Everybody wants to talk about Georgia and Texas as the title favorites and point to their recruiting rankings or portal hauls. Fine. But the actual number that decides games in the SEC is red zone touchdown percentage. Florida Gators finished last season at 67% in the red zone, which ranked 11th in the conference. That is not good enough. You cannot leave points on the field against the top half of this league and expect to compete for anything meaningful. The Gators have to get that number north of 80% if they want to be taken seriously. The offensive line play inside the 20 was the biggest problem. When you cannot run the ball on first and goal from the 5, you are playing right into the defense's hands. The new pieces up front from the portal have to change that dynamic. Georgia sat at 72% and Texas was at 74% last year. That is the gap. The margin between a good season and a great one is measured in feet, not miles. Florida has the skill players to score. The question is whether the line can create the push. If the Gators hit 80% in the red zone, the win total jumps by at least two games. That is just math.