Here’s a couple grades after Georgia’s 38-20 loss to Florida, a setback that temporarily rearranges the pecking order in the SEC East:

OFFENSE: B

Over 200 total yards from Nick Chubb and a career-high passing effort from Hutson Mason should’ve been enough to beat a .500 Florida team, but it wasn’t Saturday afternoon in Jacksonville. After a nine-play, 85-yard touchdown drive in the first quarter (spearheaded by Chubb’s 39-yard burst), the Bulldogs came up empty on their next eight possessions, a mix of punts, a lost fumble and a missed field goal. Losing veteran center David Andrews for the entire second half certainly didn’t help, but after Florida’s first possession of the third quarter resulted in Matt Jones’ 44-yard touchdown run, Georgia’s strength on the ground was irrelevant trailing by a couple scores.

DEFENSE: D

“We knew we were going to pound them. We weren’t going to be denied.” Kelvin Taylor’s postgame comments are all you need to know about Florida’s offensive production, a relentless rushing attack that amassed over 400 yards. By the second half, Georgia’s front seven was gassed and the Bulldogs’ arm tackles were no match for Taylor and Matt Jones. The Gators rarely faced third-and-long and Jeremy Pruitt’s oft-blitzing defense was nullified with Florida’s success between the tackles and on the boundary. Treon Harris completed just three passes as Jeff Driskel’s replacement — that’s how bad it got for the Bulldogs against the run, bludgeoned and dominated at the point of attack.

SPECIAL TEAMS: D

Giving up a fake field goal for a touchdown was the game’s biggest play, a momentum-swinger that helped the Gators escape from early deficiencies on offense. The oft-reliable Marshall Morgan missed a field goal on Georgia’s fourth possession and didn’t come on the field again for points until a PAT with 13:49 remaining in the game.

COACHING: C

It’s not an inexcusable loss for Mark Richt and staff, but surprising nonetheless. Florida played up to its potential for the first time all season, relying on its power run game to pound the Bulldogs into submission. Clearly, Georgia was out-coached on the special teams touchdown sprung by a kick-out block from Trey Burton.

OVERALL: C-

There aren’t many positives to pull from a loss to Florida as a double-digit favorite, considering a win would’ve pushed the Bulldogs that much closer to clinching a bid to the SEC Championship game, but here’s some: Chubb’s the leader of this offense and will continue to be until Todd Gurley’s return against Auburn on Nov. 15; tackling has been an issue at times, but not necessarily a weakness; Mason won’t make mistakes to lose games, but won’t win many either.