Florida's win over Texas on Saturday was a statement win badly needed in the Billy Napier Era. It doesn't change the fact that Napier is still 21-22 as head coach of the Florida Gators, but it was a nice moment in The Swamp for fans to enjoy.
But life in the SEC doesn't let one enjoy their spoils for too long as the Gators will travel to Texas A&M this Saturday with these questions still looming.
Can Dallas Wilson power this offense by himself?
There is no denying that Florida's offense looked far more potent and far more dangerous with five-star freshman Dallas Wilson on the field compared to the first four games of the season that he missed due to injury.
The question for Florida moving forward is how they pivot as teams adjust. Texas seemed content to leave Wilson one-on-one and didn't provide a ton of safety help to their corners.
We would have to imagine Texas A&M isn't going to show up with the same approach and this is where the cat and mouse game, one that frankly Napier usually loses, is going to come into play.
Has Eugene Wilson been relegated to the bench?
Hidden in the debut of Dallas Wilson was the fact that Eugene Wilson was largely a non-factor on Saturday. The latter Wilson took 23 snaps, had one target, and no catches.
As much as we like the burst that Eugene Wilson has, he has never proven whether or not he can be a downfield threat for the Gators. Whether that's on him or on how the coaching staff forces him to run 82 motions a game has always been the grand question.
But it was clear from Saturday that Napier seemed to settle on Dallas Wilson, Vernell Brown III, J. Michael Sturdivant, and Aidan Mizell as his preferred options.
Was this a blip for Cormani McClain?
Against Miami, Cormani McClain played great. He had an interception, and he was one of Florida's better players out on the field.
Against Texas, McClain was picked on frequently and was targeted a ton.
And considering it's hard to truly evaluate his LIU and USF games given the offenses they were running, we'll see if Texas A&M chooses to try and attack McClain again this week.