Three commits in four days is no joke. But if you think Jon Sumrall is pitching positives behind closed doors, think again. The first-year Gators’ head coach is drawing a line, daring recruits to either buy in or walk out. But when recruits are still lining up anyway, it shows how they’re buying into Florida despite a major turnover in both the player roster and the coaching staff. 

“I tell recruits all the time. If you like us now, you’re gonna love us later,” Jon Sumrall said. “If you don’t like me now, go somewhere else, because I’m not changing. What you see’s what you get. If you want to come improve your craft every day, it’s gonna be a blast. If you’re tough and love football, it’s gonna be a blast. If you’re soft and you like football, don’t come here.”

There’s no room for complacency in what Jon Sumrall is building at Florida. But how does a program coming off a four-win season suddenly climb into the top 10 of the 2027 class rankings? It starts with clarity and right now, the Gators have it. Players who fit his requirements are already streaming in with the most recent movement starting with Maxwell Hiller, the program’s first 5-star OL commitment in nearly a decade, followed by 4-star QB Davin Davidson.

And just when the Orange and Blue Game wrapped, CB Aamaury Fountain flipped to Florida from South Carolina. With these three new additions in four days, the Gators sit at No. 10 in the Rivals rankings with six commits, jumping three spots from No. 13 in a matter of days. Still, Jon Sumrall isn’t pretending this is a finished product. In fact, he’s going out of his way to say the opposite.


“We are going to land some pieces in recruiting,” he said. “We’re about to do some things that I think build a roster here that is going to bring it back to where we all want it to be.”

Recruits are buying that honesty paired with visible transformation. Florida 4-star OT target Sean Tatum made that clear about Jon Sumrall’s team despite eventually committing to Miami. 

“The energy has flipped a 180,” he said. “The new staff is better than the old staff, and no disrespect of course, but ask any recruit. They’ve seen the energy is electric.”

As far as visits go, the Swamp is starting to feel like a destination again. The Orange and Blue Game brought several curious commits on campus including 5-star DL Jalen Brewster, a top-10 national prospect in the 2027 class who’s currently committed to Texas Tech. This isn’t his first visit either and that shows how something about the program still intrigues this elite prospect. Jon Sumrall knows why.

“We can get anybody to come visit the University of Florida if we want in America if we do a good job,” he said. “This is not a really hard place to recruit to… I think the guys that come here to visit, most of them come back at some point whether they’ve chosen us or not, how they feel the energy’s real. And there’s authentic relationships.”

This is where the big shift from Billy Napier comes into focus because it’s not just about the commits, but it’s also to do with contrast. 

The vibe shift under Jon Sumrall is undeniable

The previous era under Billy Napier wasn’t devoid of effort but it lacked juice that makes recruits feel like they’re stepping into something alive. Jon Sumrall is different as he’s not trying to be everything to everyone. The Orange and Blue Game gave a glimpse of progress. He saw flashes from defensive physicality, offensive rhythm, and moments from playmakers like D.J. Coleman, whose interception turned heads. But he also saw what still needs fixing.

“This is a special place,” he said. “Championships are the standard and expectation. We’ve got to get it back there. We’ve got to wake this beast up. This is a sleeping giant. I’m telling you right now, It ain’t a matter of if we’re gonna win here. It’s how fast we’re gonna win. It’s coming. This winning thing, it’s coming. Now, I’m not patient. I want it to happen every day.”

That’s a challenge to his roster, his staff, and anyone paying attention. And if this recruiting momentum holds, that timeline might shrink faster than expected because right now, Jon Sumrall is building relevance in Florida.