Thanks for all the support. I hope you have enjoyed reading this blog as much as I have enjoyed writing it.
Anyone with comments/questions/suggestions please email me at: bdfoxjr@chomptalk.com
2021 Florida QB commit Carlos Del Rio is looking forward to completing in the Elite 11 Finals, which run from Monday to Wednesday.
Del Rio told ChompTalk.com that “it means a lot to make it to the Finals, knowing how hard I’ve worked.”
Del Rio is a 4-star prospect according to the 247Sports composite rankings and has been committed to the Gators since July 26, 2019.
As a junior, the Peach State prospect, threw for 1,792 yards and 16 touchdown. He also ran for 572 yards and 8 scores.
“My expectations for the finals are to make others around me better [and] get better myself,” Del Rio stated.
Del Rio is also excited to learn from the coaches and to bring the new knowledge into his preparation for his senior season at Grayson High. However, make no mistake, Del Rio’s goal is to, “Win it.”
The 22nd annual #Elite11 Finals
📍Nashville, TN
🗓June 29-July 1, 2020
The field is set!
Florida added another defensive back to their 2021 recruiting class Sunday evening as Jordan Young, of Gaither High School, pledged his commitment.
The 6’0″ 185-pound cornerback is currently a three-star recruit with a 247Sports composite rating of 0.8867. The Tampa native chose Florida from a list of 26 total offers. Other programs that were interested in Young include Alabama, Ole Miss, and Arkansas.
In the end, Torrian Gray and Christian Robinson convinced the young athlete to stay close to home.
Despite his three-star rating, Young is a ball hawk. He displays a keen talent for locating the ball in the air and attacking it cleanly.Aside from his timing and soft hands, Young’s presence adds even more depth to the Gators’ talented secondary.
Gators fans will want to watch out for this talented athlete in the very near future.
Young is Florida’s twentieth commitment of the 2021 recruiting cycle and the Gators currently sit at No. 8 in the 247 national rankings.
The whirlwind recruitment of IMG safety Kamar Wilcoxson took yet another turn on Friday when the 4-star DB announced his commitment to Florida, yet again.
Business over emotion, imma Gator stop the commotion ♾ . . .
This is the third time that the talented DB has made the pledge to Florida and this one represents a flip from SEC East rival Tennessee.
Wilcoxson is a 6’2, 185 lb, composite 4-star prospect out of Lilburn, GA who will be attending IMG Academy this year.
The Peach State prospect is the composite No. 16 safety in the 2021 recruiting cycle and had offers from many of the top programs in the nation including Tennessee, Auburn and Alabama.
Florida now has 19 commitments in the 2021 class and has the No. 7 ranked class in the cycle, according to 247Sports.
Mitchell is a 6’0, 184 lb safety from Winter Park, FL where he attends Winter Park High. He is rated a 247Sports composite 3-star and the No. 28 S in the 2021 recruiting cycle.
Mitchell had been committed to LSU since March before decommitting on June 12, ultimately opting for the Gators.
Mitchell was primarily recruited by Gators’ coach Ron English and was also targeted by LSU, Alabama, Auburn, and Arkansas, among others.
The Gators now hold the national No. 8 ranking in the 2021 class with 18 commitments.
The Florida Gators baseball team opened the 2020 season a program-record 16-0 and were the last team in the nation to remain unbeaten.
After the 2020 MLB Draft, it’s clear that the 2021 team should, somehow, be even better.
The Gators saw no players and only two signees selected in the shortened draft, meaning Florida will essentially ‘run it back’ in 2021.
Head coach Kevin O’Sullivan has to be thrilled at his spoils.
With the #MLBDraft over, @GatorsBB will officially welcome back No. 1 and No. 2 starting pitchers Tommy Mace and Jack Leftwich to go with Hunter Barco and a ridiculous stable of arms. #Gators should be the easy No. 1 pick going into 2021.
The Gators are pretty much loaded across the board and are especially deep on the mound.
Florida will likely see a motivated Tommy Mace and Jack Leftwich (both of whom went unselected in the draft) and a developing lefty in Hunter Barco (2-0, 1.40 ERA in 2020) round out their weekend rotation while literally a dozen options exist for midweek action and bullpen work. Signee Timothy Manning is likely to get a lot of action as well.
The Gators lineup should only prove to be deeper than last year (which, hardly seems possible) as Florida will add top prospects SS Colby Halter, C Mac Guscette, and SS Sterlin Thompson, all of whom have the ability to make an immediate impact.
While McKethan Stadium didn’t see the send-off it deserved as the Covid-19 pandemic spread across the world, the Gators will have the opportunity to break in the new Florida Ballpark with, easily, the deepest team in program history.
