GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- With roughly a third of the season in the books, GatorBait.net stops to update its position grades. Today, we look at the offense.

Quarterback

Depth Chart: Jeff Driskel, Treon Harris, Skyler Mornhinweg, Will Grier

Overview: Florida came out of fall camp with a seemingly very good situation at quarterback. Driskel was playing well and Harris had improved by leaps and bounds in just a few weeks of work on the practice field. The Gators really looked like they'd turned a corner at the most important position on offense.

Fast forward a month, and we're right back to where we ended the 2013 season. Driskel has been only marginally improved at best, to the point that Florida may have a legitimate quarterback controversy on its hands in the bye week.

Until Driskel can start connecting on more passes, particularly down the field, Florida's offense will remain a work in progress. Worse, if he continues to play like he has, there's the very real possibility that the confidence on offense shatters again and the Gators plummet right back to the bottom of the SEC in production.

Key Question: Can Driskel shake off a couple bad outings and be the player we saw in fall camp? Or will he force the coaches to give Harris a shot as the starter?

Post-Camp Grade: B+

Early Season Grade: C-

Running Back

Depth Chart: Matt Jones, Kelvin Taylor, Brandon Powell OR Mack Brown

Overview: Going into the season Florida figured to be extremely deep at running back. But it's basically been a two-man show so far. Jones has emerged as the back the coaches thought he would be in 2013, while Taylor has had a quiet start.

While the running backs have been good, they haven't yet been great. Jones went off against Kentucky, but otherwise we haven't seen a ton of ultra-dynamic plays. It'd be nice to see a bit more of Powell, since he offers some rare speed Florida seems to be lacking.

In any case, the position is fine. It feels like it has the potential to be better than that, but we'll see moving forward.

Key Question: Will the Gators get Powell more involved to get some home run ability out of the backfield?

Post-Camp Grade: A-

Early Season Grade: B+

Wide Receiver

Depth Chart: WR(X) -- Quinton Dunbar, Demarcus Robinson, Andre Debose | WR(Z) -- Demarcus Robinson, Ahmad Fulwood | WR(Y) -- Latroy Pittman, Valdez Showers, C.J. Worton

Overview: There's no question that Robinson's emergence is what many expected to see a year ago. He has always been the most talented receiver since he stepped foot on campus. Now he's finally getting a chance to show it.

The rest of the group has left a lot to be desired, though. Dunbar is dropping passes he normally snags every time. Pittman hasn't been a matchup problem in the slot at all. Debose has yet to get involved. And the depth chart across the board seems to be much slimmer than we expected it to be.

Aside from Robinson, the group has been fairly disappointing. It's better, we think. Just not by a whole lot yet.

Key Question: Can anyone step up to be a consistent second target behind Robinson?[/b]

Post-Camp Grade: A-

Early Season Grade: B-

Tight End / B Position

Depth Chart: Clay Burton, Tevin Westbrook, DeAndre Goolsby

Overview: This position was dealt a huge blow when Jake McGee suffered a season-ending broken leg in the opener. That said, Burton has been better than expected. He's actually catching passes now, and he's always been a very sound run blocker.

Westbrook has snagged a few passes but can't be counted on to consistently show up in a given game. Goolsby looked lost mentally when he played against Alabama a week ago. So the position is definitely still a work in progress.

The good news is that the position has been plenty serviceable for Florida through the first three weeks. The bad news is that with McGee, the Gators thought it could be a real weapon. With the current personnel, that's not going to happen.

Key Question: Can Goolsby progress quickly from a mental standpoint, like he seemed to do in spring ball, to emerge as a reliable pass-catching option?

Post-Camp Grade: B

Early Season Grade: B-

Offensive Line

Depth Chart: LT -- Chaz Green, D.J. Humphries | LG -- Trip Thurman, Tyler Moore | C -- Max Garcia, Drew Sarvary | RG -- Trenton Brown, Tyler Moore | RT -- Roderick Johnson, David Sharpe

Overview: Oddly enough, we've always kind of counted on Florida's offensive line to be better at run blocking than pass blocking. So far this year, that hasn't really been the case. A patchwork unit with two starters out has actually done a remarkably good job protecting the quarterback.

The run blocking hasn't been bad, it just hasn't been quite as good as we figured it would be. The line needs to generate a bit more push at the point of attack.

Still, the play of the line has easily been the most pleasant surprise of the season for Florida fans. They're playing well. Certainly well enough for the Gators to be a good to very good offense if some other positions start to click better.

Key Question: Will Florida be able to stay healthy? The Gators have already lost two starters and can't afford for anyone else to go down.

Post-Camp Grade: B-

Early Season Grade: B+

Kicker

Depth Chart: Austin Hardin OR Frankie Velez

Overview: Velez has been the field goal kicker from close range, while Hardin has handled the long ones. They've been better, but it's hard to tell just yet if that's fools gold, because there haven't been many attempts yet. Jury is still out.

Key Question: What happens when Florida's forced to attempt multiple field goals in the same game? What happens if there are a few misses, will the confidence collapse?

Post-Camp Grade: C+

Early Season Grade: B