That quote from Sumrall is exactly the right energy, but you're putting way too much stock in special teams for a program that needs to fix its core identity first. Florida's problem isn't hidden yardage, it's fundamental football. Their defense gave up 5.5 yards per play last season, which is bottom half of the SEC, and the offense was even worse at 5.3 yards per play. You can't scheme your way out of that with kickoff coverage. A sleeping giant gets woken by winning at the line of scrimmage, not by hoping for touchbacks. Their offensive line ranked outside the top 100 in sacks allowed, so field position is irrelevant if you go three-and-out because your quarterback is on his back. The punt return average is a symptom, not the disease. When your team is getting physically dominated on both sides, focusing on special teams is like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. Sumrall's physical identity has to show up in the trenches on standard downs before any special teams edge matters. Until they can consistently run the ball and stop the run, all the hidden yardage in the world won't change their record. Look at the teams that actually compete, they dominate in the box first. Florida has to prove they can do that before we talk about analytical edges from the kicking game.