This is the third installment in our
running anthology of posts looking back at past recruiting classes
for the Florida Gators. Today's entry highlights the Class of 1992.
After falling behind the Seminoles and
the Hurricanes in the recruiting wars, the Gators made a loud
statement when Steve Spurrier announced a 25-man signing class on
Feb. 6, 1992. A group that was considered the consensus-No. 1 group
in the country included the following:
David Barnard, Line (6-3, 280), Miami
(Miami Senior)
Jim Bates, Jr., Back (6-2, 215),
Sevierville, Tenn. (Sevier County)
Johnie Church, Back (6-3, 218), Fort
Myers (Cypress Lake)
Cameron Davis, Line (6-4, 230),
Lauderhill (St. Thomas Aquinas)
Tony Davis, Back (5-11, 190), Chipley
Dexter Daniels, Back (6-2, 225),
Valdosta, Ga. (Valdosta)
Bart Edmiston, Kicker (5-10, 170),
Pensacola (Washington)
Jerome Evans, Back (6-2, 222), Arcadia
(DeSoto County)
McDonald Ferguson, Line, (6-2, 245),
Miami (North Miami)
Reggie Green, Line (6-7, 297),
Bradenton (Southeast)
Demetric Jackson, Back (6-1, 180), Lake
City (Columbia)
Eric Kresser, Quarterback (6-3, 200),
Palm Beach Gardens
Antone Lott, Back, (5-10, 180),
Jacksonville (Raines)
Jeff Mitchell, Line (6-4, 240),
Clearwater (Countryside)
Dwayne Mobley, Back (6-0, 215),
Brooksville (Hernando)
Shawn Nunn, Back (6-3, 230), Ocala
(Vanguard)
Jason Odom, Line (6-6, 283), Bartow
Nick Quintana, Line (6-4, 290), Miami
(Senior)
Shea Showers, Back (5-11, 170), Alachua
(Santa Fe)
Kenny Times, Back (6-1, 218), Winter
Park (Lake Howell)
Andre Washington, Back (6-1, 215),
Jacksonville (Ribault/Georgia/Florida C.C.)
Shawn Wilson, Back (6-1, 180), Virginia
Beach (Bayside)
Lawrence Wright, Back (6-2, 195), Miami
(North Miami/Valley Forge)
Danny Wuerffel, Quarterback (6-3, 193),
Fort Walton Beach
Donnie Young, Line (6-3, 260), Venice
– Allen Wallace declared this group
the top-ranked recruiting class in the country, while Max Emfinger
named the Gators “co-champions” with LSU.
– Dexter Daniels earned 1991 USA
Today Defensive Player of the Year honors. To date, Daniels remains
the only player to win that award and sign with Florida.
– 22 of the 25 members of this
signing class were from inside the state of Florida (88%)
– Times did not qualify in 1992 and
had to defer his enrollment to the following year.
– Florida
closed out with 14 of the state's consensus top-50 recruits, while
FSU came in a close second with 13. Miami landed eight. It was a
dominant year inside the state borders for the Big Three. Clemson and
Michigan were the only out-of-state programs to land more than one
top-50 prospect from Florida, but both were only able to grab two.
Biggest Hits: Making a list of
who didn't pan out in this class is considerably easier.
Wuerffel was the 1996 Heisman Trophy winner. Bates, Daniels, Green, Lott,
Odom, Wright and Young all picked up All-SEC honors during their stay
in Gainesville as well. In total, this class produced a total of six NFL
Draft picks.
It should be noted that Reggie Green had a fine career in Gainesville, despite dealing with knee issues that prevented him from a likely 10-year career at the pro level.
It should be noted that Reggie Green had a fine career in Gainesville, despite dealing with knee issues that prevented him from a likely 10-year career at the pro level.
Biggest Misses: Quintana flunked
out of UF after the fall semester of '92, and did not return to the
squad. A highly-decorated player coming in, a knee injury kept Wilson
from contributing at UF.
Andre Washington, who had previously
pulled an eleventh-hour switcheroo in 1990 and elected to sign with
Georgia instead to Florida, ended up signing with UF as a part of the
1992 class. He left Georgia after his freshman season and transferred
to Florida Community College in Jacksonville. However, the
long-awaited debut of Washington never took place at UF, as he failed
to earn his A.A. Degree and was not able to enroll at Florida.
Tony Davis was never able to make a
significant presence in the offensive backfield. After threatening to
leave midway through his freshman season, he would eventually be
expelled from school in the fall of 1994.
The ones who got away: Even with as
good as Florida's offensive line haul was in 1992, the Gators nearly
made it that-much-better with the presence of future NFL Hall-of-Famer
Jonathan Ogden. The 6-foot-8, 340-pound behemoth from St. Albans
School in Washington D.C. was also a highly-regarded shot-putter at
the prep level. His short list included the Gators and Notre Dame,
but Ogden eventually signed with UCLA.
Aside from that one, there weren't many
misses. Although Dexter Daniels had a solid career in Gainesville, he
was actually overshadowed in the long run by prep rival Randall
Godfrey, who played at Lowndes High School in Valdosta and ended up
at Georgia. Godfrey went on to play 12 years in the NFL.
Florida State signed a very good class as well. Although not quite on the level of Florida's, it was rated as a
consensus top-five group, led by WR/KR Tamerick Vanover and OL Marcus
Long, both named first team All-America by the USA Today. QB Danny
Kannell, OL Todd Fordham, P Sean Liss, LB Todd Rebol, DT Connell
Spain as well as the Crockett brothers – FB Zack and LB Henri –
were major contributors for the 'Noles as well.
SEC recruiting co-champ LSU's crop
included highly-regarded TE David LaFleur and WR Eddie Kennison, a
pair of first-round NFL draft picks. Two-time All-SEC DE Gabe
Northern was also a part of the 1992 class for the Tigers. Otherwise,
it was a mostly forgettable group.
Tom Lemming, speaking on National
Signing Day in 1992, would do an excellent job looking into the
crystal ball many years into the future with this quote:
The SEC is so far ahead of everybody
else in the nation,” Lemming said at the time. “It's phenomenal.”
Wise words, to be sure.
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