Clipboard Hint for IPad

 
 

Use This Hidden Trick to Quickly Copy and Paste Between Your iPhone and iPad

Use Apple’s universal clipboard to move videos, photos and more between your mobile devices.

Nelson Aguilar headshot
Nelson Aguilar
 
 
 
copy and paste across apple products
Apple’s universal clipboard allows you to copy and paste across various devices.

Sarah Tew/CNET

Apple’s ecosystem allows you to easily work on your smartphone and then move to another device, like your tablet, and pick up where you left off. Whether you’re browsing the internet, making a payment online, sketching a drawing or texting your friends, you can use a feature known as Continuity, which seamlessly connects all your Apple devices. 

One of Continuity’s best tools is the universal clipboard. With the universal clipboard, you can copy a photo, video or link on your iPhone and then hop over to your iPad or MacBook and paste it without any issues. If you’re already familiar with the tool, you know how useful it is. But we can also tell you about a hidden gesture that makes the universal clipboard much easier to use. 

Are you looking for a new Apple device? Check out CNET’s guides to the best iPad and iPhone for 2022.

Are your devices compatible with Continuity?

For Continuity to work on your Apple products, each device must meet the following requirements:

  • Logged in to the same iCloud account
  • Connected to the same Wi-Fi network
  • Bluetooth and Handoff must be enabled

Also, while the universal clipboard feature works on most Apple devices, for this guide I’ll focus just on touchscreen devices, which use pinch gestures with Continuity, so this would only be for compatible iPhone, iPad and iPod touch models running at least iOS 10.

Use pinch gestures to easily copy and paste between your iPhone and iPad

There are several ways to copy and paste with the universal clipboard feature, but the quickest way to do it is with pinch gestures:

  • Copy: Pinch in with three fingers
  • Paste: Pinch out with three fingers

The best way to use this feature is with pictures and videos in the Photos app. Let’s say you want to copy and paste a photo from your iPhone to your iPad. All you need to do is open the Photos app on your iPhone, find the photo you want to migrate and then pinch in with three fingers to copy it to your clipboard. To then move the photo over to your other device, open the iPad, go into an app like Notes or Messages and pinch out with three fingers to paste the photo. Below you can see the feature in action.

You can do the same with links and text, but they would both need to be highlighted before using the pinch gestures to copy them to your clipboard and move them over to another device.

Gator Culture Change

“Culture change,” said CBS Sports’ Dennis Dodd, “is a mystery phrase to me. But it can be anything from running off players to just teaching kids the way the coaches want to approach it.”

And that’s the thing about culture change.

There’s no right way to do it.

There’s only YOUR WAY or the highway.

We’ve seen it in Gainesville over time and certainly currently with new coaches on football and basketball.

The biggest culture change happened when Steve Spurrier took over on New Year’s Eve 1989 as the head football at Florida. He switched to the blue jerseys because the orange ones “looked like Clemson,” ripped up the artificial turf and set the new policy of no excuses.

“It was about attitude as much as anything,” he said. “We had to get the players to believe that they could beat Georgia, that playing Auburn and Georgia back-to-back wasn’t a problem. We had good players, really good players, when I got here and we just had to get the attitudes straightened out.”

“For him to do that so quickly was incredible,” said Chris Doering of the SEC Network and Sirius radio. “We inherited his personality.”

One thing that tends to happen when an athletic director is making a coaching change is that he wants something different. In the case of Billy Napier, Florida wanted a coach that was passionate about recruiting after the previous coach was not.

“Being around Billy, everything is so well thought out, nothing is left to chance,” Doering said. “It’s not just the recruiting part of it. It’s everything.

“The biggest thing is the ability to connect with players. And you have to be clear in what they want to create.”

Florida basketball will look different under Golden than it did under Mike White and in many ways “different” was what a program that had become stagnant needed — a jolt, if you will, built on a modern approach to the game.

It’s always been that way. When Billy Donovan took over the basketball program, the biggest change in culture was to ramp up recruiting to a level we had never seen at Florida. At the same time, Donovan established early that players who did not but in were not going to play.

