Monthly Archives: December 2021

S&C Coach Hocke

Mark Hocke
Mark Hocke to Lead Gators Football Strength and Conditioning
Hocke will serve as the Gators Football Director of Strength and Conditioning.
GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Florida head football coach Billy Napier has announced Mark Hocke as the Gators next Associate Head Coach/Director of Football Strength and Conditioning on Monday.
 
He spent all four seasons (2018-21) at Louisiana with Napier, which included four straight Sun Belt West Division titles, a share of the Sun Belt title in 2020 and 2021 Sun Belt Conference Champions.
 
Hocke began his collegiate coaching career at the University of Alabama in 2009 spending six seasons on head coach Nick Saban’s staff and was with Napier in Tuscaloosa during the 2011 and 2014-15 seasons. He helped coach three teams that won BCS National Championships (2009, 2012, 2013) and trained over 35 players that signed NFL contracts, including 10 first-round NFL Draft picks. The New Orleans native also headed the offseason Player Leadership Council.
 
He served as the head strength and conditioning coach at the University of Georgia in 2015, where he directed a 15-person staff that trained a pair of All-SEC honorees in offensive lineman as the Bulldogs finished the year with a 10-3 record, which included a win over Penn State in the Gator Bowl.
 
Hocke was on the strength and conditioning staff at Texas A&M (2017) and Florida State (2016). His certifications include CSCCC Certified, FMS Screen Certified as well as USA Weightlifting Level 1 Sports Performance Coach Certified.

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Thanks Reef, great email!

With December 7th right around the corner, and Veterans Day just a few weeks behind us, I thought it would be a good time to remember some comments made by true American patriots when they were confronted with negative comments about our country:

1). JFK’s Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, was in France in the early 60’s when DeGaulle decided to pull out of NATO. DeGaulle said he wanted all U.S. military out of France as soon as possible. Rusk responded, “Does that include those who are buried here?” DeGaulle did not respond – you could have heard a pin drop.

2). When in England at a fairly large conference, Colin Powell was asked by the Archbishop of Canterbury if our plans for Iraq were just an example of “empire building” by George Bush. He answered by saying, “Over the years the United States has sent many of its fine young men and women into great peril to fight for freedom beyond our borders. The only amount of land we have ever asked for in return is enough to bury those that did not return.”

3). There was a conference in France where a number of international engineers were taking part, including French and American. During a break, one of the French engineers came back into the room saying, “Have you heard the latest dumb stunt Bush has done? He has sent an aircraft carrier to Indonesia to help the tsunami victims. What does he intend to do, bomb them?” A Boeing engineer stood up and replied quietly: “ Our carriers have three hospitals onboard that can treat several hundred people; they are nuclear powered and can supply emergency electrical power to shore facilities; they have three cafeterias with the capacity to feed 3000 people three meals a day, they can produce several thousand gallons of fresh water from sea water each day, and they carry half a dozen helicopters for use in transporting victims and injured to and from their flight deck. We have eleven such ships. How many does France have?”

4). A U.S. Navy Admiral was attending a Naval conference that included Admirals from the U.S., English, Canadian, Australian, and French Navies. At a cocktail reception he found himself standing with a large group of officers that included personnel from most of those countries. Everyone was chatting away in English as they sipped their drinks but a French Admiral suddenly complained that, whereas Europeans learn many languages, Americans learn only English. “Why is it that we always have to speak English in these conferences rather than speaking French?” The American Admiral replied, “Maybe it’s because the Brits, Canadians, Aussies, and Americans arranged it so you wouldn’t have to speak German.”
Finally,

5). Robert Whiting, an elderly gentleman arrived in Paris by plane. At French Customs, he took a few minutes to find his passport in his carry on. “You have been to France before Monsieur? “ the customs officer asked sarcastically. Mr.Whiting admitted that he had been to France previously. “Then you should know enough to have your passport ready.” The American said, “The last time I was here, I didn’t have to show it.” “Impossible…Americans always have to show their passports on arrival in France.” The American senior gave the Frenchman a long hard look. Then he quietly explained, “Well,when I came ashore at Omaha Beach on D-Day in 1944 to help liberate this country, I couldn’t find a single Frenchman to show a passport to.”

With all of the revisionist history being taught in our classrooms today, and with statues of great heroes being removed everywhere you look, it is easy for many to forget what a great Nation we are blessed and privileged to live in. Worse yet, our youngest generations are often taught that America is “The Great Satan” rather than the greatest Nation to ever inhabit this planet. America is a beacon of hope for the rest of the world, is the most generous Nation on the planet, and our youngest citizens need to learn this so that “the light of the World” doesn’t slowly fade into irrelevance and obscurity.

