the Sunshine
RivalsFlorida State Seminoles
Georgia Bulldogs
Tennessee Volunteers
Miami Hurricanes
LSU Tigers
WebsiteGatorZone.com

The Florida Gators football team represents the University of Florida in the Southeastern Conference's Eastern division. They play their home games on Florida Field in Ben Hill Griffin Stadium (also known as "The Swamp") in Gainesville, Florida. In 100 years of play, Florida has been recognized as SEC champions eight times (finishing first in the conference an additional three times), were national champions of the 1996, 2006 and 2008 college football seasons, and went undefeated in the 1995 regular season, surviving a tough SEC schedule and vaunted rival, Florida State University. The University of Florida is the winningest college football team in the nation since 1990 [1]

Urban Meyer, in his fourth season in 2008, is the current head coach of the Gators.

Overview

Florida plays an eight-game Southeastern Conference schedule. Five of these contests pit the Gators against the other members of the SEC's Eastern division: Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Vanderbilt. The conference slate is rounded out with an annual game against LSU and two additional foes from the SEC's western division on a rotating basis. (Until 2003, the Gators also played Auburn every season with only one western conference team in rotation.)

Key conference rivalries include "The World's Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party" in which Florida and Georgia play annually in Jacksonville, Florida (usually around Halloween), the matchup with Tennessee (usually in mid-September), and the game with South Carolina (usually in November). The later contest became a rivalry in 2005, when former Gator coach and player Steve Spurrier took over the Gamecock program after a coaching stint in the NFL.

In addition to the conference foes, the Gators face in-state rival Florida State at the end of the regular season. The two teams' emergence as perennial football powers in the 1980s and 90s helped build the contest into a game that has often held national title implications. Prior to 1988, in-state rival Miami was also an annual opponent. But due to expansions in conference schedules, Florida and Miami have met only 3 times in the regular season since then. The remaining dates on Florida's regular season schedule are filled in with various non-conference foes which vary from year to year.

Unlike many other teams at the college and pro level, the Gators do not currently have any retired numbers from former players. The numbers of Gator Football Ring of Honor players Steve Spurrier (11) and Scot Brantley (55) had been retired in the past, but the numbers were re-issued to players during Spurrier's time as Florida head coach.

History

Prior to the University of Florida's move from Lake City to Gainesville, football existed solely as a club sport at UF. With the passing of the Buckman Act in 1905, the campus moved to Gainesville and members of the rival Florida State College enrolled at UF since the school in Tallahassee became an all-women's school.

The 1907 Florida Gators squad.

Buoyed by their new enrollments, the Gators began varsity play in football in 1906 as the new Gainesville campus opened. They were coached by James Forsythe for three winning seasons. In 1909, G.E. Pyle took over coaching duties.

The 1910s saw the team face many of their current rivals for the first time. The first game against South Carolina was in 1911. When Florida joined the now-defunct Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association in 1912, they faced Auburn for the first time, followed by Georgia in 1915. The Gators joined the Southern Conference in 1922, following their traditional rivals' departure from the SIAA a year earlier.

The Gators joined the Southeastern Conference in 1932, along with several other rivals from the Southern Conference—Georgia, Auburn, Alabama, and Georgia Tech.

In 1949 the iconic cheerleader Mr. Two Bits attended his first home game and began the tradition of leading the fans in the "two bits" cheer.

Logo used from 1966-1967

Florida had its first taste of long-term success in the mid-1960s, when Ray Graves set the team record for wins at Florida with 70, a record that stood for thirty years. Graves fielded one of his best teams in 1966, led by Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Steve Spurrier (during this time, Florida researchers developed the popular sports drink Gatorade and tested it on the Gators football team due to the humid conditions under which the team played). Graves retired after a 9–1–1 season in 1969 and Florida alumnus Doug Dickey took over the reins. Dickey had some success, going 58–43–2, but it wasn’t enough to keep his job after a 4–7 season in 1978.

Charley Pell took over for Dickey, bringing the Gators back to respectability on the field with troubles off of it. Though he began his career with an 0–10–1 season in 1979, the Gators turned it around with an eight-win season the following year, in which the team set an NCAA record for win differential (this has since been surpassed). Pell went 33-15 after the winless opening season, but he was fired during his (and, at the time, the Gators’) best season in 1984 in light of major NCAA violations.