Urban Meyer came into the Florida football program in 2005 and immediately went about establishing a culture change by banishing the players from the locker room and not allowing them to wear Gator gear until it was earned.

What he left behind was a mess that Will Muschamp had to clean up. That started when he threw Janoris Jenkins off the team.

“You look at how the culture changed under Nick Saban at Alabama,” Dodd said. “Same with Sam Pittman at Arkansas. They got the players to buy in quickly and then it is established what the standard is.”

That goes for every sport that brings in a coach with a different set of expectations for his players.

Not everyone accepts culture change. That’s why the transfer portal in every sport is stacked with players who want a different culture and that’s where it gets tricky.

Any player who wants to come to Florida in any sport has to understand what that culture is and what is expected of them.

There are some new cultures in town. Gator fans are excited about the coaches who are implementing them.

Buckle up. It’s going to be interesting.

 

By Pat Dooley

 

 

Gymnasts Finish Second

FORT WORTH, Texas – Being normal is the goal for every Florida gymnastics meet. UF Head Coach Jenny Rowland knows that when the Gators are normal, that leads to a lot of success.
 
Today in the NCAA Gymnastics team final at Fort Worth’s Dickies Arena, being pretty close to normal wasn’t quite enough.
 
Florida was second at 198.0875 as top-ranked Oklahoma claimed its fifth title at 198.20. Utah was third (197.75) followed by Auburn (197.35).
 
“That’s what you’re going to get in a national championship. You could see it across the board amongst all teams,” Rowland said. “All teams were just trying, fighting a little harder, looking for more.
 
“Maybe not exactly what the Gators are capable of doing but a stunning performance nonetheless.”
 
Three of the seven slenderest margins of victory in the event’s 40-year history have come in three of the last four team finals, including today’s slight 0.1125 OU advantage.
 
THIS AFTERNOON’S MEET:
Florida missed some tenths with steps on vault landings. Trinity Thomas’ 9.9875 is the second-highest ever for a Gator in NCAA event finals. The highest? A 10.0 by Susan Hines in the 1998 NCAA Super Six. She was in the stands Saturday to cheer the Gators.
 
The Gators powered past a miss in the early part of the lineup to hit the remaining four uneven bars routines. Thomas matched her winning bars mark (9.975) from Thursday to lead the Gators.
 
The Gators used four marks of 9.9 or better toward its balance beam total of 49.50. Senior Leah Clapper anchored the lineup with the team’s top mark of 9.925.
 
Florida headed into the final rotation trailing OU by two-tenths. The Gators turned in some great floor routines – including a 10.0 by Thomas. But UF couldn’t close the gap on the Sooners as they used beam marks of 9.9 or better toward their closing event total.
 
Today’s result was Florida’s lone loss of 2022, as the Gators finished 2022 action at 31-1-1.
 

EVENT WINNERS:

Vault Trinity Thomas Florida 9.9875
Uneven Bars Trinity Thomas Florida 9.975
  Danielle Sievers Oklahoma 9.975
Balance Beam Ragan Smith Oklahoma 9.9625
Floor Exercise Trinity Thomas Florida 10.0
All-Around Trinity Thomas Florida 39.8625

 
It was another spectacular performance for Florida’s Thomas.

  • Her winning all-around total shares No. 2 all-time in NCAA finals.
  • Posted the eighth floor 10.0 in NCAA team final – and first since 2005
  • Perfect 10.0 in every 2022 NCAA floor performance – NCAA Regional Second Round, NCAA Regional Final, NCAA Semifinal & NCAA Final
  • Finished season with 12 perfect marks (7 floor, 3 vault, 1 each bars, beam). That is second only to UCLA Kyla Ross’ 14 in 2019.
  • The nation’s six highest all-around totals of the 2022 season all were turned in by Thomas
    • 39.90 (April 2 – NCAA Regional final)
    • 39.875 (March 31 – NCAA Regional second round)
    • 39.8625 (April 16 – NCAA Team Final)
    • 39.85 (Feb. 25 vs Oklahoma)
    • 39.825 (March 19 – SEC Championships)
    • 39.8125 (April 14 – NCAA Semifinal)

 
NEXT UP:
The NCAA Championships closes collegiate gymnastics competition for 2022. Two will join the Gators next season – Lori Brubach and Kayla DeCello.
 
