KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -- Rocky Top hit rock bottom against the Florida
Gators.
Jesse Palmer threw a disputed 3-yard touchdown pass to Jabar Gaffney with 14
seconds remaining, lifting No. 6 Florida to an unlikely 27-23 victory over No.
11 Tennessee on Saturday.
"No question, God was smiling on us because the other team outplayed us,"
Gators coach Steve Spurrier said. "And somehow we got more points."
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| Florida running back Earnest Graham hauls the Vols' Steven Marsh into the end zone for a TD.(AP) | |
With a Neyland Stadium-record crowd of 108,768 cheering on the Vols, they
failed to hold off the Gators' game-winning, 91-yard march that brought an end
to Tennessee's 23-game home winning streak.
"Right now our pride is hurt," Tennessee coach Phillip Fulmer said, "and
we're really disappointed."
It was the Vols' inability to score touchdowns in the first half that
eventually led to their downfall. And the defeat couldn't have come in a more
demoralizing fashion.
On the winning play, a first-and-goal from the Tennessee 3, Palmer threw a
quick strike to Gaffney just over the goal line. Gaffney had the ball for an
instant and then it was knocked loose by cornerback Willie Miles. But line
judge Al Matthews ruled Gaffney made the catch, and the call stood after a
brief conference with referee Al Ford.
"I had it long enough for it to be a touchdown," said Gaffney, who
finished with six catches for 91 yards.
Mills had a different view.
"I saw the ball fall," he said. "I'm not a ref. What I think doesn't
matter. The Gators won but the world knows about the last play. I thought they
were going to overrule. I don't think they were sure."
The officials were not available for comment.
What was certain, though, was the Gators (3-0, 1-0 SEC) had beaten the Vols
(1-1, 0-1) for the 12th time in the last 15 meetings and now have the upper
hand in the SEC East race. The winner of this game has won the division six
times and the loser twice in the eight years since the league went to division
play.
Palmer is familiar with game-winning passes, but it's the first time in a
real game he has pulled it off.
"I've been in that situation five million times in PlayStation," Palmer
said, "but never in person. It's something I've dreamed about."
Florida took over on its own 9 and Palmer hit Gaffney for 33 yards to the
Gators' 38, and then found Reche Caldwell for 21 yards to the Vols 5. A 5-yard
penalty and a 7-yard completion later, Palmer hit Gaffney.
"In the huddle, we said 'let's go make some memories,'" Palmer said. "You
know you're a long way away but you can see it. You can see you can get
there."
When the game ended, the crowd booed and the Gators celebrated on the field.
Trailing 23-17 after Alex Walls kicked a school-record tying fifth goal -- a
42-yarder early in the fourth quarter -- the Gators closed to 23-20 on Jeff
Chandler's 32-yard field goal with 7:35 left.
And that field goal set the stage for the final dramatic moments in one of
the SEC's fiercest rivalries. In the last three years, this game has been
decided by a total of eight points -- the Vols won 20-17 in OT in '98 and the
Gators won last year, 23-21.
The loss offset a magnificent performance by Tennessee's Travis Henry, who
carried 37 times for 175 yards and a touchdown. A.J. Suggs, starting his first
game, was 17-of-29 for 140 yards.
Palmer, who was replaced for a time by Rex Grossman in last week's win over
Middle Tennessee, was 20-of-43 for 290 yards and had at least a half-dozen
passes dropped in the first half.
Florida took its first lead, 17-12, with 8:50 left in the third period when
cornerback Lito Sheppard stepped in front of Suggs' pass intended for Cedrick
Wilson and ran 19 yards for a touchdown.
Three plays earlier, Chandler pulled the Gators within two at 12-10 on a
24-yard field goal.
Henry scored Tennessee's only TD on a 1-yard dive with 1:43 left in the
third quarter. The 2-point conversion pass from Suggs to Wilson made it 20-17.
The Vols led 12-7 at halftime thanks to field goals of 36, 19, 29 and 19
yards by Walls. On three occasions, Tennessee reached the Florida 6, 1 and 2
and each time came away with a field goal.
Florida managed just 79 yards -- 62 passing, 17 rushing -- in the first half,
while the Vols piled up 226.
With the power running of Henry and safe, short swing passes by Suggs,
Tennessee had field goals on four of its six first-half possessions.
After moving 78 yards to the Florida 19 on their second drive, the Vols
settled for a 36-yard field goal by Walls with 3:30 left in the first period.
The first drive ended in a fumble by Wilson on the Florida 37.
Tennessee was back in business at the Florida 45 after Eric Parker returned
a punt 18 yards. But Henry fumbled on third down at the 1 and Walls kicked an
19-yarder 3:20 into the second period.
After the Gators went three-and-out for the fourth consecutive time with Palmer
at the controls, the Vols were on the move again after another strong punt
return by Parker, this one for 21 yards to the Gators 25. Henry nearly scored
from 13 yards out, but was tripped up by linebacker Byron Hardmon at the 6.
Henry fumbled on the next play, but the Vols recovered and Walls made it 9-0 on
a 29-yard field goal with 7:57 to go in the half.
While defense kept the Gators in the game, the offense led by Palmer didn't
pick up a first down until 7:34 remained in the half on a 30-yard pass to Alex
Willis. Florida made the most of the opportunity and cut the lead to 9-7 on
Earnest Graham's 1-yard TD run one play after Palmer hit Taylor Jacobs for 25
yards.
Suggs then completed passes of 14 yards to Parker, 9 to Bobby Graham, and 6
to Wilson, before Walls come on for another 19-yarder on the final play of the
half.
AP NEWS
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