Florida drops first regular-season home meet since 2008
By Alejandro López | Feb. 26, 2016Leading with one rotation to go, Florida’s gymnastics team was in a familiar position.
Leading with one rotation to go, Florida’s gymnastics team was in a familiar position.
The last time Florida played LSU, the Gators were coming off an embarrassing 14-point loss to Tennessee that showcased their inconsistencies on both ends of the court.
Torrian Gray wasn’t going to leave his alma mater, Virginia Tech, for just any job.
The Florida-Miami rivalry has always been one of the biggest in college sports.
As it became clear that Florida was going to lose to Georgia for the second time this year last Sunday, all Cassie Peoples could do was watch and wonder what could have been.
As powerful as the Florida Gators gymnastics program is, it’s still haunted by its fair share of ghosts.
For nine members of Florida’s softball team — seven players and two coaches — the annual Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic in Palm Springs, California, is a homecoming — a chance to play in front of friends and family that live thousands of miles away.
Last season, senior Kyra Jefferson watched as UF’s men’s track and field team won the SEC Indoor Championship, while her women’s team fell to a second-place finish against Arkansas.
The Florida women’s tennis team has done well against top-ranked teams.
Florida’s men’s tennis team hasn’t lost to Florida State since 2007, winning the past seven dual matches between the two in-state rivals.
Supporters of Hillary Clinton are getting their own space.
Curt Guyette, the journalist who broke the Flint, Michigan, water crisis, spoke to UF students Thursday.
A man will stare into the depths of a politician’s mouth today.
Alachua County Animal Services announced Wednesday that it has halted canine adoptions and will quarantine its dogs for 10 days.
Cary Michael Lambrix dreams of nature.
UF’s Engineering Leadership Institute will focus on women’s leadership this year.
The Collegiate Skate Tour is coming to Gainesville for the first time Saturday afternoon.
TEDxUF led an event that addressed discrimination against minorities in higher education Thursday night.
Pirates have been around for more than 2,000 years. From the olive coasts of ancient Greece to the years of Viking dominance from A.D. 500 to A.D. 1050 and far beyond the classic bearded fellows of the Caribbean in the 18th century, the act of piracy is not new. Items of significant value will always have a market; it’s just that not everyone in the market will want to pay.
Bear with us, fellow Gators: one more day. One more long, uncomfortably-balmy-considering-it’s-almost-March Friday afternoon, and we’ll all be free — at least for the next week.