Final pregame thoughts:
I'm glad this will be the last time Michigan plays a regular season neutral site game for the foreseeable future, and hopefully these awful all maize uniforms never come back. I don't think this will be a blowout like the bowl game two years ago, but I wouldn't surprised if it is.
The biggest key is how successful Michigan is at running the ball. I think Evans is going to be very good, potentially all-BigTen this year with Higdon and Isaac being good backups at RB. The OLine is supposedly better at run-blocking than last year. Meanwhile, supposedly Florida's DLine is their strength along with some decent linebackers.
The wildcard of the game is Michigan's passing game. I think Speight will be ready but the OLine could struggle in pass-protection and the aforementioned RBs aren't as good in blocking as Smith was last year. Of course, the receivers are mostly inexperienced but talented, so I suspect shorter routes will be Michigan's primary passing plays. Avoiding 3rd-and-long situations will be important.
Defensively, I am feeling rather confident. The DLine should be able to create a lot of pressure and the LBs are strong against the run. The safeties are new starters, but both played well last year. The CBs are my main concern, but so long as the front 7 gets to the QB soon enough, that should mitigate that, though they'll still probably give up a few big plays.
Special teams were a major advantage for Michigan last year. The kicker, punter, and returners are all new, which is a concern, but the kicker and punter were both highly rated and there have been positive reports about them so far. I'm less optimistic that the new returners will be as good as Peppers and Lewis were, but as long as they catch the ball, I won't complain. The coverage teams were pretty good last year, and Michigan led the country in punt blocks, too, so that could be a big advantage. I understand that Florida has strong special teams, as well, though.
34-23 is my score prediction.