Relationships Dating
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Florida defensive end Jeremy Mincey spent last weekend at home in Georgia, h... No party for loser in Geor
"It's all they talked about: Bulldogs, Bulldogs, Bulldogs," Mincey said. "I don't want to hear about the Bulldogs. My own aunt was against me."
The annual football celebration known as the World's Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party strains relationships and fosters hostility well beyond the two border states. It also could define this season for No. 4 Georgia and No. 16 Florida.
"This is the game of the year," Gators linebacker Todd McCullough said. "It's my favorite game as a player. It was my favorite game as a young child. ... I wish I could play the Florida-Georgia game every day for the rest of my life."
The Bulldogs can clinch the Southeastern Conference Eastern Division with a victory and secure a spot in the title game for the third time in four years. Georgia (7-0, 5-0 SEC) also would keep alive its national title hopes.
"The way we're sitting right now, this game has huge implications in the East," Georgia coach Mark Richt said. "Have you ever heard the term, 'So close and yet so far?' We're very close. With a victory, we win it. With a loss, we're very, very far away from it."
Florida (5-2, 3-2) could spoil the Bulldogs' bid and stay in the hunt for the East title. If the Gators win today, they would need to beat Vanderbilt and South Carolina and have Auburn knock off Georgia in two weeks to get to the championship game.
A loss to Georgia would leave the Gators out of the SEC title game for a fifth consecutive season and raise more questions about the school's foundering football program, especially considering Florida would be in the same spot under coach Urban Meyer that it was for three years under Ron Zook - playing for a second-tier bowl berth.
The Gators have won 13 of the last 15 in the series, a dominating run that began with coach Steve Spurrier's arrival at Florida in 1990. He knocked off Georgia six straight times with Ray Goff at the helm and had a 4-1 edge on Jim Donnan before winning his lone meeting against Richt in 2001.
Even after Spurrier left for the NFL, the Gators kept winning. Zook beat Georgia his first two years, including a 2002 upset that was the Bulldogs' only loss.
Richt got his first win over Florida last year, a 31-24 victory that came just days after the Gators fired Zook, who agreed to coach the final four games.
The Bulldogs are looking for back-to-back wins in the series for the first time since 1988-89. They will try to do it with a backup quarterback making his first start against Florida.
Joe Tereshinski III will start in place of D.J. Shockley, the top-rated passer in the conference who sprained his left knee against Arkansas last week. Tereshinski is a third-generation Georgia player who has worked mostly on special teams.
"I've spent my whole lifetime around Georgia football," he said. "One of the biggest opponents for Georgia has always been Florida. To be starting against Florida is something I've always dreamed about."
The results agreed. Florida essentially managed one legitimate scoring drive against conference heavyweights Tennessee, Alabama and LSU this season - and lost two of those games.
"We have a tremendous amount of work to do offensively," Meyer said, adding that the most important thing he needed to do was get quarterback Chris Leak comfortable again.
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