“The future is really bright for this team. We’re returning a great solid core for next season. They’ve all experienced it so they’ve all got a good taste and know what it takes to get to this point,” Rowland said. “So looking forward to making the most of this moment, celebrating and then taking our next step to move on to next season.”

Spring Game Awards

Courtesy Florida Sports Information

Spring Team Awards

Channing Chowder Headhunter Award
o Diwun Black
o Jordan Young
o Ethan White
o Ja’Quavion Fraziars

Chris Doering I Like to Practice Award
o Justin Shorter
o Donovan McMillon
o Tyreak Sapp
o Daejon Reynolds

Jack Youngblood Defensive Lineman Award
o Gervon Dexter

Lomas Brown Offensive Lineman Award
o Kingsley Eguakun

Joe Haden Defensive Back Award
o Tre’Vez Johnson
o Jason Marshall Jr.

Emmitt Smith Running Back Award
o Montrell Johnson

Danny Wuerffel Most Improved Player
o Dante Zanders
o Michael Tarquin
o Derek Wingo
o Jaydon Hill
o Princely Umanmielen

Tim Tebow Leadership Award
o Rashad Torrence II
o Marco Ortiz
o Trent Whittemore
o Nay’Quan Wright

Vernell Brown Culture Award
o Amari Burney
o Antwaun Powell-Ryland Jr.
o Jeremy Crawshaw
o Richard Gouraige
o Desmond Watson

Steve Spurrier Commitment to Excellence Award
o Trey Dean III
o O’Cryus Torrence
o Brenton Cox Jr.
o Lorenzo Lingard

Reidel Anthony Receiver Award
o Xzavier Henderson

Wilber Marshall Linebacker Award
o Ventrell Miller

Community Service Award
o Chief Borders
o Josh Braun

Louis Oliver Outstanding Non-Scholarship Player Award
o Adam Mihalek
o Noah Keeter
o Kahleil Jackson
o Taylor Spierto
o Justin Curtis
o Mark Pitts
o Justin Pelic

Fred Taylor Most Improved Freshman Award
o Jack Miller III
o Kamryn Waites
o Justus Boone
o Austin Barber
o Devin Moore
o Scooby Williams

Game Review from GatorCountry!

This is an example of the quality reporting found on Gator Country (www.Gatorcountry.com).
 
https://www.gatorcountry.com/feature/notebook-richardson-shines-black-splashes-more-tidbits/
 

Notebook: Richardson shines, Black splashes, more tidbits

  

As usual, the quarterback position was in the spotlight during the Orange and Blue Game on Thursday night.

Anthony Richardson showed some major promise as a redshirt freshman last year, and the estimated crowd of 45,000 wanted to see him show signs of progress as a passer.

Richardson didn’t disappoint. He executed what was likely a watered-down version of the offense to near perfection, as he took care of the ball and delivered accurate throws to his receivers.

He completed 18 of 24 passes for 207 yards and two touchdowns, and he also scored via a 12-yard rushing touchdown. He led the Blue team to touchdowns on all three of its first-half possessions and four of its first five drives overall.

Richardson’s efficient night through the air propelled the Blue team to a 34-0 blowout of the Orange team.

“I think Anthony is a production of a lot of hard work,” coach Billy Napier said. “I can’t say enough. His approach has been first class. When I think about a quarterback, we think about a person who represents everything of what the organization is about. Certainly, at the highest level of football, the quarterback is the face of the organization. They set the greatest example with their work ethic, their attention to detail, their self-discipline, their approach.

“He’s a product of his work. He’s learning a new system. Standing behind him back there, it wasn’t too big for him. He communicated well, and the ball went where it was supposed to go. The players around him played well. The pocket was clean. Guys [caught] the ball. It was a good day.”