Prior to the 1990s, the 1984 team was considered clearly the finest Gator squad ever. The offense was especially potent, with an offensive line dubbed "The Great Wall of Florida" (Crawford Ker, Jeff Zimmerman, Phil Bromley, Billy Hinson, and Lomas Brown) that paved the way for John L. Williams and Neal Anderson to run the ball and for quarterback Kerwin Bell to step in as a freshman and lead the team to a 9-1-1 record. Several polls after the season ended ranked the squad as the best team in the nation that year.

File:Old UF Athletics logo (stylized).png
Logo used from 1979-1991

Galen Hall coached the team from the middle of 1984 to 1989 with much success, including an SEC title in 1984 and 1985, though these were to be stripped due to NCAA violations committed by Pell. Hall went 40–18 at Florida. He had his own violation scandal, however, and was fired during the 1989 season. Gary Darnell finished the season for him.

The '90s

The football team has been the winningest in Division 1-A since 1990, the year Spurrier returned to his alma mater as coach. That year, the Gators finished first in the SEC for the third time ever (the others being the title-stripped years of ’84 and ’85), but were ineligible for the SEC title. They won their first official SEC championship in 1991. The team played for the championship in the first ever SEC Championship Game in 1992 but lost to the eventual national champions, Alabama. The Gators went on to win the following four SEC Championship Games (1993-1996), leading Spurrier to quip as the team posed for their championship photo that "this is our annual team picture." [2] Spurrier broke his old coach—Ray Graves'—mark for wins as Florida coach in 1996.

The Gators in their home, The Swamp
Head coach Urban Meyer (pictured) and the Gators celebrated 100 years of Florida Football with a BCS Championship in 2006.

The Gators had their first and only unbeaten regular season in 1995, but were denied a national championship in the 1995 Fiesta Bowl, later nicknamed the “Fiasco Bowl” for its lopsided score in favor of Nebraska (62–24).

Much of the team's offense returned following the bittersweet 1995 season. The 1996 team would end up setting dozens of UF's scoring records, as the Gators rolled over most of their opponents to start the season 10–0. The top-ranked Gators faced the #2 Florida State Seminoles on the road in Doak Campbell Stadium, the last regular-season 1-vs-2 matchup for a decade. Keyed by several blocking errors on offense and special teams, the Gators left Tallahassee with a 24–21 loss. But the pieces fell into place for Florida, as they beat the Alabama Crimson Tide in the SEC Championship Game, 45–30, and Texas upset Nebraska in the inaugural Big 12 Championship Game to clear the path for #4 Florida to become the best available opponent for the Seminoles in the Sugar Bowl (#2 Arizona State was contracted to play in the Rose Bowl). To have a shot at a national title, the Gators would need help in the Rose Bowl, which Ohio State provided by defeating #2 Arizona State on the last play, thus setting up the Sugar Bowl to crown a national champion. The Gators seized the opportunity, as Heisman trophy-winning quarterback Danny Wuerffel avenged the earlier loss and garnered game MVP honors in a 52–20 rout of the Seminoles.

File:UF logo (1992-1997).png
"Old Albert" logo; used as an alternative logo over the past two decades, reaching its popularity in the mid-1990s
File:FloridaGator'Albert'Logo.png
Albert logo; a more modern rendition of the Gators' mascot Introduced with the 1996 National Championship team
File:FloridaGators.png
Primary logo from 1991-Present
File:Script ``Gators``.png
The script "Gators" has appeared on Gators helmets since 1979

The following season, in 1997, the Gators looked like they would reload for another title, beating heavily-ranked Tennessee at home and obtaining the #1 ranking. But the team struggled midway through their schedule, losing to LSU on the road and a 20-point loss to Georgia after having dominated both teams the previous year. Arguably the loudest, most intense game in The Swamp's history occurred later that year, as the 10th-ranked Gators upset their rivals, the top-ranked Florida State Seminoles in a 32-29 thriller that featured two last-minute lead changes.

Having won five SEC titles in six seasons in 1996, the Gators had trouble keeping pace with their amazing run in the conference later in the decade, going three seasons before capturing the title again in 2000. The Gators looked prime to return to the SEC Championship Game as favorites in 2001, but lost a heartbreaker to the Tennessee Volunteers on a game postponed to December due to the attacks of 9/11.

