GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- It was the kind of game where nothing made sense,
except the final score.
The left guard caught a touchdown pass. A punter glided his way to the
longest run of the day. A running back scored off a blocked punt. So did a wide
receiver.
Somewhere in all the madness Saturday, No. 5 Florida earned its seventh trip
to the Southeastern Conference title game with a 41-21 victory over No. 21
South Carolina.
"It was," Gators coach Steve Spurrier said, "a different-type game."
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| Florida lineman Thomas Moody dives into the end zone after catching a deflected pass.(AP) | |
So different, that long after Florida (9-1, 7-1) gets done celebrating its
SEC East title -- a ritual that has become almost routine -- the Gators will
surely remember this as one of the weirdest, wackiest displays of football
they've ever played.
"It was the wildest game I've ever been a part of," said Gators
quarterback Jesse Palmer, who came off the bench to lead the Florida rally.
It left South Carolina (7-3, 5-3) bemoaning a 21-3 lead squandered and a
lost chance to continue Lou Holtz's impossible journey, from 0-11 last season
to SEC champions in 2000.
"We aren't good enough fundamentally," Holtz said. "They were just too
strong for us. Defensively, we played like we were in the glare of the
headlights. Offensively, they just dominated us up front."
Still, the Gamecocks had their chance thanks to a pair of blocked punts, one
returned for a score by receiver Carlos Spikes, the other by running back Derek
Watson. It gave them a 21-3 lead in the first quarter and left The Swamp in
shock.
Of course, nobody has more big-play comeback potential than the Gators.
"It kind of set us up to pitch it around a little bit," Spurrier said.
"We get behind, and here, we're either going to get way behind, or we're going
to catch up."
The risk-taking began early when punter Alan Rhine, still smarting from the
two blocked kicks, ran around left end for 26 yards on fourth-and-2.
On the next play, Palmer boinked a pass off the back of cornerback Sheldon
Brown's helmet and into the hands of Jabar Gaffney for a 40-yard gain to set up
the first touchdown and trim the deficit to 11.
On the next drive, Palmer hit Gaffney for a 70-yard score -- relatively
routine for this day.
Then came the play that not even Spurrier could draw up.
On third-and-goal from the 6, Palmer came under heavy pressure and unloaded
a pass that deflected off a South Carolina defender and bounded into the hands
of left guard Thomas Moody.
Seeing the play unfold in front of him, Palmer nudged Moody toward the end
zone and Moody lumbered in, mobbed by teammates after scoring the go-ahead
points, and one of the strangest touchdowns in memory.
"I got an early Christmas present," Moody said. "Offensive linemen aren't
supposed to do that. It happened today. It's one of those dreams you have."
Holtz, a study in fist-pumping enthusiasm earlier, stood on the sideline
expressionless after that one, wondering how it could all go so bad, so
quickly.
The lead gone, Holtz seemingly lost his head for a moment, too, electing to
punt to Florida's explosive Lito Sheppard with 19 seconds remaining in the
half.
Sheppard juked and slashed his way for a 57-yard touchdown return, his
second career score on a punt return, and the Gators led 31-21 after a
remarkable first half.
"That was critical," Holtz said. "That was what put the nail in our
players' hearts."
Lost in the commotion was another turn of Spurrier's quarterback
merry-go-round. He benched redshirt freshman Rex Grossman after a few empty
drives during the first quarter.
Palmer finished 15-for-27 for 250 yards and three touchdowns, one more than
the Gamecocks had surrendered all season.
Once again, the Gators have a quarterback issue to settle heading into next
week's huge game at No. 3 Florida State, although Spurrier spoke as if the job
is Palmer's to lose.
"It's a struggle for Rex," Spurrier said. "He's going to be fine, I
think. But he's a freshman, and it was time to put a senior in the game."
South Carolina will prepare for its game next week against Clemson, then a
likely bowl berth in the Citrus, Outback or Peach -- not bad considering where
the program was just a season ago.
But this one will sit hard for a while, especially considering the Gamecocks
briefly looked like they could do what no SEC East team has done since the
conference was split into divisions: Beat Florida at the Swamp.
"You can't do what we did at the end of the first half," linebacker Marco
Hutchinson said. "I think that's when the reality set in. We saw we were up
for a fight, a long fight. I don't think we responded to the pressure as well
as we usually do."
The Gators clinched the win with a pair of goal-line stands, stopping South
Carolina twice inside the 2 as the Gamecocks tried to trim the 20-point deficit
in the fourth quarter.
With his score, Gaffney has 13 touchdowns this season, the most in major
college history for a freshman wide receiver. He finished with 168 yards, tying
a Florida record with his sixth straight 100-yard game.
AP NEWS
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