The Florida Gators are the 2006 champions of college football. That sentence barely looks real, especially considering what we’ve been through in the last decade.
We saw a legendary coach shockingly leave for the NFL. We saw a bungled coaching search end with a disastrous hire. We saw three years of false hopes, based solely on a mongoloid’s reputation as a strong recruiter. We saw a young coach come into town to clean up a mess. And after just two years, we saw a national championship.
Monday’s game was an ass-kicking, pure and simple. Ohio State looked like who they were: the best team from a bad conference. The media poo-pooed the notion that there’s speed, then there’s SEC speed, but the Gators showed the true difference last night.
Ohio State had 82 yards of offense. 82 EFFING YARDS!!! Seriously, myself and ten of my friends could probably get 80. Anybody who claimed Michigan was more deserving, or Ohio State would win a blowout, or Boise State needs a chance, please… 82 YARDS!!!
First basketball, now this. I have no idea how to describe the emotion I’m feeling this morning. I will never be a happier football fan than I am right now. On to the pundits…
ESPN.com’s Pat Forde:
Ohio State was a 7½-point favorite. Rarely has Las Vegas and almost every member of the sports media — my moronic self emphatically included — been this wrong.
Florida had a month between BCS Selection Sunday and this game to simmer in a stew of disrespect. Clearly, the Gators had reached a boiling point by kickoff.
“Motivation was not an issue,” said Urban Meyer, whose first six years as a college head coach merely rank among the most impressive in history. “If you are looking for a great pregame speech, I didn’t have to have any. We had one for 30 days.”
But it’s one thing to play angry. It’s another to play angry and play perfectly.
This was 85 guys going Don Larsen on an unbeaten and allegedly unbeatable opponent. This was one team rising to the occasion and the other snorkeling far below it.
Consider: Florida hadn’t beaten a I-A opponent by this many points since Central Florida on Sept. 9, and hadn’t beaten a BCS-conference opponent by that much since last season. Ohio State hadn’t been beaten by this many points since 1994.
The Florida game plan was art, suitable for framing. The execution of the game plan was similarly gorgeous.
Urban Meyer undressed The Vest. Scored 41 points on him, the most ever on a Jim Tressel-coached Ohio State team. Last time Tress’ boys gave up more it was 1999 and he was the coach at I-AA Youngstown State.
Chris Leak humiliated Mr. Heisman. To say he won the personal matchup with Troy Smith is like saying Sitting Bull got the best of Custer. It was a massacre and a stunning reversal of fortune for a guy who was widely doubted as a big-game quarterback while Smith was universally saluted.
A Florida defense that has been excellent all year was impenetrable Monday night. The Buckeyes were held to a preposterous 82 yards of offense, which looks like a misprint unless you saw the game.
Dave Hyde of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel:
Here’s the wonderful thing about one-sided nights like this: Everything gets answered. Everything. Every argument. Every doubt. Every nit that’s been picked since college football kicked off months ago.
Florida didn’t deserve to be in the champion-ship game, as Michigan’s Lloyd Carr said? Someone ask him again after this 41-14 win against Ohio State.
Coach Urban Meyer’s trick offense couldn’t flex enough muscle to win big? Someone take a look at what it did Monday.
And the Bowl Championship Series couldn’t deliver a proper champion? It might not provide the perfect ending to the perfect season. But someone ask Florida fans how it looked this night.
No questions. No controversy. No doubt who’s No. 1.
They won on muscle and magic, guts, guile and even a kicker no one trusted.
If Meyer had shaken his playbook for this game, you’d expect gumdrops, whistles, a few firecrackers, a bottle of elixir and maybe Adam Sandler to have fallen out. It wasn’t anything Florida hadn’t shown this regular season.
It was just everything in one night.
Pat Dooley of the Gainesville Sun:
Think they belong now, Michigan?
“There’s a team that doesn’t belong in this game,” Deshawn Wynn said. “And it’s not the Gators.”
One thing you can say for the Gators, they know how to win a national championship.
They took a team that was supposed to be unbeatable and beat it down like it was UCF. They pushed so hard they caused the usually conservative Jim Tressel to go for it on fourth down from his own 29.
“Obviously, it was the wrong call,” Tressel said.
This was the best we’ve seen this Florida team play this year. Who is the big-game coach now?
In their minds they were disrespected by the national media. They saw in one newspaper where a 42-14 score was predicted in favor of the other team.
Then they went out and came a point short of reversing it.