The 2020 MLB Draft is finally upon us. Beginning tonight at 7:00 PM, the professional careers of 160 players will begin.
The University of Florida has been well represented in the MLB Draft since Kevin O’Sullivan took over the program. 2020 should be no different with at least two players and a signee selected over the five round, two-day draft.
SIGNEE ZAC VEEN:
Veen will never step foot on campus as a Gator as he is projected to go as high as No. 4 to Kansas City by most draft pundits. Veen signed with UF back in November, but has generally been seen as someone who would never realize his collegiate baseball potential.
The Port Orange, FL native is a 6’4 prospect who is projected as power-bat positioned in the outfield.
RHP TOMMY MACE:
The junior from Tampa was enjoying an excellent bounce back after a rough 2019 that saw him go 8-5 with a 5.32 ERA.
As Florida’s Friday night starter, Mace put up a 3-0 record in four starts while lowering his ERA to a 1.67 clip in 27.0 innings of work.
Mace is the No. 69 prospect according to MLB.com and will likely be selected on Thursday.
RHP JACK LEFTWICH:
Leftwich was also enjoying a bounce back year in the Orange and Blue as he had garnered a 2-0 record to go along with a 4.15 ERA in four starts in 2020.
Leftwich struggled in 2019 and his 6-5 record and 5.31 ERA show just how difficult a season it was. In addition, the Orlando native had issues with blisters on his pitching hand for much of the season.
Leftwich is the No. 145 ranked prospect according to MLB.com.
Also draft-eligible:
RHP Justin Alintoff
LHP Jordan Butler
C Cal Greenfield
OF Austin Langworthy
RHP David Luethje
IF Kirby McMullen
RHP Garrett Milchin
RHP Christian Scott
1B/C Brady Smith
IF/OF Jacob Young
Top signees that could hear their name:
3B Coby Mayo
SS Sterlin Thompson
C Mac Guscette
SS Colby Halter
LHP Timothy Manning
The first round of the 2020 MLB Draft is slated to begin at 7:00 PM on Wednesday and will be aired on ESPN and MLB Network. Rounds 2-5 will begin on Thursday at 4:00 PM and will also be aired nationally on ESPN and MLB Network.
Thirty-two years of Gator baseball played in a once world-class facility on Stadium Road ended abruptly with the conclusion of this season due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Alfred A. McKethan Stadium, or “The Mac” as it’s so affectionately called, was retired and will be torn down after the last game of the 2020 season was played within its walls.
The names and faces on Perry Field at Alfred A. McKethan Stadium have changed over those 32 years. The boys in blue pinstripes grow older, graduate and move on to life outside the first and third base lines.
Now, the time has come for their beloved stadium to do the same.
Next season, the players, fans and traditions will travel 1.6 miles to Hull Road for the inaugural game in Florida Ballpark.
32 years worth of homeruns, strikeouts, walk-offs, and dogpiles are now forever immortalized in the record books as statistics of a bygone era.
Whether you ask players or fans about the esteemed stadium, the answer is always the same: There was just something about The Mac.
The theatre style seating primed for fans eager to watch their beloved Gators defeat the visiting team in dramatic fashion, the glaring Gainesville sun and infamous Rainesville weather delays all contributed to an environment unlike any other.
When the baseball team’s Twitter posted a video memorializing The Mac, several former players reminisced about their days on the diamond. Tyler Dyson, UF pitcher from 2017-2019 and pitcher in the Washington Nationals organization, said the place was “more than just a field.”
In 32 years, a lot of memories were made in that ballpark by athletes and spectators alike.
For Terri and RW Walker, longtime members of the Gator Dugout Club, baseball was just “something between basketball and football.”
“We came to the baseball stadium not knowing anyone,” the couple said. “Who could have predicted it would become our passion?”
Strangers to the game and its devoted fans at first, the Walkers expressed that the best part of Gator baseball was becoming lifelong friends with their seatmates in Section B and getting to know the players and their families as members of the booster club.
While The Mac facilitated friendships and housed some of their favorite memories of Gators sports, the Walkers in turn gave back to the stadium in the form of a new tradition.
“One game, we decided to honor the recently departed legendary announcer, Keith Jackson, by saying his famous “Whoa Nelly” when number 27, Nelson Maldonado came to bat,” the couple said. “We thought it would be a fitting motivation for Nelson.”
At first, Terri and RW were the only two chanting the late announcer’s catchphrase. But soon, the rest of their section and the stadium joined in.
“A simple saying became pom-poms, the big Nelly head, and the ‘1,2,3 -Whoa Nelly!’ the couple said.