Richardson said that one of the biggest things he worked on this spring was consistency. Fans were ready to start building him a statue after some of the jaw-dropping plays that he made early in the 2021 season, but he struggled enough down the stretch to give you a little bit of doubt as to whether or not this is going to work out.He felt like he turned in a much more even performance on Thursday.

“I feel like it’s my decision-making, just being confident and deliberate with what I want to do,” he said. “I feel like I’ve always had a decent arm, but it’s just my thought process sometimes is terrible. I just tried to keep it dialed in and just understand where the ball was supposed to go in certain coverages. I feel like I did a decent job with that today.”

One of the defining characteristics of the offense on Thursday was the tempo that they played with. They didn’t get plays off as quickly as some of those Oklahoma teams have over the years, but they didn’t give anyone much time to fully process what had just happened on the play before or send out a tweet before they snapped the ball again.

Richardson admits that he still has room to grow in the new scheme, but he feels comfortable with the tempo.

“I love the tempo,” Richardson said. “I talk to the O-Line before every drive, every series. I let them know that we’ve got to play smart, we’ve got to play fast, we’ve got to be concise. In this offense, if you do one thing wrong, you mess up the whole play. I just tell them we’ve got to play fast and play concise. If we do that, I don’t think anybody can stick with us because our tempo is pretty fast. We should know the plays like that. Honestly, I love the tempo.

“I feel some of the plays I’m not that familiar with, that comfortable with. It’s kind of hard to say it was easy. It’s just a matter of my extra work on your own, getting in with the coaches and doing some things like that. I feel like if you put in the work and the time and the effort, then you’ll catch onto it pretty fast.”

Johnson leads the way

With Nay’Quan Wright sitting out as he continues to work his way back from a significant leg injury and Lorenzo Lingard leaving the game in the first quarter with a hamstring injury, Louisiana transfer Montrell Johnson carried even more of the load than was initially expected.

He played for both teams and toted the ball a combined 15 times for 62 yards and a touchdown.

He showed off his downhill, physical running style that allowed him to lead the Ragin’ Cajuns in touchdowns and earn Sun Belt Freshman of the Year honors in 2021. He ran through a defender to convert a third-and-7 late in the second quarter, and he also pushed the pile for extra yards on a couple of other occasions. He never got knocked backward.

“Montrell’s extremely bright, picks things up quickly,” Napier said. “He certainly was a very productive back for us last year. I think he rushed for 800 or 900 yards and was the conference player of the year. He belongs out there. I think he’s 5-11½ and weighs 217 pounds. He hit 21.5 miles per hour last year in a game on his GPS. He’s got a big lower half. He’s got contact balance. He can protect. He can catch.

“Montrell is what the doctor ordered. He’s certainly going to provide depth and production for our team.”

Johnson said that he arrived at UF in January with a chip on his shoulder. He feels like he should’ve gotten SEC offers when he was in high school, and he wants to prove that to the world now.

“I was a very under-recruited guy,” he said. “I feel like I can play with those guys. I’m going to say it felt the same as the Sun Belt. It’s a difference, but I felt very comfortable out there, very confident. I’m going to keep grinding and getting better.

“I think one of my strengths is I’m a very patient runner. I wait to see when the hole is going to open up. One of the things I can work on is my speed. That’s really about it.”

His Gators career is off to an encouraging start.

Black splashes

Linebacker Diwun Black was a breakout player on the defense this spring, and he put an exclamation mark on the spring with a solid showing on Thursday. He made three tackles and broke up a pair of passes, including one where he exploded out of nowhere and nearly intercepted Jack Miller in the first quarter.

“The guy’s got some height and length, very instinctive,” Napier said. “Even when he’s wrong a little bit, he can make it right and oftentimes makes plays. He is productive on a consistent basis. One thing I would say about Diwun Black, during identity program, I wrote his name down multiple days where he’s probably been the gold standard when it came to effort in the program.

