COLUMBIA, S.C. -- South Carolina is running out of goal posts.
For the second straight week, the Gamecocks ended a long-losing streak in
stunning fashion, beat No. 9 Georgia 21-10 to end nearly three years -- and 18
losses -- of Southeastern Conference frustration.
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| Georgia's Terrence Edwards has the ball knocked away by South Carolina's Shannon Whadley.(AP) | |
Just like last week's 31-0 win over New Mexico State that ended South
Carolina's 21-game overall losing streak, the goal posts and shrubs didn't
stand a chance at Williams-Brice Stadium.
"I tell you what, I don't want to start that as a tradition," said Holtz,
who was soaked with a cooler of ice water for the second consecutive week.
If the Gamecocks (2-0, 1-0 SEC) keep winning, he'll never stop it.
"These are what make last year enjoyable, if that's possible," said South
Carolina offensive coordinator, and Holtz's son, Skip. "To see it all come
together and to see it all come together is really exciting."
And unbelievable.
Georgia's Heisman Trophy contender Quincy Carter threw five interceptions,
one less than all of 1999. After a first-possession touchdown, the Bulldogs
(1-1, 0-1) could only manage a 21-yard second-quarter field goal. Derek Watson
had three touchdowns as South Carolina controlled the ball almost 24 minutes of
the second half.
"I think Georgia underestimated us a little bit," Gamecocks defensive
lineman Kalimba Edwards said.
The Bulldogs were held to 287 total yards. Even worse for Georgia fans who
considered this one of its strongest teams since Herschel Walker's days 20
years ago is that any title - SEC or national - hopes could be over.
If Georgia's offense struggles against South Carolina, which hadn't won an
SEC game since beating Vanderbilt 35-3 on Oct. 25, 1997, what can it possibly
do against Tennessee and Florida next month?
"It's still early in the season, even though you don't want to lose to an
inferior team," George defensive tackle Richard Seymour said.
Carter was supposed to be Georgia's junior leader, who passed up a shot at
the NFL draft last year to lead the Bulldogs to glory. But he never gave them a
chance in this one. He missed receivers, threw two first-play interceptions and
had a personal-foul penalty that led to South Carolina's go-ahead score.
After Andre Goodman returned Carter's interception 70 yards, the quarterback
rushed to make the tackle and flung Goodman hard to ground out of bounds. The
penalty put the ball on Georgia's 2 and Watson rushed over for a 14-7 lead.
The Bulldogs drove to South Carolina's 5 three minutes before halftime. On
third down, Carter missed a wide open Jervaris Johnson in the end zone and
Georgia settled for a 21-yard field goal.
Carter, who carved the Gamecocks for 253 yards and a touchdown last year,
was 10-of-24 for 108 yards.
"Obviously, we have some real problems offensively," Georgia coach Jim
Donnan said. "From my standpoint, this is a real letdown."
Things turned for South Carolina early. Georgia scored on its opening
possession on Brett Millican's 5-yard TD. But Watson, a sophomore who passed on
Tennessee to join Holtz in February 1999, returned the kickoff 53 yards. He
finished the drive with a 5-yard scoring run.
"It showed we weren't going to back down to them," said Watson, who
finished with 93 yards on 20 carries.
Watson's final score, a 21-yard cutback run with 4:10 left in the game, put
things away and got students and fans massing along the end zone railings. The
yellow posts fell a lot quicker this time - the fans got better from week one
to week two.
"It's the Gamecock millennium baby," one yelled as they tumbled.
Georgia's defense kept South Carolina off-balance most of the game -- holding
the Gamecocks scoreless on five straight trips inside Georgia's 35. But nothing
was going right for the Bulldogs.
Corey Alexander dropped the ball in the backfield, picked it up ran out of
bounds, where he was hit hard by Georgia linebacker Kendrell Bell. The referee
threw the flag as Bulldogs tackle Marcus Stroud pleaded and shouted at
officials.
AP NEWS
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