Lightly recruited, Lamical Perine has silenced his doubters and become Florida’s most valuable player
Lamical Perine had several opportunities to turn his back on Florida. He never did. Saturday, he begins his final laps around The Swamp as a Gator. What a ride it’s been.
When the Florida Gators run out of the tunnel and into The Swamp for the home opener Saturday night, senior running back Lamical Perine might take a moment to reflect on the unlikely path heโs traveled to get to this moment.
โItโs been a long journey,โ Perine admitted this summer at SEC Media Days, where he represented the school that 2 years ago, he nearly left behind.
It seems strange a player who led the team in rushing as a sophomore considered leaving that offseason. But by late October of Perineโs sophomore season, the head coach who recruited him to Gainesville had resigned and the interim staff left to stitch what was left of the season had one foot out the door. The Gators stumbled to a 4-7 finish, hitting rock bottom in blowout losses to Georgia and Missouri.
When the season ended, Perine did some serious soul searching.
โIt was hard for a while,โ Perine said at SEC Media Days. โThe coaches that recruited me to Florida were leaving. I felt lost. I lost my position coach and my head coach. But I went home and prayed on it with my Mom and my family. I decided to stay. Iโm so glad I stuck it out and followed Godโs plan for me.โ
A season later as a junior, under Dan Mullen, Perine led the Gators in rushing again, tallying 826 yards, 6.2 yards per carry and 7 TDs in a timeshare with Jordan Scarlett, now with the Carolina Panthers. Perine saved his best football for the biggest games, rushing for 85 yards and 2 touchdowns in Floridaโs 27-19 win over No. 5 LSU and adding 98 all-purpose yards and 2 touchdowns on only 10 touches in Floridaโs 41-15 rout of No. 7 Michigan in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.
โThatโs just who he is,โ fellow senior Jabari Zuniga said at SEC Media Days. โHeโs not loud or flashy, but you can rely on him to bring it every day, and to make a play when it matters most.โ
Maybe Perine needs to be flashier.
His consistency is probably his greatest strength, but coming out of tiny Prichard, Alabama, a sleepy hamlet on the outskirts of Mobile, many Power 5 programs werenโt confident in his ceiling as a college running back. The recruiting services weren’t overly impressed either. Perine, a 3-star, was the No. 493-ranked prospect in the country.
โBeing from Mobile, I figured if I worked hard Iโd get a chance to play in the SEC,โ Perine recalled. โBut Auburn — coach (Gus) Malzahn told me I was too slow to be an SEC running back. I remember those words. I wonโt forget that sort of thing. In my eyes, I always knew I could play with anybody.โ
One staff that did recruit Perine heavily? Dan Mullenโs at Mississippi State. Until Florida came calling, Mississippi State was Perineโs only Power 5 offer.
Perine still hasnโt forgotten that Mullen and his staff believed in him when others didnโt. โCoach Mullen recruited me when he was at Mississippi State,โ Perine said. โFor a while, that was my only SEC offer. Itโs funny how life works.โ
In Perineโs home state of Alabama alone, recruiting services ranked 2 other running backs ahead of him in 2016. One never made it to college (Denzell Mitchell). The other was Auburnโs Malik Miller, who Gus Malzahn felt was fast enough. Perine had more rushing yards last season in his final 4 games (346) than Miller has in his career at Auburn (272).
After Florida offered and Perine committed, Alabama swooped in at the last moment, figuring it could take a chance on an in-state running back.
โCoach Saban offered me my senior year of high school, but he offered me last minute,โ Perine said. โI felt kind of disrespected by that and so I had to stay loyal and stick with my commitment, which was to Florida.โ
Perine rewarded the Gators’ faith in his talents with a 421-yard freshman season that included multiple 100-yard rushing performances and a highlight reel, Jamal Adams nightmare inducing, scouts dream of a run in a Florida victory at LSU.
His production and versatility have increased each season since, even amidst the chaos of Floridaโs lost 2017 campaign. That drive to get better is what defines Perine.