The 2000s

Following the 2001 season, Spurrier left the program to try his hand at coaching in the National Football League. After a much-publicized and much-scrutinized coaching search, former Gator assistant coach Ron Zook was hired as his replacement. Zook's squads were known for their inconsistency;[3] they handed Nick Saban's Louisiana State team its only loss in its 2003 national championship season and Georgia its only loss in 2002, while going winless against the state of Mississippi, Miami, and in its bowl games. Zook was fired midway through the 2004 season after an embarrassing loss to Mississippi State, but was allowed to finish out the regular season. After Zook was relieved of duties for taking the open job at Illinois, defensive coordinator Charlie Strong served as interim coach for the 2004 Peach Bowl against Miami (FL), becoming the first African-American head football coach at Florida and the second in SEC history. Jeremy Foley, Florida's athletic director, found a much higher profile candidate to replace Zook in national coach of the year, Urban Meyer of Utah.

Meyer was announced as Florida Football's new head coach in December 2004. His first season in 2005 was an improvement at 9–3, including a bowl win against the Iowa Hawkeyes. Though the team managed to sweep its three biggest rivals (Tennessee, Georgia, and Florida State) for just the fourth time in school history, they missed out on a chance to play in the SEC title game after a devastating loss to Spurrier's new team, South Carolina.

In 2006, the Gators were victorious in the SEC Championship Game against Arkansas, winning their first title since the 2000 season. The Gators played in the BCS Championship Game against the Ohio State Buckeyes, on January 8, 2007. They beat the No. 1 ranked Ohio State Buckeyes, 41–14, for their second national title. The Gators played the nation's toughest schedule in 2006.[4]

A month after the national championship, the Gators celebrated signing arguably their second #1 recruiting class in as many years.[5]

Tim Tebow became the full time starting quarterback for the 2007 season. The Gators started off the season 4–0 and were ranked as high as #3. However, a midseason stretch in which the team lost 3 of 4 games to conference foes put an end to hopes of a repeat national championship.

While the Gators finished with a relatively disappointing 9–4 record and #13 final ranking, Tim Tebow's records-setting season earned him many post-season awards, including the Heisman Trophy. A sophomore, he was the first underclassman to receive the award.

The Gators responded in 2008 as an improved defense led by linebacker Brandon Spikes helped to rekindle the championship passion. Florida won their fourth straight game over Tennessee 30-6 and then followed it up with a 31-30 loss to Ole Miss. Florida responded with dominant play on both sides of the ball the rest of the season on their way to a second national championship game berth in three years. Along the way, they crushed the LSU Tigers 51-21, achieved revenge on SEC Rivals Georgia, handed former coach Steve Spurrier his worst loss in his career and thumped Florida State in Doak Campbell Stadium 45-15. Florida earned the #2 slot in the BCS poll by knocking off a resurgent and then undefeated Alabama 31-20 for the SEC Championship. The Gators won the 2008 BCS National Championship on January 8th, 2009 over the Oklahoma Sooners and former Gator defensive coordinator Bob Stoops 24-14 and became the first program to win two BCS championships with the same coach (LSU has won two BCS titles, but with different coaches).

Rivalries

Florida State

Sometimes referred to as "The Battle for the Governor's Cup", the yearly meeting of Florida State has, since 1964, alternated yearly between the Gators’ field and the Seminole’s home turf of Bobby Bowden Field at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee.

Georgia

Commonly known as "The World's Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party", the official name of the rivalry with Georgia is the "Florida-Georgia/Georgia-Florida Game" due to a reluctance to promote alcohol consumption. Currently, the game is held at Jacksonville Municipal Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida, usually on the last Saturday in October or the first in November. The designated "home" team alternates from year to year, with ticket distribution split evenly between the two schools. In past years, fans from Florida and Georgia were assigned seats grouped in alternating sections of the stadium, and the contrasting colors worn by the fans created a "beach ball" visual effect in the stands. Recently the seating arrangement has split the stadium lengthwise and fans sit on the side corresponding to the sideline their team occupies.

The teams' first meeting was in Jacksonville in 1915. In the early days of the rivalry, games rotated through neutral site locations in Savannah, Georgia and Tampa, Florida along with Jacksonville and, occasionally, Gainesville and Athens. Since 1933, however, the contest has been held in Jacksonville every year except 1994 and 1995, when renovations to rebuild Jacksonville Municipal Stadium for the NFL's new Jacksonville Jaguars temporarily moved the game back to on-campus sites.

Tennessee

Sometimes called the "Third Saturday in September," Florida and Tennessee have faced off in September every season since 1990, except 2001, when the game was rescheduled to December due to the September 11th terrorist attacks. In addition, they met 21 times prior to 1991. Under the old, 10 team SEC, the teams would play on a rotation of two years on, two years off. With the SEC splitting into two divisions in 1992, the teams now play each season. Both are members of the SEC's East Division, and until 2002, were the only teams to represent that division in the SEC Championship Game.

