FINAL: Florida 33, Tulane 8

THE QUICK CUT
FLORIDA 33, TULANE 8

What happened

TAMPA, Fla. — Freshman quarterback DJ Lagway threw for 305 yards and a second-half touchdown, junior kicker Trey Smack made four field goals and the Florida Gators finished the 2024 season with a fourth straight victory Friday, defeating Tulane 33-8 in the Gasparilla Bowl at Raymond James Stadium.

With their eighth win, the Gators got their most in four years and sent out the third-year coach Billy Napier into the offseason with the program’s longest winning streak since 2020, along with much to be encouraged about regarding the future of Florida football given the turnaround from the ugly and lopsided 1-2 start to the season.

Smack, of Severna Park, Md., kicked field goals of 34, 44, 24 and 30 yards, two in each half, as his first three put his team up 9-0 in the third quarter. Lagway, named the Gasparilla Bowl MVP, completed 22 of 35 passes, with his 305 yards setting a bowl record for yardage. He had a 7-yard score to the tight end Tony Livingston in the third period that basically broke the game open, but also threw a pair of interceptions in the first half, including one in the end zone, that kept the game close through the first two-plus periods until a 27-point run that bridged the third. and the fourth quarter turned a close game into a rout.

Although all eyes were on Lagway, Florida’s defense, with Ron Roberts in all responsibility according to co-coordinator Austin Armstrong’s exit last week for Houston, was probably the biggest factor in the game. UF nearly shut out a Tulane offense that was one of the best in the nation during the regular season – 37.2 points (9th in the nation) and 421.1 yards per carry. game (41st) – but was knee protected by the departure of the star quarterback Darian Mensah(2,723 yards, 22 TD), who entered the transfer portal and signed last week with Duke. In his place, junior Ty Thompsona former five-star prospect and transfer from Oregon, was under duress and inaccurate all game. Thompson finished just 11 of 29 for 125 yards and three interceptions while scrambling nine times for 17 yards. Thompson’s 16-yard touchdown to Mario Williams with 29 seconds to play averted a shutout.

Smack kicked a field goal in each of the first two quarters, but the Gators’ inability to finish drives kept things close in the first half and well into the third quarter. Midway through the period, with UF up just 9-0, defensive back Dijon Johnson tipped a Thompson pass that was intercepted by walk-on teammate Alfonzo Allen Jr. at the UF 40. Seven plays later, lagway play-faked, rolled right and threw his short scoring pass to Livingston for a 16-0 lead with just over four minutes left in the quarter.

Two minutes into the fourth, Smack hit his fourth field goal to put his team up 19-0.

Florida added a pair of touchdowns in the final seven minutes. The first came after the Gators sacked Thompson on fourth-and-3 to force a turnover on downs. UF moved to the Tulane 25 and faced a fourth-and-1, where Lagway tried to sneak for the first down. However, the ball broke loose and bounced backwards, how true freshman tailback KD Daniels scooped it up and raced through the Green Wave defense 27 yards for a score with 6:29 left. It was 26-0.

Walk-on tailback Anthony Rubioson of the US senator and likely the next Secretary of State, Marco Rubiocapped the Florida scoring with a 9-yard touchdown run with 1:11 left on a drive that included two plays — first a 1-yard run, then a lead block — with the 449-pound defensive tackle Desmond Watson in his final collegiate game just down the road from his hometown of Plant City.

The Gators finished with 529 yards of total offense, their second-most of the season (behind 632 against FCS-ranked Sanford), including 224 on the ground. The Green Wave, who lost to Army in the American Athletic Conference championship game two weeks ago, were held to a season-low 194 yards, with nearly half (89) coming in the fourth quarter after the game was decided.

UF defensive tackle Desmond Watsonall 449 pounds of him, doing as WWF in a first-half bear hug stop on the Tulane quarterback, Ty Thompson.

What it means

The last time the Gators left a season with this much momentum was in 2019, when they beat Virginia in the Orange Bowl for a fourth straight win and second consecutive 11-win season. That UF team, coached by Dan Mullenhad nothing near the off-field momentum (read: recruiting) like the roll Napier and his army are on right now, with what is expected to be (once the final signings come in) a top-10 class.

UF improved to 25-24 all-time in bowl games, winning its first since that UVA showdown in Miami. Napier evened his Florida record at 19-19 over three seasons.

In the limelight

The Gators are 6-0 when Lagway starts and finishes a game. He came along Chris Leek as the only true freshman quarterback in program history to win at least six games as a starter (Læk was 6-3 in 2003). He wasn’t perfect, far from it, but now the 2023 Gatorade Player of the Year is getting an offseason with all the first-team reps. Lagway’s final freshman numbers: 115 of 192 (59.9 percent) for 1,915 yards, 12 touchdowns and nine interceptions.

Staggering statistics

Over the last four games (all wins), the Florida defense combined for 38 tackles-for-loss, 19 sacks, 13 turnovers and allowed an average of just 13.0 points per game. match.

Up Next

Keep an eye on the transfer portal, which will remain open until December 28, followed by an enthusiastic start to offseason conditioning in January, and what figures to be the most anticipated spring season in years come March. In the meantime, Merry Christmas, Gator Nation.

Email senior writer Chris Harry at [email protected]