Missouri freshman quarterback Drew Lock threw two touchdowns in his first career start last week.

He told reporters neither pass was as much fun as executing the victory formation to seal a 24-10 win over South Carolina.

Lock will start again Saturday — against a much stiffer Florida defense that dominated Ole Miss.

Look for these five Gators to play a key role in how much fun Lock has.

1. QB Will Grier: How well can Grier handle success? We’ll find out a little bit more about his maturity Saturday. He threw four touchdowns last week, catching everyone’s attention.

2. WR Demarcus Robinson: Saturday seemed like the Will Grier show, but only because Grier knew who his Ninjas were. Robinson had 8 catches for 98 yards, including the the 36-yard post play for a TD in which he got behind two defenders. Robinson has 28 catches, twice as many as every other Gators receiver.

3. RB Kelvin Taylor: The yards didn’t come as easily against Ole Miss, but Taylor still averaged better than 3 yards per carry and ran with a physical style that kept linebackers honest. He picked up two first downs in third-and-mediums. It was the play-action fake to him that set up Grier’s 2-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jake McGee, who slipped behind the closing linebackers. (Taylor whiffed on an assist block, however, on Grier’s long back-foot throw for a touchdown.) Missouri’s linebackers lead that defense. Taylor needs to keep them busy.

4. DEs Jonathan Bullard/Alex McAlister: They’ll act as one, a bookend of trouble. Bullard has 4.5 sacks. McAlister has 4. Both have to relish the opportunity to face a true freshman making his second start, especially if the Grier and Co., get rolling early and put the Tigers in must-throw mode.

5. CB Vernon Hargreaves III: The nation’s top corner looked like he was having some fun during his interception return last week, high-stepping and hurdling his way down the sideline. Lock has big, physical targets, but the game-plan might stay away from Hargreaves, who is capable of holding his own. Either way, that should allow other defenders to key more on Lock’s other options.