Miami

When Florida and Miami play each other, the War Canoe Trophy is up for grabs. The one-time annual rivalry halted after the 1987 season, and the two schools wouldn't play each other again until the 2001 Sugar Bowl. Florida and Miami would play a home-and-home series in 2002 and 2003, and again in the 2004 Chick-Fil-A Bowl. Florida won the first leg of a home-and-home series in 2008, ending a six game losing streak against the Hurricanes. Their next scheduled regular season meeting will be in 2012. The Hurricanes lead the all time record against the Gators 28–26.

Uniforms

Helmet
Left arm Body Right arm
Trousers
Socks
Home
Helmet
Left arm Body Right arm
Trousers
Socks
Away
Current uniforms

National Championships

Year Coach Selector Record Bowl Result
1996 Steve Spurrier AP, Coaches 12-1 Sugar Bowl Florida 52, Florida State 20
2006 Urban Meyer BCS, AP 13-1 BCS National Title Game Florida 41, Ohio State 14
2008 Urban Meyer BCS, AP 13-1 BCS National Title Game Florida 24, Oklahoma 14
Total national championships: 3

Note: NCAA Division I football's championship is a mythical national championship crowned by various media and coaches polls. In 1984, Florida finished #3 in the AP poll, but was recognized as the national champion by The Sporting News, the New York Times, Billingsley, DeVold, Dunkel, FACT, Matthews, and Jeff Sagarin rankings.[6]

Conference Affiliations

Conference Championships

Florida has won a total of 9 conference championships, with 8 of those being official. The University was stripped of the 1984 conference championship after the season due to NCAA violations. The 1985 and 1990 teams finished with the best conference record, but were ineligible for the conference championship due to probation resulting from violations committed under the previous coaching staff. Florida won its first officially recognized football championship in 1991.

Year Conference Overall Record Conference Record
1984 SEC 9-1-1 5-0-1
1985 SEC 9-1-1 5-1
1990 SEC 9-2 6-1
1991 SEC 10-2 7-0
1993 SEC 11-2 8-1
1994 SEC 10-2-1 8-1
1995 SEC 12-1 9-0
1996 SEC 12-1 9-0
2000 SEC 10-3 8-1
2006 SEC 13-1 8-1
2008 SEC 13-1 8-1
† Ineligible, but had best conference record
Total Conference Titles 8 (Officially Recognized)

In 1992, the Southeastern Conference split into Eastern and Western Divisions and created a championship game between the division winners to crown the league champion. Florida has made 9 appearances in the SEC Championship Game, the most of any SEC school, with the most recent coming in 2008. The Gators are 7-2 in those games.

Year Division Championship SEC CG Result Opponent PF PA
1992 SEC East L Alabama 21 28
1993 SEC East W Alabama 28 13
1994 SEC East W Alabama 24 23
1995 SEC East W Arkansas 34 3
1996 SEC East W Alabama 45 30
1999 SEC East L Alabama 7 34
2000 SEC East W Auburn 28 6
2006 SEC East W Arkansas 38 28
2008 SEC East W Alabama 31 20
Totals 9 7-2 - 246 185

Season-by-Season Records[7]