โI think when you look at Lamical, from the kid (running backs coach Greg Knox and Mullen) recruited at Mississippi State to now, (you see) a kid that does everything you need to do to become a better, complete football player,โ Mullen said. โHeโs always been a natural running back. Heโs relentless, hard to tackle. But heโs done the work to make sure he understands protection, understands the passing game and route running, understands the system. And of course he does everything you want off the field too. Itโs special to see that.โ
Last season, Perineโs production spike, as well as his improvement as a blocker and pass catcher, created some buzz about whether heโd join fellow junior Jordan Scarlett in declaring for the NFL Draft.
Yet again, when presented with a different option, Perine chose Florida, returning for his senior year and one more shot at a return trip to Atlanta, where the Gators went when he was a freshman, in no small part because of his performance against LSU.
โI think the decision he made to come back to school for his senior year will serve him well,โ Mullen said at SEC Media Days. โHe was a well-rounded back but one still improving at being a complete back. The guys playing on Sunday right now at that position, they have value in all aspects of the game. They catch the ball out of the backfield. They are excellent in protection. Thatโs the type of value he has.โ
The Gators have reaped the dividends.
One of Floridaโs captains, Perine has emerged as a leader on and off the football field and is widely regarded as one of the best running backs in the SEC. A 2nd team All-SEC selection who appeared on the prestigious preseason Doak Walker Award watch list, Perine hasnโt let his accomplishments change him as a person. He remains the confident but humble young man from a working class family that Florida recruited, quick to deflect praise even as the accolades pile up.
โCoach Mullen has put me in the right positions to be a better player,โ Perine said this summer. โHeโs been unafraid to show all my attributes as a player, whether in the run game, being able to catch balls out of the backfield, in protections. I want to be a back that can do all those things and coach Mullen has given me that opportunity. Whatever I have to do to win games for my team, Iโll do it.โ
Perine is a rare back, one with the power to churn out short, tough yards but also the patience and vision to break off the big chunk plays offenses rely on in the era of fast, pressure defense.
On the run below — a simple inside zone — you get an idea of how Perine can do both, as he displays the patience and vision to wait for the hole to open and then shows his burst and power to make sure he picks up the 1st down after contact.
โThe main thing about him is heโs got great vision and is just brutal to tackle,โ a Georgia assistant told me this summer. โHe just runs through you and his center of gravity is so low. Heโs as tough a kid as there is in our league.โ
That blend of power, vision and better-than-you-think speed has the attention of former collegiate legends and NFL scouts alike.
Reggie Bush tweeted a video earlier this summer of Perine highlights with the title: โMost Versatile Playmaker in the Country,โ heady praise from one of the most versatile college running backs in history.
NFL front offices have also taken note.
โPerine is one of the highest backs on our 2020 board because heโs so versatile,โ an NFL scouting director from a playoff team told me this week via email. โAs a runner, heโs got tremendous vision and leg turnover, but itโs his patience, that willingness to let blocks develop without unnecessary movement that impresses most.
“He sees the game of football better than about anyone weโre looking at. Are there limitations? Top-end speed questions? Sure. We have questions about it. But he has a good burst through gaps and to be consistently elite in yards after contact in a league like the SEC shows strength and a low center of gravity, which you need to be successful in our league. Plus his character is off the charts. Someone — maybe us — will be getting a heck of a player.โ
For now, Perine isnโt concerning himself with whatโs next. Itโs been too long a journey to get here to do anything but live in the moment. Heโll graduate with a degree from a top-10 public university this December (a semester early), which gives him the luxury of knowing his future is in good shape regardless of what happens with the NFL.
โIโll worry about that when itโs time to. Iโm going to play my role this year, whatever my workload,โ Perine said at Media Days. โI want to enjoy this opportunity, the chance to be the leader of the football team. I want to be a guy people can look up to. And I want to be a guy where the coaches know if they need to make a play to win a game, they can call on me.โ
Lamical Perine is Floridaโs Mr. Reliable, Floridaโs Playmaker. You can bet Floridaโs fans and coaches already know that. Theyโve called on him for 3-plus seasons, and heโs constantly answered the bell. Whatโs amazing is how close maybe the most complete Gator was to not being a Gator at all.
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.



