Florida coach Dan Mullen opened his first team meeting this week talking about handling success.

  • Gators coming off their biggest win since the 2015 season
  • Face Vanderbilt on the road this week, a team they have beaten 26 of the last 27 meetings
  • The four-game win streak is Florida's longest since 2015

He’ll find out Saturday if anyone was paying attention.

Coming off the program’s most significant victory in three years and with a rivalry game against No. 2 Georgia looming in two weeks, the 14th-ranked Gators are facing the sometimes-daunting task of avoiding a letdown at Vanderbilt.

“We won, so guess what, Twitter’s going to tell you how great we are,” Mullen said. “If you like being told how great you are, get back to work and let’s win again, OK? If you’d rather be told that you’re no good and you stink, well then you don’t have to work very hard and everyone will tell us we won’t win the game and then everybody will tell us how bad we are.

“When you walk on campus like today, everyone’s patting you on the back, right? It’s only about six inches lower that they’re kicking you in the rear end, right? It’s about that much difference. I like the pat on the back rather than the kick in the rear end, so let’s just keep working to keep it six inches higher.”

Florida (5-1, 3-1 Southeastern Conference) has won four straight since losing at home to Kentucky, none bigger than last weekend’s 27-19 victory against then-No. 5 LSU. It’s the team’s longest winning streak since a 6-0 start in 2015 that included a lopsided win over then-No. 3 Mississippi.

The Gators have been up and down since.

If they want to keep going in the right direction, they have to find a way to get motivated for an 11 a.m. kickoff on the road against one of the five SEC teams without a league victory and in front of an expected crowd of about 30,000.

“We definitely understand,” receiver Josh Hammond said. “We’re going to treat Vanderbilt as a big game because it’s the next game coming up. We’ve still got to be ready to prepare and treat it as if it’s a national championship game and come out ready to practice and continue to get better.

“I think that will be the biggest thing moving forward: just to not let our improvement that we keep making going up and let it slip or plateau. We’ve got to continue to get better, get better, get better and it will propel us into the game on Saturday.”

The Gators have won four in a row and 26 of the last 27 against Vandy (3-3, 0-2).

Instead of focusing on how one-sided the series has been or that the Commodores lost their two conference games this season by a combined 51 points, Mullen pointed to how tough Vanderbilt has played Florida in the past.

The Gators shouldn’t require much of a reminder since the last three games have been close. Florida needed a late field goal for a 9-7 victory in 2015 and three turnovers to win 13-6 the following year in Nashville. The Gators had a little more breathing room last year, but the 38-24 outcome was a one-score game until Malik Davis’ late touchdown run.

“For our guys to have any thought except for how hard I can go on the next play would be us taking a step backwards as a team,” Mullen said. “That has to be the focus of everybody within the program.”