SEC Recruiting Class Grades

AI-analyzed recruiting class evaluations with position-by-position breakdowns

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University of Florida

University of Florida

Class of 2025 Recruiting Analysis

A-
Overall Score: 92
A
Offense
A
Defense
D+
Special Teams
92
Overall Score

Position Grades

A+
WR (6)
A
S (4)
A
CB (6)
A
LB (2)
B+
DL (6)
A
ATH (1)
A
EDGE (1)
A-
RB (4)
A-
OT (2)
A-
QB (2)
C-
IOL (1)
C-
TE (2)
D+
K (2)
D
P (2)

Strengths

5-star WR Vernell Brown III, 5-star WR Vernell Brown III, WR depth (6), S depth (4), CB depth (6), DL depth (6), RB depth (4)

Areas to Address

None significant

Needs Addressed
No specific needs filled
Remaining Needs
None

Full Analysis

The University of Florida has assembled an exceptionally strong recruiting class that should be highly competitive within the SEC, boasting a stellar 92/100 overall score with 41 commits. The class is anchored by what appears to be two elite wide receivers (though the duplicate listings suggest data entry errors), with the crown jewel being 5-star Vernell Brown III, ranked #30 nationally. The impressive depth across skill positions and secondary stands out, particularly the six wide receivers and ten total defensive backs (four safeties and six cornerbacks), indicating a clear emphasis on modernizing the offense while fortifying pass coverage. With 33 four and five-star recruits comprising over 80% of the class, Florida has secured talent that should translate immediately in the competitive SEC landscape. While the sheer volume and quality of recruits is impressive, some concerns emerge from the data presented. The lack of specifically identified needs being filled, combined with the notation of "no unfilled needs," seems unrealistic for any program and may indicate incomplete analysis rather than a truly perfect roster construction. Additionally, the heavy concentration on wide receivers and defensive backs, while valuable, raises questions about whether Florida adequately addressed other critical areas like offensive line depth or linebacker development. The class's strength lies in its ability to provide immediate competition and depth in skill positions, but the true test will be whether this talent translates to on-field success against elite SEC competition like Georgia, Alabama, and LSU.

Report generated: Jan 14, 2026