“Motivation was easy for the last 30 days,” UF coach Urban Meyer said.
And so they were able to pass the crystal around, just as their basketball brethren did nine months ago. And they did so with a performance that will at least allow the 2006 Gators to enter the argument for best team in Gator history. Certainly, this was a game that is in the argument for best all-around performance ever.
And Leak gets into that best quarterback argument.
David Whitley of the Orlando Sentinel:
A beautiful love-hate relationship ended Monday night. From now on, Chris Leak always will be loved.
He did what no other Gator except the most exalted ever has done, and a lot more. Danny Wuerffel didn’t have to beat invincible Ohio State to win a national championship.
He never had to switch to an offense that highlighted his weaknesses in mid-career. He never had to hear thousands of fans drool at the mention of his backup’s name.
He never had to know that whatever he did, it probably wouldn’t be enough. If putting 41 points on the Buckeyes and wining the offensive MVP award isn’t enough, Leak should tell people to kiss his championship ring.
Not that he would dare say such a thing.
Even after winning the biggest game of his life, Leak sounded like a guy ordering a cheeseburger at the local In-N-Out.
“It’s a great feeling to be national champions,” he said. “I’m just so thankful to be around my great teammates and great coaches.”
Leak certainly wasn’t wrong to give his teammates credit. Troy Smith will be seeing Gators rushers chasing him in his sleep for the next few months.
It’s not quite that they could have manhandled Ohio State with one arm tied behind their backs, but Earl Everett did lose his helmet on one play and still made like a wild man and ran down Smith.
The Heisman Trophy winner had said how comfortable he was in Phoenix, especially since he loved going to the In-N-Out by the team hotel. He should have parked his car in the drive-through lane there Monday night and refused to come out until Ohio State figured out how to block.
The best move he made all night was giving Leak a big hug after the game. His counterpart deserved it after completing 25 of 36 passes, including his first eight.
Mike Bianchi of the Orlando Sentinel:
Meyer’s Gators came into this championship game billed as a team of destiny, but, brother, this was not destiny. This was domination. This was devastation. This was destruction. This was the antithesis of Nebraska 11 years ago in this very desert.
This is the 100-year anniversary of Florida football, and wouldn’t you know it: The Gators pulled off one of the most shocking upsets of the century. Exactly 10 years after winning their first national title with a rout of No. 1-ranked Florida State, the Gators destroyed another undefeated team a decade later.
The naysayers said the Gators didn’t belong in the game at all. The oddsmakers and media experts picked them to lose handily. But the Gators — these gritty, gutty Gators — did not care. Their fans were outnumbered, their team was outranked, but they believed. They believed in themselves. They believed in their coach. They believed in their quarterback.
Talk about validation and vindication, maybe now QB Chris Leak finally will get the credit he is due as one of the greatest quarterbacks in Florida and Southeastern Conference history.
And all those questions surrounding Meyer have been answered unequivocally. People wondered whether he was ready for a big-time job like Florida. People wondered whether his offense could work in the big leagues of a BCS conference. People wondered whether he ever could emerge from the immense shadow of Steve Spurrier.
Yes, yes and ohmygawd yes.
John Romano of the St. Petersburg Times:
It seems silly today to recall the controversy of last month when Florida swept past Michigan in the final BCS poll to claim a spot in the title game.
Turns out, in the end, it wasn’t about computer rankings or polls. It wasn’t politicking or strength of schedule or network television preferences.
In the end, it was simply football.
A quicker team. A smarter coach. And far more heart and resolve.
And now, for the first time in Division I history, one school can claim to have the reigning national champions in both football and men’s basketball.
It wasn’t supposed to be like this. Not by a long shot. Not for a team that was 7 1/2-point underdogs.
Oh, sure, the Gators had a chance. After all, they were Southeastern Conference champions and owners of a 12-1 record.
But they weren’t supposed to overwhelm anyone, let alone Ohio State. Remember, this is a team that struggled against Vanderbilt. A team seemingly on the verge of collapse every week.
Yet Monday night, they were beasts. They crushed Ohio State’s offense and toyed with its defense. The team supposedly built on pluck turned bully overnight.
Greg Cote of the Miami Herald:
In the end, where delirium and dreams met, Florida Gators fans outnumbered here 3-1 or more were the ones making noise like they owned the place. And they did. Gators players pogoed and danced on the field and silver confetti shimmered like starlight as fans roared and slapped outstretched hands in a Gator Chomp-chomp-chomp after their team had devoured Ohio State and lifted a campus in Gainesville higher than any college has been.