The Camels Are Coming

Something to ponder…..

 

The camels are definitely on the horizons……….. !!!

 

The founder of Dubai, Sheik Rashid, was asked about the future of his country, and he replied, “My grandfather rode a camel, my father rode a camel, I ride a Mercedes, my son rides a Land Rover, and my grandson is going to ride a Land Rover…but my great-grandson is going to have to ride a camel again.

 

Why is that, he was asked? And his reply was, “Hard times create strong men, strong men create easy times. Easy times create weak men, weak men create difficult times. Many will not understand it, but you have to raise warriors, not parasites.”

 

And add to that the historical reality that all great empires…the Persians, the Trojans, the Egyptians, the Greeks, the Romans, and in later years, the British… all rose and perished within 240 years. They were not conquered by external enemies; they rotted from within.

 

America has now passed that 240-year mark, and the rot is starting to be visible and is accelerating. We are past the Mercedes and Land Rover Years….the camels are on the horizon.

 

The greatest generation consisted of 18-year-old kids storming the beaches at Normandy.

 

And now, two generations later, some 18-year-old kids want to hide in safe rooms when they hear words that hurt their feelings. They also want free stuff from the government because they think they are entitled to it. 

 

The “camels are on the horizon” for sure.  Something to ponder?

 

History has a way of repeating itself.

 

Coach Napier’s Comments

·3 min read
 
 

Florida coach Billy Napier wore a camouflage Louisiana hoodie Monday as he straddled his dual responsibilities as the incoming leader of the Gators and the outgoing architect of a Ragin’ Cajuns team that hosts Saturday’s Sun Belt Conference championship game.

Here are five takeaways from Napier’s Zoom media conference — his first public remarks since taking the UF job.

1. He’s focused on Louisiana…

By announcing his decision to go to UF on Sunday, Napier hoped to get that business out of the way so he could lock in on his final game at Louisiana. Coaching against Appalachian State this weekend was “non-negotiable.”

Napier said his game preparation schedule will not change this week so he can try to win his first outright conference title.

“I think from a loyalty standpoint, anything less than that would be — that’s not who we are and not what we’re about,” Napier said.

Napier said it has not yet been determined whether he’ll coach the Ragin’ Cajuns in their bowl game.

2. …but he isn’t neglecting the Gators.

Napier said he’ll devote early-morning and late-night hours “to work on some of the future challenges that we have.” Translation: recruiting and assembling a staff at UF.

He is expected to arrive in Gainesville on Sunday.

3. He sounds like Nick Saban.

Napier spent five seasons under Saban (one as an analyst, four as receivers coach) and modeled Louisiana after Saban’s Alabama dynasty.The similarities were unmistakable.

“I think the big thing here is that we don’t get too consumed with Saturday, and we focus on what we need to do each day,” Napier said. That’s coach-speak, yes, but it’s also a quick summary of Saban’s famed Process, the all-encompassing approach that stresses, well, the process, not the result.

Napier also said “you need complementary talent, but you have to have a shared vision, if that makes sense.”

It does if you understand Saban, who uses an army of analysts and support staffers to follow his top-down directives.

4. Napier explained his approach concisely.

“It’s one thing to collect talent,” he said. “I think it’s another thing to build a team. I think that’s what we’ve focused on here, is building a team.”

Both pieces are important, of course. The UF job was open (in part) because Napier’s predecessor, Dan Mullen, didn’t collect enough talent.

But the team-building aspect is key, too. Athletic director Scott Stricklin acknowledged that on the day he fired Mullen.

“You’ve got to put really good structure, culture in place in order to sustain at a high, high level over a long period of time,” Stricklin said. “That’s, going forward, what we’ve got to focus on.”

5. Napier is respected by the league.

Sun Belt commissioner Keith Gill began his portion of the Zoom session by congratulating Napier for getting the UF job. Though it’s good for the Sun Belt’s brand to have a premier program snag one of its coaches, it’s also unusual to hear a conference commissioner be so excited about a rising star leaving his league — especially at the start of a news conference about the championship game.

“(I’m) certainly excited for Coach Napier,” Gill said. “I’m probably more excited for Florida in a sense that they’re getting an unbelievable coach — unbelievable person….

“He’s one of the coaches that I certainly leaned on when I was trying to get advice and just the way he kind of approaches things, the level of care and deliberation he puts into making decisions. I was really impressed by that. Just a really smart, thoughtful, high-character person.”