“The guy’s really bought in, and I will say this: he’s completely changed his reputation in the building relative to his attitude, his work ethic, how he goes about his business. He’s really academically had a decent semester. He needs to continue to work hard, but I’m very pleased. What you saw out there today is what we observe every day in practice.”

Black is still very new to the position. He primarily played safety in high school and junior college, and he cross-trained at a couple of spots last year. Now, he’s a full-time inside linebacker.

Starting middle linebacker Ventrell Miller said that he’s been impressed with how Black has handled the position change.

“I feel like that’s a difficult thing to do,” Miller said. “Just coming from a DB, coming to linebacker, you’ve got to be a lot more vocal. You’ve got to communicate. You’re just the quarterback of the defense. So, I feel like he’s embracing that role a little bit, learning what he’s doing, and he’s getting better every day.

“I’ve just seen the progress. He always gets his hands on the ball. He’s just a playmaker. You just see him flying around.”

Tight ends surprise

Due to injuries, Keon Zipperer was the only scholarship tight end who played in the Orange and Blue Game who began the spring as a tight end.

So, surprisingly, two of the top-3 pass-catchers in the game were tight ends – and Zipperer wasn’t one of them.

Dante Zanders, who began his career as a tight end before switching to defensive end prior to the 2020 season, moved back to the position about a week into the spring. He played on the Blue team, which featured the presumptive first-string offense. He led both teams with five receptions for 56 yards.

“You can immediately see where he’s got a future,” Napier said. “I can’t compliment him enough. He’s been the story of the spring. Heck, we had three scholarship tight ends injured, out for the spring three, four, five practices in. We moved him over from defense, and the guy picked it up quickly. I saw him around the facility more than some of the coaches. He was in there grinding away, and he has ability.

“He’s loose. He can transition. He’s got good ball skills. Most importantly, he’s smart, and he’s consistent. The guy is heavy-handed at the point of attack. He’s a godsend. Not only did he make the move, that guy running out there is going to make a lot of plays for us. Extremely pleased with Dante.”

Richardson said that he’s been impressed with how quickly Zanders has picked things up and how selfless he has been for the team.

“First of all, just embracing new coaches, that’s hard,” he said. “Then trying to learn one playbook, then two to come play offense, that’s just a hard thing to try to grasp and take in. He’s been excellent to me. I remember the first day they told me that he was going to be out there, I was like, ‘Man, that’s different.’ Then I saw him walking. We were going to our cars. He was like, ‘Bro, I’ve got you.’ Since then, he’s had my back, and I’m thankful for that.”

Noah Keeter, a walk-on who transferred to UF as an outside linebacker in 2020, caught three passes for 53 yards and a score while also working with the first-string offense.

“Honestly, I thought [the transition] would be a lot harder, but I was lucky,” Keeter said. “I transitioned before spring break, so, over spring break, I was able to study the whole break and kind of figure out the offense on my own. I’ve been meeting with Coach [Ty] Darlington and Coach [William] Peagler pretty much every day trying to figure it out.”

Orange and Blue Review


The first taste of the Florida Gators under new head coach Billy Napier came on a rare Thursday night as the 2022 Orange & Blue Debut was held in primetime inside Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. With the roster and coaching staff split among uniform color lines, the Gators showed that the offense remains far ahead of the defense in a 31-0 shutout win for the Blue squad.

Led by redshirt sophomore quarterback Anthony Richardson, the Blue team scored on every first-half possession to open up a 21-0 halftime lead. Richardson remained in the game through the third quarter, completing 18 of 24 passes for 207 yards and two touchdowns with a rushing score on the evening. His passes were crisp, his surgically-repaired knee looked 100% healthy, and he managed the first-team offense exceptionally well against a first-team Orange defense that proved it still has miles to go.

“I can’t say enough [about him],” head coach Billy Napier said of Richardson. “His approach has been first class.”

The same could not be said for redshirt freshman QB Jack Miller III, who was incredibly inconsistent with the ball and made numerous errors in the red zone. Miller completed 13 of 23 passes for 121 yards with an end zone interception thrown into triple coverage. As if the starting job was not already decided entering the game, Richardson made it quite clear why he is QB1 entering the season as Miller got off his spot too easily and telegraphed passes too frequently.

