Jon Sumrall embraces rival jabs as Florida eyes resurgence under new leadership
TOI GLOBAL DESK | TOI GLOBAL | Feb 28, 2026, 05:28 IST
Jon Sumrall embraces rival jabs as Florida eyes resurgence under new leadership
New Florida coach Jon Sumrall has yet to coach a game for the Gators, but rival jabs have already provided motivation. At Steve Spurrier’s annual dinner in Gainesville, Georgia’s Kirby Smart and Miami’s Mario Cristobal made playful comments about Florida’s recent struggles, including coaching turnover and last season’s 41-17 loss to Miami. Sumrall laughed along but has built a reputation for using perceived slights as fuel. He previously turned around struggling programs at Troy and Tulane, leading Tulane to back-to-back conference title games and a 2025 championship. Known for motivating his teams with an edge, Sumrall once referenced disrespect toward New Orleans after Tulane dominated Northwestern. Florida believes it has the talent to compete despite recent near-misses against Georgia and inconsistent performances. With a November matchup against Georgia looming in Atlanta, the Gators hope to transform offseason jokes into on-field results under their new coach.
The Florida Gators haven’t played a snap yet under new coach Jon Sumrall, but he already has bulletin board material.
At Steve Spurrier’s annual dinner in Gainesville, what started as a fun night slowly turned into a roast. Georgia coach Kirby Smart and Miami coach Mario Cristobal took playful shots at Florida, and Sumrall happened to be sitting right there in the crowd.
Smart joked that he has faced four different Florida coaches during his time at Georgia and said, “Well, you’re the fourth coach I’ve played since being at Georgia, so she’s getting a lot of money selling houses.” The room laughed. Sumrall laughed too. But moments like that usually stay in a coach’s mind.
Cristobal followed with his own reminder of Miami’s 41-17 win over Florida at the Swamp last season. It was a light moment on stage, but it pointed to a hard truth. Florida has struggled for years, changing coaches and missing big goals while rivals keep winning.
Sumrall did not respond publicly that night. He did not need to. His history shows how he handles things.
At Troy, he took over a team that had won only five games and turned it into a conference champion. At Tulane, he reached back to back title games and won the 2025 conference championship. He built teams that played tough and played angry when needed.
Last season at Tulane, he asked Northwestern to allow his team to wear white jerseys at home to honor the anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Northwestern declined. Tulane then dominated the game 23-3. Afterward, Sumrall said, “When you disrespect the city of New Orleans, you’re gonna run into it.” That line told everyone what kind of coach he is.
Florida believes it has enough talent to compete. In the last two seasons, the Gators were close to beating Georgia but could not finish. Against Miami, they had a chance late but conservative play calling led to a punt, and the defense faded in the fourth quarter.
Now Sumrall takes over with a chance to change the story. Florida will not see Miami again unless it is in the postseason, but the matchup with Georgia in November will come fast. This time, the game will be in Atlanta because of renovations in Jacksonville, putting Georgia closer to home.
For Sumrall, the jokes at the dinner may have sounded harmless. For his players, they could become motivation. Rival coaches had their laughs in February and Florida will try to answer in November.
At Steve Spurrier’s annual dinner in Gainesville, what started as a fun night slowly turned into a roast. Georgia coach Kirby Smart and Miami coach Mario Cristobal took playful shots at Florida, and Sumrall happened to be sitting right there in the crowd.
Smart joked that he has faced four different Florida coaches during his time at Georgia and said, “Well, you’re the fourth coach I’ve played since being at Georgia, so she’s getting a lot of money selling houses.” The room laughed. Sumrall laughed too. But moments like that usually stay in a coach’s mind.
Cristobal followed with his own reminder of Miami’s 41-17 win over Florida at the Swamp last season. It was a light moment on stage, but it pointed to a hard truth. Florida has struggled for years, changing coaches and missing big goals while rivals keep winning.
Sumrall did not respond publicly that night. He did not need to. His history shows how he handles things.
At Troy, he took over a team that had won only five games and turned it into a conference champion. At Tulane, he reached back to back title games and won the 2025 conference championship. He built teams that played tough and played angry when needed.
Last season at Tulane, he asked Northwestern to allow his team to wear white jerseys at home to honor the anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Northwestern declined. Tulane then dominated the game 23-3. Afterward, Sumrall said, “When you disrespect the city of New Orleans, you’re gonna run into it.” That line told everyone what kind of coach he is.
Florida believes it has enough talent to compete. In the last two seasons, the Gators were close to beating Georgia but could not finish. Against Miami, they had a chance late but conservative play calling led to a punt, and the defense faded in the fourth quarter.
Now Sumrall takes over with a chance to change the story. Florida will not see Miami again unless it is in the postseason, but the matchup with Georgia in November will come fast. This time, the game will be in Atlanta because of renovations in Jacksonville, putting Georgia closer to home.
For Sumrall, the jokes at the dinner may have sounded harmless. For his players, they could become motivation. Rival coaches had their laughs in February and Florida will try to answer in November.