Year Conference Overall Record Conference Record
1906 none 5-3 n/a
1907 none 4-1-1 n/a
1908 none 5-2-1 n/a
1909 none 6-1-1 n/a
1910 none 6-1-0 n/a
1911 none 5-0-1 n/a
1912 SIAA 5-2-1 n/a
1913 SIAA 4-3 n/a
1914 SIAA 5-2 n/a
1915 SIAA 4-3 n/a
1916 SIAA 0-5 n/a
1917 SIAA 2-4 n/a
1918 SIAA 0-1 n/a
1919 SIAA 5-3 n/a
1920 SIAA 5-3 n/a
1921 SIAA 6-3-2 n/a
1922 Southern 7-2 2-0
1923 Southern 6-1-2 1-0-2
1924 Southern 6-2-2 2-0-1
1925 Southern 8-2 3-2
1926 Southern 2-6-2 1-4-1
1927 Southern 7-3 5-2
1928 Southern 8-1 6-1
1929 Southern 8-2 6-1
1930 Southern 6-3-1 4-2-1
1931 Southern 2-6-2 2-4-2
1932 Southern 3-6 1-6
1933 SEC 5-3-1 2-3
1934 SEC 6-3-1 2-2-1
1935 SEC 3-7 1-6
1936 SEC 4-6 1-5
1937 SEC 4-7 3-4
1938 SEC 4-6-1 2-2-1
1939 SEC 5-5-1 0-3-1
1940 SEC 5-5 2-3
1941 SEC 4-6 1-3
1942 SEC 3-7 1-3
1943 SEC no team n/a
1944 SEC 4-3 0-3
1945 SEC 4-5-1 1-3-1
1946 SEC 0-9 0-5
1947 SEC 4-5-1 0-3-1
1948 SEC 5-5 1-5
1949 SEC 4-5-1 1-4-1
1950 SEC 5-5 2-4
1951 SEC 5-5 2-4
1952 SEC 8-3 3-3
1953 SEC 3-5-2 1-3-2
1954 SEC 5-5 5-2
1955 SEC 4-6 3-5
1956 SEC 6-3-1 5-2
1957 SEC 6-2-1 4-2-1
1958 SEC 6-4-1 2-4-1
1959 SEC 5-4-1 2-4
1960 SEC 9-2 5-1
1961 SEC 4-5-1 3-3
1962 SEC 7-4 4-2
1963 SEC 6-3-1 3-3-1
1964 SEC 7-3 4-2
1965 SEC 7-4 4-2
1966 SEC 9-2 4-1
1967 SEC 6-4 4-2
1968 SEC 6-3-1 2-2-1
1969 SEC 9-1-1 4-1-1
1970 SEC 7-4 3-3
1971 SEC 4-7 1-6
1972 SEC 5-5-1 3-3-1
1973 SEC 7-5 3-4
1974 SEC 8-4 3-3
1975 SEC 9-3 5-1
1976 SEC 8-4 4-2
1977 SEC 6-4-1 3-3
1978 SEC 4-7 3-3
1979 SEC 0-10-1 0-6
1980 SEC 8-4 4-2
1981 SEC 7-5 3-3
1982 SEC 8-4 3-3
1983 SEC 9-2-1 4-2
1984 SEC 9-1-1 5-0-1
1985 SEC 9-1-1 5-1
1986 SEC 6-5 3-3
1987 SEC 6-6 3-3
1988 SEC 7-5 4-3
1989 SEC 7-5 4-3
1990 SEC 9-2 6-1
1991 SEC 10-2 7-0*
1992 SEC 9-4 6-3
1993 SEC 11-2 8-1*
1994 SEC 10-2-1 8-1*
1995 SEC 12-1 9-0*
1996 SEC 12-1** 9-0*
1997 SEC 10-2 6-2
1998 SEC 10-2 7-1
1999 SEC 9-4 7-2
2000 SEC 10-3 8-1*
2001 SEC 10-2 6-2
2002 SEC 8-5 6-2
2003 SEC 8-5 6-2
2004 SEC 7-5 4-4
2005 SEC 9-3 5-3
2006 SEC 13-1** 8-1*
2007 SEC 9-4 5-3
2008 SEC 13-1** 8-1*
** = Consensus National Champions * = Conference Champions

All-time record vs. annual opponents

School UF Record Streak 1st Meeting
Florida State 32-19-2 Won 5 1958
Georgia 38-46-2 Won 1 1915
Kentucky 41-17-0 Won 22 1917
LSU 29-23-3 Won 1 1937
South Carolina 21-4-3 Won 3 1911
Tennessee 19-19-0 Won 4 1916
Vanderbilt 30-9-2 Won 18 1945

