
Blackmon: For better or worse, Scott Stricklin's fate is in Billy Napier's hands
Scott Stricklin has made his choice. The Florida athletic director is sticking with embattled football coach Billy Napier for the 2025 season.
Sticking with Napier, who is 15-19 in just under 3 years at Florida, is a bold choice. Plenty of Florida fans have used other words to describe it. It’s the kind of decision that men and women like Stricklin are well-compensated to make.
It also might end up being the last consequential decision Stricklin gets to make as Florida’s athletic director.
Outside of asking the man himself, there’s no way to know whether the 54-year-old Stricklin is so confident in Napier’s future success at Florida that he’s willing to stake his career at Florida on Napier figuring it out and becoming the coach Florida thought they hired nearly 3 years ago in December 2021.
Make no mistake, though, staking his future at Florida on Napier’s success in 2025 and beyond is precisely what Stricklin seems to have done.
Whatever happens next, Stricklin and Napier are married at the hip.
Will Stricklin be validated, or will his faith in the 45-year-old Napier, who was 40-12 and won 2 conference championships at Louisiana and turned down the Auburn and South Carolina jobs before being hired by Florida, be rewarded?
There’s no question retaining Napier required a leap of faith from Stricklin, who had little to hang his hat on from a results standpoint.
Yes, until Saturday’s wipeout loss at Texas, the Gators appeared to be improving in all respects, buoyed by the fabulous play of freshman phenom quarterback DJ Lagway, who was injured early in the Georgia game while the Gators held a lead and appeared firmly in control.
But in handing Napier a 4th season, Stricklin is undoubtedly trusting and rewarding the eye-test of an improving young team over wins and losses.
Florida, after all, still lost rivalry games to Miami, at Tennessee and to Georgia.
There might be participation ribbons in some aspects of life, but not in the cutthroat world of SEC football. There are wins and there are losses, and Florida earns little prestige by losing close games to the Vols and Bulldogs.
At Florida, a place with 11 SEC championships and 3 claimed national championships, should a coach get a 4th year based on vibes and moral victories?
Stricklin’s letter explaining the choice cited Florida’s effort and the need for “a disciplined, stable approach that is focused on long-term, sustained success for Gator athletes, recruits and fans,” but what evidence of long-term sustained success exists at present, either on or off the field?
On the field, the Gators are 4-5 with 2 games against ranked opponents remaining.
If Florida fails to win at least 1 of those games, they will miss a bowl game for the 2nd time under Napier and suffer a 4th consecutive losing season for the first time in the modern era (post-integration) of college football.
Off the field, recruiting is a tire fire, with the Gators poised to ink their worst signing class in decades, currently ranked 45th in the 247 composite rankings. Bringing Napier back may offer a modicum of stability, and certainly seems to assure Lagway’s return, a huge deal by any objective measure.
But is Lagway enough? The answer might depend on what talent Napier brings in as Florida makes good on promises, first reported here at SDS, to spend as much as $13M this offseason in the transfer portal and NIL investments now that a decision on the coach’s fate has been made. Further, given Napier has received financial and administrative support from the University of Florida never offered to a head coach before, will he coach well enough to deliver with even more investment and financial support?
Stricklin seems willing to bet his future as Florida’s athletic director on the answer to these questions being “yes.”
Stricklin, a masterful fundraiser, has improved Florida’s infrastructure to succeed in sports across the board, overseeing the financing and construction of a host of new facilities, including a beautiful baseball stadium and state of the art football facility. He’s also offered stability to the athletic department at a time of flux for UF, which has an interim president serving after Ben Sasse resigned mired in scandal earlier this year. Florida also lacks permanent deans at the law and medical schools, 2 of the school’s 3 largest alumni contribution bases from a financial standpoint. The leadership vacuum has made Stricklin’s steady fundraising hand especially valuable.
But Stricklin has had little luck with hiring coaches at a place where championships are an expectation.
Florida’s best head coaches, from iconic track coach Mouse Holloway to Jenny Rowland, the leader of the powerhouse gymnastics program and Kevin O’Sullivan, arguably the nation’s best baseball coach, are all holdover hires from the championship-filled Jeremy Foley era.
