A deadly combination: COVID-19 and college football's effects on Gators Athletics
With each passing day, the chances of college football being played on the gridiron this fall becomes grimmer and grimmer.
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With each passing day, the chances of college football being played on the gridiron this fall becomes grimmer and grimmer.
They didn’t build her a hut.
The University of Florida is a massive university in the academic sense.
During the Fall in Gainesville, everything revolves around Saturdays.
For a skateboarder, anything that is concrete is skateable.
Introduced July 22, the Save Our Stages Act is a bipartisan U.S. Senate effort to support independent music venues; On July 30, Gainesville music outlets are pushing to keep the music on.
It has been 141 days since the test “heard round the world” that shut down the NBA and the entire sports world.
Football gamedays in the fall are an important part of Gainesville’s culture. The tailgating, the sea of orange and blue, the rowdy fans and the spectacle of watching football with 90,000 other fans are all part of the college football experience.
Cancellations of internships because of the COVID-19 pandemic spurred UF student Danielle Gray to offer an opportunity — and school credits, if desired — for undergraduates and recent graduates to prove that they stayed productive despite global setbacks.
Florida will welcome six teams by the Swamp, headlined by Alabama and Florida State.
A return to normalcy is often a slow trudge. In the wake of the world-stopping COVID-19 pandemic, our favorite activities and spectacles may return with restrictions.
Returning UF students can expect quarantines, face masks and social distancing in the fight against COVID-19 in The Swamp.
Athletic Director Scott Stricklin didn’t mince words when talking about safety.
What’s your favorite sports moment?
Civilization. Leonardo’s. Burrito Brothers. Southern Charm Kitchen. Gainesville staples are disappearing or facing closure as big development and COVID-19 threaten their existence. The list grew larger last week.
Christina McCue-Hoek and her friends stand around the Swamp’s jukebox in 2007 during their senior year at UF.
From its start in 2004, the popularity of podcasts has skyrocketed. For some podcast hosts in Gainesville, their podcasts have provided a platform to share science, beliefs, music and business insights.
UF alumna Nicole Mollison wanted the “Gator Bait” chant scrubbed from Gator Band’s repertoire as early 2009. She’d learned of its racist past and brought her concerns to band leadership.
Why the big league NFL reigns supreme over college football
The second year of the Dan Mullen era was largely a success. Florida won double-digit games in the regular season for the first time since 2015, defeated its two in-state rivals in the same season for the first time since 2008 and won the Orange Bowl.