Friday January 31st, 2025 10:44PM

Muschamp out as Gators' coach after 4 seasons

By The Associated Press
GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA -- Despite trying three coordinators and five quarterbacks, Will Muschamp never figured out one side of the ball at Florida.<br /> <br /> And it cost him his job.<br /> <br /> The Gators parted ways with Muschamp on Sunday, one day after a gut-wrenching loss to South Carolina that summed up the former defensive coordinator's four-year tenure as head coach.<br /> <br /> Muschamp's close-to-the-vest style proved to be too conservative and too unsuccessful for a school with three national champions, eight Southeastern Conference titles and sky-high expectations.<br /> <br /> Muschamp, who cleaned up a troubled program and made Florida one of the best defensive teams in the SEC, will stick around for the final two regular-season games against Eastern Kentucky and Florida State. He is 27-20, including 17-15 in conference play, in three-plus seasons in Gainesville.<br /> <br /> "Upon evaluation of our football program, we are not where the program needs to be and should be," athletic director Jeremy Foley said in a statement. "I've always said that our goal at the University of Florida is to compete for championships on a regular basis. ... I will be forever grateful to Will and his staff for their unwavering commitment to the University of Florida and the mission of our athletic program."<br /> <br /> The decision came less than 24 hours after a 23-20 loss to South Carolina in overtime. It was Florida's sixth defeat in its last eight games in Gainesville.<br /> <br /> The last two were debacles that sealed Muschamp's fate, making the guy nicknamed "Coach Boom" a bust at Florida.<br /> <br /> "I was given every opportunity to get it done here and I simply didn't win enough games - that is the bottom line," Muschamp said in a statement. "I have no bitter feelings, but this is a business and I wish we would have produced better results on the field. We have a great group of players and a staff that is committed to this University and this football program. They have handled themselves with class and I expect them to continue to do so.<br /> <br /> "As I've said many times, life is 10 percent of what happens to you and 90 percent how you respond."<br /> <br /> The Gators didn't respond well enough, especially in their last two home games.<br /> <br /> The Gamecocks blocked a field goal and a punt in the final four minutes of regulation Saturday, special teams gaffes that turned what should have been a 10-point lead into a third consecutive home defeat.<br /> <br /> The previous loss was equally troubling for Foley. The Gators (5-4, 4-4 SEC) turned the ball over six times in a 42-13 drubbing against Missouri on homecoming last month. Chants of "Fire Muschamp" could be heard throughout an emptying Florida Field.<br /> <br /> Foley stuck with Muschamp after that one, saying the coach and the season would be evaluated "as it plays out." The Gators regrouped, benched turnover-prone quarterback Jeff Driskel and won consecutive games in dominating fashion, including a stunner against rival Georgia. They even had an outside shot at winning the SEC's muddled Eastern Division.<br /> <br /> But that ended against the Gamecocks, which entered the game with one of the country's worst defenses.<br /> <br /> "Hate to see it about coach Muschamp," South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier said Sunday. "Will is a good person and a good coach. He's been a bit unlucky. We all, as coaches, complain about close losses and he's had his share of them. I was telling somebody that in the four meetings we've had with his team, we've not scored more than 20 points in regulation, but we've won three out of four somehow."<br /> <br /> Spurrier also made it clear he has no intentions of returning to his alma mater, where he won the 1966 Heisman Trophy, spent 12 years (1990-2001) coaching and led the Gators to the 1996 national title.<br /> <br /> "I've already had my run at Florida," Spurrier said. "They need to hire a coach that hopefully will be there 10 years."<br /> <br /> Florida fell to 17-8 under Muschamp at home, where Spurrier (68-5) and fellow former coach Urban Meyer (36-5) dropped a combined 10 games in 18 seasons.<br /> <br /> Florida fans expected and demanded better results.<br /> <br /> The former head-coach-in-waiting at Texas, Muschamp was Foley's pick to replace Meyer after he stepped down at the end of the 2010 season.<br /> <br /> Foley extended Muschamp's contract twice and gave him a raise. Because of those shows of good faith, Florida owes Muschamp more than $6 million for the final three years left on his deal.<br /> <br /> Paying off the rest of the coaching staff could cost about another $2 million.<br /> <br /> It's unclear how long it will take for Foley to find a replacement. But the hire likely will be someone with head-coaching experience who comes from an offensive background. After all, the last two defensive guys with no head-coaching experience Foley hired - Muschamp and former coach Ron Zook - didn't pan out.<br /> <br /> Muschamp hired Charlie Weis, Brent Pease and Kurt Roper to run the offense but all failed to impress a following that had grown accustomed to seeing points a plenty under Spurrier and Meyer.<br /> <br /> The Gators finished 105th, 103rd and 113th in total offense during Muschamp's first three seasons. They rank 88th this year through nine games.<br /> <br /> Players were told of the decision during a team meeting Sunday and quickly reacted via social media.<br /> <br /> "I'm hurt man," offensive tackle Rod Johnson posted on his Twitter feed.<br /> <br /> "Great coach but an even better person," kicker Frankie Velez tweeted. "I'm thankful everyday for the opportunity coach Muschamp gave me. Sad day for Florida."
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