Stricklin inherited those coaches and has done well to keep them, but has hired no real championship caliber coach of his own.
The closest such figure, men’s basketball coach Todd Golden, should be basking in having a SEC title contender in just his third year on campus. Instead, Golden is coaching through uncertainty as a respondent in a Title IX investigation for sexual misconduct.
The allegations are unproven, and due process must play itself out, but it is not lost on many Gators fans that this is the 3rd coach hired by Stricklin facing accusations or allegations of misconduct toward women.
This is the SEC, though, and a great football coach can cure all that ails an athletic program.
Stricklin, facing down adversity with an alligator’s grin, has staked his future on Napier.
History is filled with men and women of consequence making enormous decisions.
Washington and a tired, freezing army crossing the Delaware.
Rosa Parks refusing to get up on a Montgomery bus.
Churchill declining to surrender during the London Blitz.
Okay, okay, okay.
This is “just SEC football.” But it just means more, right? And in our sport, there are also consequential decisions and inflection points.
Whatever Mal Moore said to Nick Saban after Saban promised he would not be the Alabama coach during that sport-altering 38-day search.
Urban Meyer’s decision to spend more time with his family in 2010 and Foley’s confidence and belief that Will Muschamp, then the coach-in-waiting at Texas, was ready to compete with the likes of Saban at Alabama.
Danny White trusting his gut and hiring Josh Heupel in January 2021 after the Jeremy Pruitt fiasco ended at Tennessee.
Big decisions. Big consequences.
Add Scott Stricklin keeping Billy Napier to the list.
If Napier fails, add a new athletic director to the list of things Florida might need in 2025, too.
Who? Who did you say?
I coulda been first probably, but I dit’n want it. Too much stress. You’re welcome.
I know it.
You guys need to stop this little game and just post something related to the story at hand
Why? This is very amusing, if somewhat juvenile.
Why? Only because I’m not a part of it but wait a little and that will change
And don’t call me juvenile
LMAO! You just proved my point!
Keep it up, all of you.
Cojo, I can’t think of a single comment I’ve made other than those in responce to you and Hump or those that were obviously playful, that was not related to the story, albeit almost always indirectly. I might add that I don’t think anyone has caught on to my in-your-face, frequently sarcastic, intention so far. Hump comes close it sometimes appears.
I get you leeland, that’s why me and you is tight and palley is jealous all the time…but you already knew that probably. What was this story about by the way? It’s a Blackmon article so I know it’s probably good…
It’s threads like these why I keep coming back to SDS :D
Well Doc, mostly going to stay in my own lane. Too toxic on here at times. Who needs it? Probably stick to UGA and general topics. You, StLouie, Nash, and the good lady GFA are good people and great fans of your team. I hope they get better. SEC needs a competitive gator team.
leeland I guess you failed to recognize my sarcastic font when I posted that message you don’t need to explain anything you are good I was just messing around
Cojo, we cool.
I get your sarcasm, palley. I’m sure leeland does too, but unlike me, I think he enjoys messin with you.
Dang it I shouldn’t have explained myself then.
So again stop the juvenile games and stick to the story
Let’s buck up Gator Nation and realize how lucky we are to have such a decent family man as head coach, unlike the Cro Magnon leading the program in Athens.
Gator Nation has been here before. The great guy back then was named Muschamp.
Sticking with Billy for another losing season is digging our hole even deeper. With this new class and another losing season, we may be years away from being a serious team again. I can’t express how angry I am that those in charge have let UF go to such lows and seemingly are ok with being mediocre.
Meanwhile Lane, fresh off beating Georgia with a school that should never have the resources to compete with UF, will come and show us what a properly coached team looks like. But Strickland is too stubborn or stupid to care about being out coached every week.
The dye for this bad choice was cast the day Ben Sasse resigned as UF President and Ken Fuchs was brought out of retirement to keep his chair warm. Stricklin and Fuchs fired McElwaine, hired Mullen, fired Mullen and hired Napier. THAT is enough incompetence for those two.
