Kyle Trask delivers Cocktail Party performance for the ages, obliterating mighty Georgia defense
After 2 consecutive years of having their heart broken in Jacksonville by a brilliant quarterback, Florida finally flipped the Cocktail Party script.
It was Kyle Trask who delivered the goods, and finally, after 3 long seasons, a Florida win over Georgia.
Behind their senior quarterback, the Gators converted on 6 of their first 9 3rd-down attempts on their way to 41 points on their first 8 possessions. The 38 points Florida scored in the opening half were the most a Georgia defense has surrendered in a half in the Kirby Smart era.
Georgia rallied, refusing to give up its vise grip on this rivalry without a fight. They forced 5 consecutive stops in the second half (the most against Florida in any Trask start). The Dawgs even nearly produced a potentially game-changing play with less than 7 minutes to play, forcing Trask into one of his only real mistakes of the day, a double-clutched in-route that was dropped by Georgiaโs Mark Webb, who had a green path to the end zone in front of him.
But in the end, the Gators held off Georgiaโs rally with timely defense, just enough first downs, and well, Kyle Trask.
Trask’s backstory is well-known. A 2-star recruit whose best offers were from Houston Baptist and Lamar, Florida had a hunch and gave Trask the chance to be a Power-5 quarterback.
It didnโt happen overnight. Greatness rarely does. A backup, Trask waited and waited. He stayed in Gainesville when backup quarterbacks at so many other programs, including a pair of 5-star ones at Georgia, transferred. Then, in Traskโs 4th season on campus, he got his chance when Feleipe Franks was lost for the season with injury. All heโs done since is win 12 of 15 starts and throw for over 4,500 yards and 47 touchdowns.
As we wrote at SDS this week, Traskโs Florida legacy is already secure.
Heโs a walking advertisement to all thatโs still right about college football, a model of persistence and perseverance and a huge reason Dan Mullen is 25-6 since arriving at a 4-win Florida program that had just lost 42-7 to Georgia only 3 years ago. Saturday was about expanding the opportunity to expand that legacy and cement it, and Trask answered the bell.
Floridaโs defense took off the first 2 possessions, putting the Gators in a 14-0 hole. No matter. After missing on his first 3 passes, Trask threw 4 touchdown passes and topped 300 yards before he threw 3 more incompletions. Playing against a Georgia defense that came into the game ranked in the top 20 nationally in pass defense, pass success rate against and yards allowed per pass attempt, Trask was surgical, handling every coverage and look Kirby Smartโs defense threw at him.
There was a pick-6 in between, when Trask had a wide open Kadarius Toney for a first down only to have freshman Xzavier Henderson run the wrong route and accidentally run Georgiaโs excellent corner, Eric Stokes Jr., back into the play.
But every time Trask made a mistake, he came back with a bigger throw.
He beat delayed blitzes with precision throws, like this one to Justin Shorter to get Florida back in the game:
??TOUCHDOWN FLORIDA??@ktrask9 finds Justin Shorter over the middle and the #Gators slice the #Dawgsโ lead in half. pic.twitter.com/dvYE8Sy4oO
— InAllKindsOfWeather.com (@AllKindsWeather) November 7, 2020
He made elite back-shoulder throws, like this one to Kyle Pitts.
50/50 balls donโt exist with Kyle Pitts
— PFF College (@PFF_College) November 7, 2020
He made this throw, where only Trevon Grimes could catch the ball, to stake Florida to a 38-21 lead at the end of the first half.
Trevon Grimes ?????
Florida leads 38-21 pic.twitter.com/pYSXeXchii
— NCAAF Nation (@NCAAFNation247) November 7, 2020
Trask made all the throws and let his playmakers do work. Traskโs playmakers, by the way, are the things Georgia didnโt have enough of Saturday, which is another reason Florida flipped the script in this rivalry Saturday afternoon.
Take future All-American Kyle Pitts, who made his impression on the game felt with a pair of beast mode catches before an illegal Lewis Cine shot to the head forced him out of the game.
Georgia bottled up Toney better than anyone has all season, limiting him to 39 yards on 10 touches, but when the Gators needed a play and a first down late, Trask eluded pressure to find his man.
Like Jake Fromm in the Cocktail Party the previous 2 years, Trask made the big plays when his team needed them most. His gargantuan final numbers, 30-of-43 for a career-high 474 yards with 4 touchdowns, make it obvious he was the difference in the game, and they are the most passing yards ever surrendered by a Smart defense, besting Mac Jones and Alabamaโs 417 earlier this season and Joe Burrowโs 349 the season before.
What should also be obvious is that Trask is very much a Heisman contender. His 22 touchdown passes through 5 SEC games is a conference record, besting Tuaโs second-place effort by 4 and Burrow, last yearโs winner, by 5. That heโs doing it with a defense still figuring out exactly what it can be is also reminiscent of last yearโs Heisman winner.
Trask may not win the Heisman. Justin Fields, who could have played this game today but now plays for Ohio State instead, will have his say. So will Mac Jones, who has been masterful throughout 2020.
What canโt be said anymore is that Trask doesnโt belong in the conversation. Gone is the idea that Trask, for all the good vibes his story sends, is just a system quarterback with a ceiling against great opponents.
Playing with a reshuffled offensive line, Trask lit up one of Americaโs most talented defenses Saturday afternoon. Any doubts about Traskโs ceiling or ability were all silenced on the banks of the St. Johnโs River on the first Saturday in November.
The win Trask delivered the Gators silences other lingering doubts, too.
Gone is the shiny red mirage of Georgiaโs invincibility, or the notion that Smart simply โhas Mullenโs number.โ It looked like that might be true for much of the 1st quarter. Then Kyle Trask led Florida on a 41-7 run to put Mullenโs program, not Smartโs, in the SEC East catbird seat.
What does that all mean? Time will tell.
But the question as to whether Florida can truly compete with Smart and Georgia, given Smartโs superior recruiting operation and Georgiaโs edge in talent, should go away for the time being. The debate will linger in fan bases, of course, and talking is fun. But this was a convincing win by a Gators team that, while featuring less 4- and 5-stars, played a more modern, fun brand of football.
Itโs the kind of video you show recruits just before you sell them modern offense and above all, tell them the story of Kyle Trask, the Gators quarterback who made it all possible.
Neil Blackmon covers SEC football and basketball for SaturdayDownSouth.com. An attorney, he is also a member of the Football and Basketball Writers Associations of America. He also coaches basketball.



