Florida fans spent four years hearing that the roster wasn’t ready. Now one of Billy Napier’s own people has said the quiet part out loud.
In a CBS Sports reflection on Napier’s time in Gainesville, Jacob LaFrance - who was on Napier’s staff all four seasons and served as Florida’s general manager in 2024 and 2025 - said the 2025 group had real heft.
“The roster we had in Year 4, which is the most frustrating part, I would have stacked it against anyone in the country”
That’s a blunt admission, and it lands because it matches what a lot of Gator fans were saying long before the end came. The frustrating part, though, is that the talent never showed up early enough to save the era.
The same piece notes, “That talent upswing just came too late.”
Florida’s own numbers back up the idea that the roster improved over time. According to the 247 Talent Composite, the Gators were ranked 14th in 2022, 15th in 2023, then 12th in both 2024 and 2025.
Better? Yes.
Perfect? No.
But far from empty, either.
That’s why the “everything was finally ready in 2025” argument doesn’t really hold up on its own. Florida wasn’t built to chase a national title, but it also wasn’t stripped down to the point where success had to wait until Year 4. The roster was good enough that 8-4 should have been the baseline, not the dream.
The numbers in the piece make that point even sharper: 16 of Napier’s 23 losses came against teams Florida had a better talent composite than.
So the issue wasn’t just when the roster improved. It was that the program spent too long underperforming with enough talent to do better. That’s the part Gator fans never stopped seeing, even when the staff kept asking for patience and credit every time something went right.
And if there’s a warning wrapped inside all this reflection, it’s the one the piece ends on: the least Florida can do is let JMU fans know what they may be getting into.
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