I’m pretty sure the Boosters will only fund Napier’s buyout if Stricklin joins him on the unemployment line. Fuchs is not allowed to fire Stricklin by the board of regents. So, keeping Napier another season becomes the only possible choice left. The football program can’t remain in limbo any longer and the new UF President won’t be seated until next summer.
unfortunately that’s so- gotten wait for the new prez-
Stricklin seems to favor west coast connections – Golden is from Cali
Thornquist unexpectedly retires in October and stricklin picks Nilsson from Pepperdine – stricklin’s pick to replace shelton, Steinberg, also has a Pepperdine background – he played for Pepperdine
NYC it’s the 5 stages of grief. I felt the same but ultimately processed the fact the Gators aren’t good and the commitment from the school isn’t there to change it. So acceptance – though the danger is if acceptance turns to fan apathy across the base. The admin is playing with fire.
Apparently there is no end to these articles.
Palace intrigue stories always get viewer interest. Just take a look at what’s happening in DC.
No end in sight, JTF, but at least this one was written by a well-informed journalist who is not inclined to manufacturing drama.
Yes, he’s probably the best on here. Hope you are well.
At least not sleeping in the barn anymore, so there’s that. Glad to see you posting here again, thought you might have gone AWOL!
Doc, see above. SDS strikes again.
Understand, but with most of these guys you learn that what looks like teeth on a comment is just humor with a sarcastic twist. Took me a little while to figure that out too, but good men who are just frustrated like I am. Of course, I’ve been threatened with excommunication by more than one priest because I maintain that sarcasm is indeed a spiritual gift, so it must really be in the eye of the beholder. :)
Any road, I enjoy your commentary and hope you’ll stop by sometimes at least. I used to pop into the Georgia pages, but they told me I wasn’t needed so I stopped the practice. Come to think of it, maybe Leghumper or you could give me a get-out-of-jail card? Being born on Ft Benning doesn’t carry much weight since it’s a federal reservation and after I left Ft Gordon the last time I didn’t renew my passport.
Doc, you’re welcome anytime.
Doc, take it from me, when someone tries to run you off a UGa article just ignore the Bama or Vol fan. UGa fans aren’t sensitive to folk stopping by and throwing up on our lawn, actually we encourage it. As for my compadre JTF here, I always look forward to his input whether I’m on his side of the fence or not, he’s good people. Cheers…and as for Fort Benning, dmmmmmm shame those fine folk in Georgia allowing the federal wokes to rename her Fort Moore…pathetic. Perhaps with the red wave another name change is in order…Fort Doc perhaps
Yup! At least it’s a different take, but it does feel very redundant. My guess is that SDS bet on the over of CBN getting articles…
I must agree with the mangy mutt about this being more of the same but you guys need to realize we are just beginning to search for a President and until that is settled we won’t have wholesale changes with the FB coach or the AD. I was all on board with getting rid of Napier after the TAMU game but now I’m resigned to giving him one more year not only because of the vacumm at the top but also because the team has not quit on him and has been playing hard. Napier also seems to be calling less asinine plays since the Tenn game so there’s that.
The core of players we have led by Lagway and a potential portal haul are positives for next year so let’s see if we can get two of these last 3 and a bowl to end the season in a somewhat positive note.
BTW the first 7 words of this post were written in the sarcasm font with no insults intended. Lighten up
This ^^^
Not sure your first seven words shouldn’t be insulting. After all, if the choice is between drinking water from a toilet, or living in a swamp, I think I’d rather live in a swamp.
while we keep saying the team hasnt given up on him is reason for him to stay, at what point does one come to the conculsion that the culuture and his players are just okay with losing?
After next season.
After Lagway misses signing up for the portal window
Too late to make the change before the 2025 season by then. We’re resigned to another year of Napier’s sideline gaffes and word salad excuses for losses.
I would say during the season, not after
Definitely after game 1. No portal window and no 30 day fired coach portal reprieve. I look for UF to encourage CBN to hire an asst coach in the offseason and the admin will ensure that new asst has the skills to be a solid interim to keep DJ bought in. I’m sure that clause was subtly put into that confidence letter Billy got, probably invisible ink..
