Florida coach Jim McElwain’s No. 1 priority on the field is to revitalize the team’s passing game.

Naturally, there’s a lot of focus on how he’ll handle the quarterback position. He inherited Will Grier and Treon Harris, who will compete for the starting job this fall. He also holds a commitment from coveted pro-style quarterback Jake Allen in the class of 2017.

But the class that will sign in February lacked a signal-caller … until now.

Consensus two-star Kyle Trask, at 6-foot-5.5 and 211 pounds, could become McElwain’s first quarterback recruit to arrive in Gainesville, Fla.

Trask, lightly recruited thus far, held offers from Houston Baptist, Lamar and McNeese State. He holds no other offer from a power-conference program. But after performing well at Florida’s “Friday Night Lights” camp, the Gators decided to offer him, and he accepted almost immediately.

The Manvel (Texas) quarterback doesn’t start for his high school and admitted to surprise when Florida offered him.

“I went up there and June and they wanted me to come back to their Friday Night Lights camp,” Trask said, according to 247Sports. “I did another private workout, and I did good. I came back the next day and toured the campus. After that, I came to Coach [Jim] McElwain’s office, it was pretty exciting.”

Trask also revealed that Florida plans to sign two quarterbacks in 2016, so the Gators likely aren’t done at the position.

“I definitely saw some things that I like. For one, it seems like they treat the players well there,” Trask said, according to Scout.com. “I enjoyed my time there and it seems like coach McElwain has a good plan for the future.”

McElwain did an excellent job of evaluating and developing talent at Colorado State, one of the reasons the Rams improved from 4-8 (2012) to 10-3 (2014) in just two seasons. Still, McElwain has drawn some criticism, or at least curiosity, for offering a number of players that aren’t being pursued by many big programs, aren’t rated well by recruiting services or both.

Trask certainly fits that picture — he’s rated as the 113th-best pro-style quarterback of the ’16 class. But McElwain has shown he can land the big fish as well, bringing in Martez Ivey, CeCe Jefferson and Jordan Scarlett in short order after he got hired.

Florida’s 2016 class now includes 18 commitments and ranks 14th in the country. According to 247Sports, if the Gators only lose the seniors after the 2015 season, there will be 20 scholarships available. So more than likely there will be room for at least a handful of other players in this year’s class.