Florida Gators head coach Jon Sumrall didn’t mince words after the Orange and Blue game, offering a revealing assessment on the depth of the offensive line.
When asked if he was going to refine his message heading into the fall, Sumrall pointed to the realities of modern roster building.
“I would love to go out and have a little free-agency period and fix a couple of spots,” he said.
The remark comes as Florida pushes through a critical phase of its rebuild, with the offensive line emerging as one of the most difficult position groups to stabilize quickly in today’s college football landscape.
The transfer portal has fundamentally altered roster building in college football, allowing coaches to reshape depth charts in a single offseason. The spring window usually provided an additional opportunity to address roster needs after spring evaluations exposed gaps, but it no longer exists.
Saturday’s Orange and Blue game provided an opportunity to evaluate multiple offensive line combinations, giving the staff a clearer sense of what they have up front as they head into the summer.
Asked for his overall impression of the day, Sumrall didn’t hold back. “Those guys have to have a freaking great summer, or we have no chance.”
With no spring transfer window and tighter restrictions on accepting blind transfers, Florida will do its heavy lifting internally. The Gators will rely heavily on organized team activities to develop the roster throughout the summer.
The NCAA’s 2020 rule changes expanded on-field, football-specific activities between players and coaches, allowing the Gators to continue to install scheme and evaluate roster development outside of traditional practice windows. For an offensive line still finding its way, the extra reps may prove vital when fall camp arrives.






