Yeah I want to get that danged OC we’ve been waiting for since last year this offseason for sure
Hi Neil: Really enjoy your columns. Keep up the great work.
I respectfully disagree that Stricklin’s fate is strictly tied to Napier. Stricklin’s greatest legacy at FLA is his successful track record of fundraising for facilities. His decision to make no decision (for now) is rooted in finances.
In today’s era, top-tier athletic departments don’t have a revenue problem. They have a spending problem. Florida fits the bill.
Napier’s $26M buyout (plus staff) isn’t prohibitive to well-heeled boosters, but that figure is large enough to create pause. With $400M-plus upcoming for a full-fledged renovation of Bill Hill Griffin Stadium, which has been pushed back during planning so that additional funds can be raised, the athletic department is paying close attention to finances. Remember, just two years ago, FLA paid $65M for Condron Family Ballpark and $85M for Heavener Football Training Center. A new roof (amongst other updates) is also needed for Exactech Arena.
Appreciate that. I did note that Scott is a masterful fundraiser. He’s also well-liked at UF by the people you need to be well-liked by to succeed. That said, my argument is largely rooted in the fact that UF spends 84 million per annum on football. That’s fourth most in the SEC. At some point, you have one job as an athletic director when that’s the investment occurring.
Great points that it is a business decision and stricklin can fund raise. But the admin better be careful to balance the equation of winning on the field and fund raising. At some point if the losing continues the storied Florida brand will become an heirloom or legacy brand like Nebraska etc. At which point the diminished brand value will affect leverage in TV revenue sharing and value in conference realignment moves.
Well said, Les. 13 years and 4 HCs so far, not to even mention 2 ADs….within striking distance of becoming a habit.
While true that past performance is not a guarantee of future performance (it cuts both ways), it is still the obvious and most proximal choice to first weigh in deciding whether a decision is either a calculated risk (+) or an uncertain, situationally-wild-aff gamble (-).
In assessing (a) two consecutive losing seasons, (b) the probability of a turd …. correction, third …. looming on the horizon, (c) a dismal recruiting class, and (d) the threat of the transfer portal resulting in existing personnel losses …. it is still difficult to properly determine here if this one is a risk or gamble. In that context, it could simply be a retrograde maneuver – that is, trading space for time to make a better decision when availability of a fully suitable replacement might be more favorable.
No matter what it is, this entire situation stinks. Napier must go a minimum of 10-2 in 2025 to keep his and Striclin’s jobs. If he does, regardless of their other fine virtues, I still wouldn’t bet my paycheck on the Gator’s future with these two in charge. I’d bet StL’s, mind you, but not mine. Sure hope I’m seeing this whole thing wrong, but we shouldn’t even be in the situation to begin with.
END OF RANT, GO GATORS.
Doc, I told my son this week that it would take a minimum of 9-3 to keep the wolves at bay next year. And the 3 losses can’t come very early in the year. Other than UF having a President in place, I’m not sure finding a replacement will be any easier next season.
I honestly don’t think it will be either, Sparky. This pothole filled road has been in place now since 2011, so I can’t imagine it being on any certified studly coach’s to-do list unless he’s a closet masochist. The sun will come up again someday, I just hope I don’t go tango-uniform before I get to see it.
I’d post Rant #2, but think I’ll take a nap instead. :)
Having a President in place will make finding a new HC much easier both for UF and for the new HC
Strickland and Napier could be staring in the reboot of Dumb and Dumber. It says a lot that Strickland watched Billy’s Snap Between the Quarterback’s Legs fiasco and then decided “I’ll stake my future on this guy’s decision making.”
I can’t help but picture Strickland like the guy from Doctor Strangelove who rides the nuclear missle out of the plan hooping and hollering like he’s just made the best decision of his life.
“Me and Billah ’bout to show the whole dang world just how smert we is!” Strickland is screaming as Billy dances around the locker room celebrating another moral victory.
Billy Napier: how I learned to stop worrying and learned to love the moral victories
That is so good I hate you a little for coming up with it.