After graduating in 2019 and being drafted in the 21st round by the Chicago Cubs, Maldonado returned to The Mac in 2020 for one last “Whoa Nelly” cheer led by “The Whoa Nelly People” themselves, as Terri and RW are referred to as by the rest of the Dugout Club.
Club president Henrietta Logan’s booster origin story is a stark contrast from the Walkers’s.
“In 1999, one of the earliest things I did when I joined the faculty at the University of Florida was to check out the baseball stadium,” Logan said.
Coming from a long tradition of championship caliber baseball, she was eager to see what Florida had to offer in that respect.
“(The Mac) was a cozy stadium with lots of open seating — Oh, and don’t forget, lots of rain delays,” Logan said.
Aside from the small crowds, she was pleased with what she saw. After buying single-game tickets through much of the early 2000s, Logan and her husband purchased season tickets.
“In 2005, we could not get tickets to the Regional or Super Regional,” she said. “So we decided, sun or no sun, shade or no shade, we needed season tickets.”
When coach Kevin O’Sullivan took over the program, season ticket stubs became a necessity for Logan.
From her early days at the ballpark to her final bout at The Mac, Logan said her favorite memory in the iconic stadium was in 2017 when the team came back to Gainesville to celebrate the program’s first College World Series title.
“That was a party,” Logan said. “I know I won’t forget that. Players got to talk, and Sully of course talked and we cheered and cheered and cheered.”
While the closing of The Mac makes her melancholy, Logan is looking forward to new memories she will make in the new ballpark just six minutes up the road. In fact, she already knows where she wants to sit.
“I want to go to Florida baseball games until I’m 100 years old,” Logan said. “So I’d like to be somewhere protected from the sun and near an elevator.”
Gordon Burleson, longtime Dugout Club member and creator of the Da-dee-da-da cheer, finds it easy to reminisce on his 23 years as a booster and Gator baseball fan. While the College World Series berths, the rivalry games where Florida emerged the victor and the capricious Gainesville weather seem to stick out in his mind, Burleson says that all of those memories seem to muddle together.
But one thing is certain. All of those games at The Mac, rain or shine, win or lose, left fans with memories to last a lifetime.
And for Burleson, “All are fond memories because it was Gator Baseball.”
Note: Sunday marks what should have been a potential Game Three of the NCAA Super Regionals, which could have been the final game ever played at McKethan Stadium.
According to a TMZ Sports report, former Florida Gators WR Reche Caldwell, 41, was shot and killed in Tampa on Saturday.
https://t.co/3S7HRq2ii0 Reche Caldwell — a former NFL wide receiver who played with Tom Brady — was shot and killed in Tampa on Saturday, his mother confirms to TMZ Sports.
University of Florida Athletic Director, Scott Stricklin, expressed optimism about the fall sports calendar in a UF Board of Trustees meeting on Thursday.
In addition, Stricklin stated that the current plan is for those games to be played with fans.
“What will our venues look like once those games are played? That’s a popular question and one for which there is no clear answer.
Our goal is to accommodate as many Gator fans as UF Health and state health officials deem appropriate.”
Stricklin continued by stating that “by early August, we should have a better idea what fan attendance can look like.”
Last month, SEC officials approved fall sports student-athletes’ return to campus for Monday, June 8 with the remaining seasons set for a July return.
UF athletics have remained in a holding pattern since COVID-19 grasped the entire country, forcing the cancellation of winter sports championships and practically the entire spring sports calendar.
Soccer is slated to open the 2020-21 sports calendar with a match on August 21. Volleyball is scheduled to open on August 28 and football is set to kickoff on September 5.
*Information for this article came directly from the UAA press release and Chris Harry.
Florida PG Andrew Nembhard will withdraw from the NBA Draft, but intends to transfer from the UF program, according to Stadium’s Jeff Goodman.
BREAKING: Florida’s Andrew Nembhard will withdraw from the NBA Draft and intends to transfer, source told @Stadium. The 6-foot-5 sophomore point guard averaged 11.2 points and 5.6 assists per game this past season and should be a pursued heavily by other high-major schools.
Nembhard averaged 11.2 points, 5.6 assists, and 3 rebounds per game as a true sophomore at Florida.
The Canadian National Team member was a five-star prospect out of Montverde Academy and started all 67 games over the last two years.
The Gators still have options at the point, including Tre Mann, who is exploring his options in the NBA Draft. Tyree Appleby is an exciting player who averaged 17.2 points at Cleveland State in 2018-19 before transferring. Florida also has sophomore Ques Glover in the mix who saw significant time backing up Nembhard.
UPDATE: Adam Zagoria is reporting that Tre Mann will return to Florida next season, clearing up the Gators’ depth chart in the backcourt.