Ever.
Never before has an NCAA Division I school been the national champion in football, which the Gators became with stunning force Monday night, while also reigning in men’s basketball, a title Florida had earned last year. …
More than 10,000 Gator fans filled UF’s campus basketball arena for a watch-party, and it was fitting, that joining together of the school’s twin-titan sports.
Meyer and basketball coach Billy Donovan happen to be close friends; “Billy recruited me,” Meyer said of the man who helped persuade him to leave Utah. Their wives are close. So are their same-aged kids. In fact, the coaches live two houses from each other in the same Gainesville neighborhood.
Does this call for a block party or what!
Martin Fennelly of the Tampa Tribune:
Turns out the BCS hue-and-cry babies were right. Florida wasn’t the second-best team in the country.
“I’ve got to admit everybody in the country was right. We weren’t the second best team in the country,” Florida receiver Dallas Baker said. “We’re the No. 1 team in the country.”
Here’s to Florida.
Sorry. My mistake.
The University of Florida.
Destiny won in a blowout in the desert. Undefeated Ohio State and Heisman winner Troy Smith were no match for the team with no chance. They were shocked. We were shocked. About the only ones who weren’t shocked were the ones who did the shocking, 41-14.
All this season, the 100th season of Florida football, they were either the team no one thought would get here or didn’t deserve to be here. But when it mattered, with a national title on the line, college football turned orange and blue again.
They saved their best for last. The Gators turned a night that couldn’t have begun worse into a season that couldn’t have ended better, not if the band had dotted the “I” in Florida. By the way, it’s official:
Urban Renewal is complete.
Dennis Dodd of CBS Sportsline:
There is speed and then there is SEC speed. Ohio State certainly wasn’t ready for it. Smith was sacked five times. Ends Derrick Harvey and Jarvis Moss, plus defensive tackle Ray McDonald, made the Buckeyes’ offensive tackles look like blocking dummies — only worse. Blocking dummies bounce back up. Alex Boone and Kirk Barton were whiffing all night.
Tressel essentially handed the game to Florida in the first half when he decided to go for it on fourth-and-one from his own 29 in the second quarter. Not a good idea. Freshman running back Chris Wells was stopped short.
“We’re a lot quicker, a lot more athletic,” the 6-foot-6 Moss said. “It’s just totally different playing guys in our conference.
“I really don’t know who they played other than Michigan. They really didn’t have an identity. They really weren’t tested by any great teams.”
Florida played 10 bowl teams, losing only to Auburn. It depends on when you lose, though. After allowing only 86 points in their first 11 games, the Buckeyes allowed 80 in their final two to Michigan and Florida.
Stewart Mandel of Sports Illustrated:
When the doors swung open to Florida’s locker room about 45 minutes after Monday night’s BCS National Championship Game, several Gators were busy filming their own mini-cam documentaries of the scene. Safety Tony Joiner delivered a monologue in front of one of them.
“They said it couldn’t be done, that David couldn’t beat Goliath,” shouted Joiner. “The score has been settled. Forty-one to 14, University of Florida. Who didn’t deserve to be here?”
David didn’t just beat Goliath on Monday — he humiliated him. He so thoroughly outclassed the only team to be ranked No. 1 during the 2006 regular season that it leaves us wondering whether the past four months were really just one big lie.
There are no shortage of figures deserving of recognition on the occasion of this, the Florida Gators’ second national championship. First, however, let us take a moment to bestow praise on college football’s new reigning genius: Jim Walden.
Walden, you may recall, is the former Washington State and Iowa State coach who, back when the rest of the country was arguing over whether Florida or Michigan should have finished the regular season No. 2, was the only one out of 175 BCS pollsters with the audacity to rank the Gators No. 1. (Walden voted in the Harris Poll.)
Following a regular season that saw three straight months of endless Buckeyes adulation, Walden was the one so-called expert to not only stand up and voice his dissent but to shout it to the hilltops. “Ohio State hasn’t proved anything,” he said at the time. Following a Michigan-Ohio State game so colossal it merited its own countdown clock, Walden was the one contrarian to voice his opinion that, “The Big Ten is as weak as it’s been in 25 years.”
And he pointed to the Gators’ 12-1 record against a grueling SEC schedule and proclaimed — to much mockery — “Florida deserves to be No. 1.”
If only we’d listened to you, Jim Walden.