For years, former Commodores QB Josh Grady was one of Vanderbilt football’s most outspoken social media cheerleaders.

But on Saturday, he’s going to do everything in his power to make sure the Commodores are on the losing side of their game at Florida.

Following the completion of his four-year degree at Vanderbilt, the Tampa-native decided to transfer to Florida as a graduate student and play out his final season of eligibility for the Gators.

Here, Grady can be seen getting vocal with his Gators teammates at practice, saying “Offense! I need 50 points on those boys this week!”:

Thanks to the suspension of starting quarterback Will Grier, Grady finds himself at No. 2 on the Gators’ depth chart behind starter Treon Harris.

That means he is one injury to Harris away from being tasked with leading Florida against his former teammates.

“It will have some emotion to it,” Grady told Jacksonville.com’s Garry Smits in reference to playing his former team. “But at the same time I’m a Florida Gator now and my only mission Saturday is to win. I love a lot of the guys on the other side. But in between white lines I have love for the Gators.”

That possibility may seem strange to Vanderbilt fans, who have watched the Commodores struggle to find a suitable quarterback during the last two seasons.

Grady was never a serious consideration to fill that role during his four years on campus, being asked by former coach James Franklin to move to wide receiver for the 2012 season, before returning to the position in 2013 and tearing his ACL after seeing action as the team’s No. 3 quarterback behind Austyn Carta-Samuels and Patton Robinette.

Grady was already injured when the Commodores arrived in Gainesville in 2013, where they beat the Gators in The Swamp for the first time since 1945.

That didn’t keep him from commenting on the post-game celebration to GatorCountry.com this week:

“As you can imagine, to us, beating Florida was our Super Bowl,” Grady told Nick De La Torre. “Even though I didn’t get to play in the game, when we were able to beat them that was like winning a national championship for us.”

When Derek Mason arrived at Vanderbilt in 2014, Grady again competed for the starting quarterback role. After falling behind at least three competitors in fall camp, he was asked to again move to wide receiver.

Grady, who was well-known in the Vanderbilt community for his penchant for voicing his opinions via Twitter, finished his Vanderbilt career with just seven receptions and six pass attempts.

It is safe to say that one of James Franklin’s top recruits in his class in 2011 was a disappointment at Vanderbilt in spite of his team’s success for his first three years on camp.

But thanks to a re-energized Florida program under the direction of new coach Jim McElwain, Grady finds himself on the cusp of a trip to the SEC Championship and holding on to an outside shot at being selected to play in the College Football Playoff.

A win against Vanderbilt on Saturday will clinch the SEC East title for the Gators.

“I mean, it’s definitely something I’ve never thought of even when I was in high school getting recruited and commit to Vandy,” Grady told De La Torre. “That’s not really a picture you think could be painted.”

The storybook ending for Grady, who says he’s been a Gator his whole life, would be to get into the action and have an impact against his old team.