Let’s dive into some other first-blush takeaways from the spring game.

Thumbs up

» Tight ends: For a position that has been ravaged by injuries and using replacement players, these guys showed out all night. Junior Keon Zipperer (Orange), redshirt junior Dante Zanders (Blue, moved from defensive line) and redshirt sophomore walk-on Noah Keeter (Blue, moved from linebacker) combined for 10 receptions, 142 yards and a touchdown (Keeter). Each had receptions of 20+ yards while averaging 15 yards per catch or better. That’s not to say this will be replicated in the regular season, but it did provide some hope at the position and some highlights for recruits that this position will be targeted frequently in the offense. Napier called Zanders the “story of the spring” for his commitment to the position change and believes he has a real future at tight end.» Montrell Johnson Jr. (Blue) transferred from Louisiana looking for opportunity under Napier, and he’s certainly found it. Though Johnson played for both teams, he got the start for Blue and received 16 total touches, the second-most in the game. Johnson finished with 64 total yards and a rushing touchdown, showing good burst and shiftiness. Given he may be more trustworthy with the ball (see below), he certainly seems to have a leg up for the starting job.

» Diwun Black (Blue) did not show out as many hoped in his first season, but he looks to have completely turned things around. Napier called out his “gold standard of effort” during the spring, noting he “completely changed his reputation in the building”, and it showed on the field. Black had three tackles and two pass defenses. The senior linebacker was frequently around the ball and looked like the playmaker everyone expected he could be both out of high school and junior college.

» Jalen Kimber and Jordan Young (Blue) showed out for the second-team defense, combining for 12 tackles (seven for loss). While Young was impressive in the open field, Kimber showed talent in coverage with an interception and two pass defenses. The redshirt sophomore and redshirt freshman were just two out of a handful of second-teamers who impressed, including sophomore defensive linemen Tyreak Sapp (forced fumble, QB hurry, tackle for loss).

» Ja’Quavion Fraziars (Orange) got the most run out of any wide receivers. The sophomore caught five passes for 53 yards, though he was missed frequently by Miller and likely could have put up a more significant stat line.

» Adam Mihalek (Blue), a redshirt freshman walk-on kicker, did something others at his position could not last year: make long field goals. Mihalek stunningly connected on 52- and 47-yard field goals in the second half, clearly making a case for a scholarship if that play is indicative of what he’s accomplished in practice to this point, though he did boot a kickoff out of bounds as well. (2022 signee Trey Smack will not enroll until the summer.)

» Atmosphere: Florida announced an attendance of over 45,000. While that was likely juiced with The Swamp acting as the Pontiac Silverdome in this scenario, there was nevertheless a huge showing of fans, proving Napier’s decision to move the game to Thursday night before Easter an inspired one. Furthermore, there were reportedly more than 300 recruits in attendance to see that fan engagement and experience a taste of a primetime atmosphere. Napier even handed out some awards to players during halftime at midfield. “It was electric out there,” Napier said after the game. “Even better than I expected.”

Thumbs in the middle

» Demarkus Bowman (Orange) showed great quickness and agility but made costly mistakes with the ball in his hands. The redshirt sophomore running back fumbled the opening kickoff and fumbled a carry on the first possession of the second half, giving Blue the ball in the red zone for an immediate Richardson rushing touchdown. Bowman took 21 touches for a game-high 79 total yards, but those miscues are going to give the coaches second thoughts about giving him the starting job. If he can take care of those ball protection issues, he is clearly the most electric playmaker on the field.

Thumbs down

» First-team defense: Spring games are not defensive showcases, so no one was expecting the Orange first team to consistently stop Richardson or turn the ball over. Still, AR15 sliced through it like butter with the Blue offense getting whatever it wanted in the first half. Blue scored on all of its possessions before halftime and likely would have in the second half as well if it didn’t take its foot off the gas. (Orange did have a nice defensive stop on the first drive of the latter period.) There was no push from the defensive front seven, and Blue was never even forced into an occasional negative play. Defensive coordinator Patrick Toney has a lot of work to do with this group over the summer.

