GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- After a few nervous days, Florida fans can rest easy. The rest of the team's 2018 signees have safely made it to campus, meaning the entire signing class is now on board.

Wide receiver Jacob Copeland was the last player to be officially confirmed as enrolled, and the delay in confirming he was good to go had left many fans uneasy. He was the highest-rated player in Florida's 2018 class, ranked as the No. 69 overall player in the country.

His addition should help further bolster a receiver corps that Dan Mullen has done a tremendous job upgrading since his arrival in late November.

The first-year Florida coach added Copeland to the mix after taking transfers from Ole Miss receiver Van Jefferson and Ohio State transfer Trevon Grimes. Both of those transfers are awaiting word from the NCAA on whether they'll be granted immediate eligibility for the 2018 season; Copeland won't have any issues playing in 2018 now that he's on campus and enrolled.

Along with Copeland, six other signees have joined the team for the Summer B semester: defensive back John Huggins, tight end Dante Lang, defensive lineman Malik Langham, kicker Evan McPherson, tight end Kyle Pitts and athlete Justin Watkins.

Three preferred walk-ons have also joined the mix, with athlete Jaylin Jackson, long snapper Marco Ortiz and linebacker Umstead Sanders also joining the program.

The arrival of the remaining signees gives Florida its full class on campus for the third straight recruiting cycle. The 2018 class for the Gators -- which doesn't take into account the addition of the transfers like Jefferson, Grimes or defensive end Adam Shuler -- ranked 14th nationally and fourth in the SEC.

Another late addition to the class was tight end Lucas Krull, who committed to Florida and enrolled last week.

The Gators will likely be expecting significant contributions from several players in the class, most notably quarterback Emory Jones. Jones is expected to play a role as the lone true dual-threat prospect on the roster, though Mullen will likely work him along slowly.

Jones was rated as the No. 85 overall player in the country and the No. 5 dual-threat prospect in the 2018 class. He went through spring practice and appeared to be turning a corner in the final week of the spring.

Others who could play a significant role next fall are defensive back Amari Burney, cornerback Trey Dean, running back Dameon Pierce, rush end Andrew Chatfield, linebacker David Reese, tight end Kyle Pitts, McPherson and Copeland.

Burney and Dean took part in spring practice and quickly worked their way up the depth chart in the secondary, with Dean a top backup at cornerback and Burney splitting time between nickelback and safety in a backup role.

Pierce will have a lot of competition in the backfield at running back but already appeared to move past sophomore Adarius Lemons and fellow freshman Iverson Clement on the depth chart. He's a big, powerful back who can get downhill in a hurry.