Bowl games

Season Bowl Game Winner Loser
1912 Bacardi Bowl Florida 28 Vedado Athletic Club 0
1952 Gator Bowl Florida 14 Tulsa 13
1958 Gator Bowl Mississippi 7 Florida 3
1960 Gator Bowl Florida 13 Baylor 12
1962 Gator Bowl Florida 17 Penn State 7
1965 Sugar Bowl Missouri 20 Florida 18
1966 Orange Bowl Florida 27 Georgia Tech 12
1969 Gator Bowl Florida 14 Tennessee 13
1973^ Tangerine Bowl Miami University 16 Florida 7
1974 Sugar Bowl Nebraska 13 Florida 10
1975 Gator Bowl Maryland 13 Florida 0
1976 Sun Bowl Texas A&M 37 Florida 14
1980^ Tangerine Bowl Florida 35 Maryland 20
1981 Peach Bowl West Virginia 26 Florida 6
1982 Bluebonnet Bowl Arkansas 28 Florida 24
1983 Gator Bowl Florida 14 Iowa 6
1987 Aloha Bowl UCLA 20 Florida 16
1988 All-American Bowl Florida 14 Illinois 10
1989 Freedom Bowl Washington 34 Florida 7
1991 Sugar Bowl Notre Dame 39 Florida 28
1992 Gator Bowl Florida 27 NC State 10
1993 Sugar Bowl Florida 41 West Virginia 7
1994 Sugar Bowl Florida State 23 Florida 17
1995 Fiesta Bowl (Title Game) Nebraska 62 Florida 24
1996 Sugar Bowl (Title Game) Florida 52 Florida State 20
1997† Florida Citrus Bowl Florida 21 Penn State 6
1998 Orange Bowl Florida 31 Syracuse 10
1999† Florida Citrus Bowl Michigan State 37 Florida 34
2000 Sugar Bowl Miami 37 Florida 20
2001 Orange Bowl Florida 56 Maryland 23
2002 Outback Bowl Michigan 38 Florida 30
2003 Outback Bowl Iowa 37 Florida 17
2004 Peach Bowl Miami 27 Florida 10
2005 Outback Bowl Florida 31 Iowa 24
2006 BCS National Championship Game Florida 41 Ohio State 14
2007 Capital One Bowl Michigan 41 Florida 35
2008 BCS National Championship Game Florida 24 Oklahoma 14

Overall bowl record: 18-19 (37 Games)

University of Florida All-Time Team

Chosen by Miami Herald in August, 1983, by a fan vote.

Florida Gator All-Century Team

Chosen by Gator Fans and organized by the Gainesville Sun in the Fall of 1999

University of Florida Gator 100th Anniversary Team

Done in conjunction with the celebration of 100 Years of Florida Football. In 2006 fans voted with mail-in ballots found at stores and also voted on the internet.

Florida's All-Time Roster

As chosen by Athlon Sports in 2001. [1]

Individual Award Winners

All-Time SEC Team Gator Honorees

Current coaching staff

Name Current Responsibilities Joined Staff Alma mater
Urban Meyer Head Coach
Special Teams
2005 Cincinnati
Steve Addazio Offensive Coordinator
Offensive Line
2005 Central Connecticut State
Vance Bedford Cornerbacks 2008 Texas
Kenny Carter Running backs 2008 The Citadel
Billy Gonzales Recruiting Coordinator
Wide Receivers
2005 Colorado State
Chuck Heater Assistant Defensive Coordinator
Safeties
2005 Michigan
Scot Loeffler Quarterbacks 2009 Michigan
Dan McCarney Assistant Head Coach
Defensive Line
2008 Iowa
Charlie Strong Associate Head Coach
Defensive Coordinator
Linebackers
2003 University of Central Arkansas
Brian White Tight Ends 2009 Harvard

Notable alumni

Notable current players

2009 Depth Chart

Offensive
  • QB - Tim Tebow, Sr.
  • TB - Jeffrey Demps, So.
  • WR - Riley Cooper, Sr.
  • WR - Carl Moore, Sr.
  • WR - Deonte Thompson, So.
  • TE - Aaron Hernandez, Jr.
  • LT - Carl Johnson, Jr.
  • LG - James Wilson, So.
  • C - Maurkice Pouncey, Jr.
  • RG - Mike Pouncey, Jr.
  • RT - Marcus Gilbert, Jr.
Defense
  • DE - J. Cunningham, Sr.
  • DE - Carlos Dunlap, Jr.
  • DT - Terron Sanders, Jr.
  • DT - Lawrence Marsh, Jr.
  • LB - A.J. Jones, Jr.
  • LB - Brandon Spikes, Sr.
  • LB - Dustin Doe, Sr.
  • CB - Janoris Jenkins, So.
  • CB - Joe Haden, Jr.
  • S - Ahmad Black, Jr.
  • S - Major Wright, Jr.

References

  1. ^ http://www.govtrack.us/congress/record.xpd?id=111-h20090121-27
  2. ^ Sports: Spurrierisms
  3. ^ "With Zook out, will Spurrier get a call?". ESPN.com. 2004-10-24. Retrieved 2009-01-14.
  4. ^ "Toughest Schedule: (Teams with at least 9 Inter-Division games) Sorted on Cumulative Opposition" (PDF). 2007-01-10. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  5. ^ "2007 Team Ranking". 2007-07-17. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  6. ^ See http://www.ncaa.org/champadmin/ia_football_past_champs.html
  7. ^ http://www.gatorzone.com/football/history/yby_scores.pdf

See also

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