» Discipline: This is mostly referring to pre-snap penalties, of which there were plenty in the game — particularly the first half. Florida was one of the five most penalized teams in the nation last season, and that lack of care is simply not sustainable if this team wants to move forward. Napier has made this a key point of offseason program, so it was a bit surprising to see it be such an issue. Then again, the Gators have surely been concentrating on larger issues during their limited 15 practices, and hopefully this is a problem addressed more thoroughly during summer camp.

» Celebration chain(s): Sure, this may be silly to write about, but Florida had a touchdown chain on the sideline. It was a simple thick link necklace with a steel padlock on the bottom. Forget for a moment that the fad was made popular by one of UF’s rivals, it is massively played out, and the Gators’ chain did not even impress. Asked about a “turnover chain” after the game, Napier demured: “Nobody ran that by me. That won’t be happening.” Hopefully, he was talking about any semblance of a celebration chain and not just specifically a “turnover” version. Either way, it does not need to be part of the program.

Basketball Commitment

Todd Golden lands first transfer commitment as Florida’s head coach

https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2BepUF_0f4d6XfY00

Former Belmont guard Will Richard announced his commitment to the Florida Gators on Saturday.

Richard becomes the first player to commit to new head coach Todd Golden after picking the Gators over Clemson, Georgia Tech and Wake Forest. As a freshman, Richard started 30 of 33 games averaging 12.1 points and 6 rebounds per game. His best scoring performance (22 points) came in an NIT loss to Vanderbilt.

The 6-foot-5-inch, 195-pounder entered the portal on March 22 and Golden immediately got to work. The two spoke daily until Richard finally made it to campus on April 7, and the decision came shortly after that trip.

Landing Richards is a good start. He’s one of the more productive names in the portal and figures to be the primary ball-handler for the Gators next season. Pairing him with Kowacie Reeves would give Golden a talented duo in the backcourt to work with.

 

Welcome Coach Augustin!

Florida Gators

Tamisha Augustin
Tamisha Augustin Joins Florida Women’s Basketball Coaching Staff
GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Florida women’s basketball head coach Kelly Rae Finley has announced the addition of Tamisha Augustin to the staff as an assistant coach.
 
“Tamisha is one of the best in the game,” Finley said. “Her authentic care for people, combined with her work ethic and knowledge, make her the total package. We are excited for Tamisha to join our team and look forward to all that we will strive to accomplish together.”
 
Augustin will be heading to Gainesville after spending the 2021-22 campaign in the NBA G-League, serving as an assistant coach on Jason Terry’s staff for the Grand Rapids Gold, the G-League affiliate for the Denver Nuggets.   
 
“I am elated to join the Gators family and look forward to building on the foundation that Coach Finley has created,” Augustin said. “Kelly is a rising star in our women’s basketball profession and I admire her work ethic, compassion and dedication to this game. Through my faith, love and passion for the game, I will strive every day to build a championship culture for our UF student-athletes. I am grateful for this opportunity. Thank you, Gator Nation!”
 
No stranger to the Southeastern Conference, Augustin recorded a brief stint as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator at Mississippi State beginning in April 2021 before accepting a position with the Grand Rapids Gold.
 
Prior to her time at Mississippi State, Augustin, who was named the 2021 World Exposure Report Assistant Coach of the Year, spent two seasons as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator at Arizona. While in Tucson, Augustin helped guide the Wildcats to the program’s first-ever appearance in the NCAA championship game in 2021. Arizona defeated its foes in the Sweet Sixteen, Elite Eight and Final four by double digit points during the run, including an impressive 69-59 victory over No. 1 UConn in the Final Four.
 
In addition to making their first appearance in the national title game, Arizona recorded a 45-13 mark during Augustin’s time with the program, including seven victories against top-10 opponents. Focusing on her work with post players, she was instrumental in the development of Cate Reese, a two-time All-PAC-12 honoree and Naismith Trophy candidate. Augustin is also a proven elite recruiter, helping to sign three top-100 players and a duo of top transfers. Her efforts helped lay the foundation for the sixth-best recruiting class in the nation last spring.
 
