1979 Florida Gators football team

1979 Florida Gators football
Conference Southeastern Conference
1979 record 0–10–1 (0–6 SEC)
Head coach Charley Pell (1st season)
Captain Bill Bennek
Nap Green
Chuck Hatch
Home stadium Florida Field
(Capacity: 62,800)[1]
1979 SEC football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
No. 1 Alabama $ 6 0 0  12 0 0
Georgia 5 1 0  6 5 0
No. 16 Auburn 4 2 0  8 3 0
LSU 4 2 0  7 5 0
Tennessee 3 3 0  7 5 0
Kentucky 3 3 0  5 6 0
Ole Miss 3 3 0  4 7 0
Mississippi State 2 4 0  3 8 0
Vanderbilt 0 6 0  1 10 0
Florida 0 6 0  0 10 1
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1979 Florida Gators football team represented the University of Florida during the 1979 NCAA Division I-A football season. The season was Charley Pell's first of six as the head coach of the Florida Gators football team. Pell arrived in Gainesville with a new plan for building the Gators football program—new offensive and defensive schemes, new assistant coaches, a new attitude and new boosters fund-raising model to support the program and improve the stadium and training facilities. Pell's plan would produce many on-the-field victories over the next five years, but his first campaign as the Gators coach produced the most losses in any single season in Gators football history, ending with a winless 0–10–1 overall record and a 0–6 record in the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The team, which was plagued by injuries, placed dead last among ten SEC teams.[2] This was the last time until 2013 that Florida fielded a team with a losing record.

The 1979 Florida team had 4 starting quarterbacks: Tim Groves, Tyrone Young, John Brown and Larry Ochab, and John Brantley also played at quarterback, though he did not start. Brantley was projected to start at quarterback, but he was injured in the preseason.

Schedule

Date Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 15 No. 13 Houston* Jeppesen StadiumHouston, Texas L 10–14   33,851
September 22 Georgia Tech* Florida FieldGainesville, Florida T 7–7   60,313
September 29 Mississippi State Mississippi Veterans Memorial StadiumJackson, Mississippi L 10–24   38,000
October 6 No. 17 LSU Tiger StadiumBaton Rouge, Louisiana L 3–20   73,073
October 13 No. 2 Alabama Florida Field • Gainesville, Florida L 0–40   64,552
October 27 Tulsa* Florida Field • Gainesville, Florida L 10–20   60,126
November 3 No. 20 Auburn Jordan–Hare StadiumAuburn, Alabama L 13–19   58,754
November 10 Georgia Gator Bowl StadiumJacksonville, Florida ABC L 10–33   68,148
November 17 Kentucky Florida Field • Gainesville, Florida L 3–31   55,760
November 23 No. 5 Florida State* Florida Field • Gainesville, Florida ABC L 16–27   58,263
December 1 Miami (FL)* Orange Bowl StadiumMiami, Florida L 24–30   28,051
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game.

Primary source: 2015 Florida Gators Football Media Guide[2]

Attendance figures: 1980 Press Guide University of Florida.[3]

Postseason

The next year, in 1980, the Florida Gators made a remarkable turnaround. They won the first three games of that season before a loss to Louisiana State crushed Florida's hopes of being undefeated, but they ended the regular season with 7 wins and 4 losses, and in the Tangerine bowl they defeated Maryland 35-20 to improve to 8-4. At the time, this Florida season was an NCAA record turnaround, and this was the first team to make a bowl game after being winless the previous season.

Roster

1979 Florida Gators football team roster
Players Coaches
Offense
Pos.#NameClass
QB 12 John Brantley Sr
TE 87 Mike Clark Jr
WR 21 Cris Collinsworth Jr
TE 80 Chris Faulkner Fr
WR 18 Darrell Jones Sr
Defense
Pos.#NameClass
DB 43 Thad Adams Fr
LB 55 Scot Brantley Sr
DB 25 Chuck Hatch Sr
DE 50 Yancey Sutton
Special teams
Pos.#NameClass
K 3 Brian Clark So
Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • Injured
  • Redshirt

References

  1. Sports Publicity Department. "Florida Football '79" (PDF). floridagators.com. University Athletic Association, Inc. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  2. 1 2 2015 Florida Gators Football Media Guide Archived 2015-12-08 at the Wayback Machine., University Athletic Association, Gainesville, Florida, p. 107 (2015). Retrieved August 16, 2015.
  3. Sports Publicity Department. "1980 Press Guide University of Florida" (PDF). floridagators.com. University Athletic Association, Inc. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
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