During her first season with the program, the Wildcats finished 24-7, a tie for the second-most wins in Arizona history, which included three wins over top-10 opponents and their first-ever top-five victory when they defeated No. 4 Stanford in overtime. Arizona’s win in Corvallis over No. 9 Oregon State also marked the first time they beat a top-10 team on the road.
 
On the recruiting front, Augustin helped Arizona sign five-star prospect, two-time Gatorade National Player of the Year and Jordan Brand Classic selection, Lauren Ware, in 2020. She also played a key role in the signing of transfers Bendu Yeaney and 2020 ACC Sixth Player of the Year, Trinity Baptiste, both of whom started on the national runner-up team.
 
Before her time in Tucson, Augustin had one-year stints at Cincinnati (2017-18) and Minnesota (2016-17). As a Bearcat, Augustin helped Cincinnati to a 19-win season, the most victories since the 2002-03 season in addition to securing their first postseason bid since the 2012 campaign with an invite to the WNIT. Working with Iimar’i Thomas, she helped the freshman to AAC Freshman of the Year honors.
 
In the summer of 2016, Augustin was one of seven assistant coaches from around the country chosen to participate in Advocates for Athletic Equity’s (AAE) annual “Achieving Coaching Excellence” (ACE) Professional Development Program. The program is recognized as helping to boost the careers of some of the top minority coaches in the college game.
 
The 2022-23 season will not mark Augustin’s first coaching position in the state of Florida, as she was an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator for UCF from 2014-16. Under her watch, Zykira Lewis earned all-league second team honors, set the UCF single season record with 86 triples and averaged 18.9 points per game in 2014-15.
 
At the collegiate level, Augustin’s career began at South Carolina State where she was an assistant coach from 2010-12.
 
Augustin played collegiately at Alabama A&M from 2002-06 and was a two-time All-SWAC shooting guard and a four-time captain.
 
Augustin graduated from Alabama A&M with a bachelor’s degree in biology in 2005. She earned a master’s degree in microbiology there in 2007 and obtained a master’s in education from Regent University in 2010.
 
What They’re Saying About Tamisha
 
“Coach T is more than a great coach, she’s a great person. Her passion for people, her knowledge of the game, and her presence on the court is undeniable. Wishing her nothing but success at Florida.”
Jason Terry
Head Coach, Grand Rapids Gold
 
Tamisha Augustin was an integral part of building our team in its first year. She had an amazing ability to connect with every member of our team and staff. She is a winner in every sense of the word, and she will be a big reason why the Gators will build a championship program.”
– Scott Howard
Director of Player Personnel, Denver Nuggets | GM, Grand Rapids Gold
 
“Coach Tamisha is the definition of a players coach! She’s one of the most prepared coaches I’ve ever been around on any level. In our short time together, she helped me with on-court adjustments and film breakdown. She has earned the respect from all the players and that says a lot about who she is and what she is about. My time with coach was amazing and I can’t thank her enough for my development in a short time being together. One of the best in the game!”
Isaiah Thomas, Charlotte Hornets
 
– #GoGators –

New Staff – Welcome Sierra Griffin !

Sierra Griffin Joins the Gators as On-Campus Recruiting Coordinator
 
GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Sierra Griffin joined the Gators football recruiting staff as On-Campus Recruiting Coordinator, head coach Billy Napier announced Wednesday.

Prior to her arrival at Florida, Griffin worked as an Assistant Coordinator of On-Campus Recruiting – Football at Auburn University (2021-22) and as a Football Creative Intern at University of Miami (2020).

In her role with the Gators, she is responsible for providing information, guiding campus visits and building relationships to sell the Florida Football program to prospective student athletes.

A native of Woodstock, Ga., Griffin graduated from Auburn with a bachelor’s of science in exercise science and received a master’s of science in sports administration from Miami.