Florida fell 34-7 against top-ranked Georgia last week, when
Gators redshirt freshman quarterback Anthony Richardson threw
two interceptions and lost a fumble in his first career start.
"It's six inches between a pat on the back and a kick in the
rear end," Gators coach Dan Mullen said Monday of his team. "In
the SEC, you're either getting one or the other. There's no
in-between."
A talented offensive line has helped Florida compile an FBS-leading
6.07 yards per carry and to become one of two teams (with Ole
Miss) to average more than 475 overall yards and 240 yards
rushing.
South Carolina (4-4, 1-4) is coming off a bye week that followed
a 44-14 defeat at then-No. 17 Texas A&M on Oct. 23.
The quarterback position continues to be a fluid situation for
the Gamecocks.
Former graduate assistant Zeb Noland, who underwent a minor knee
procedure last week, was practicing earlier this week in hopes
of being ready to face the Gators. If the coaching staff feels
Noland isn't mobile enough to perform, senior Jason Brown would
start.
Brown relieved Noland in the fourth quarter against the Aggies
-- one week after Noland, who started the first three games,
entered for the final drive and fueled a come-from-behind
victory against Vanderbilt. Sophomore Luke Doty, who played most
of the game against the Commodores, is out for the season after
undergoing foot surgery.
"If you look at the great offenses across high school football,
college football, the NFL, a pretty common denominator is
they've all got pretty good quarterback play," South Carolina
coach Shane Beamer said. "You've got to have a quarterback, and
you've got to keep him healthy. We have quarterbacks; we haven't
been able to keep them healthy."
Florida leads the overall series 29-9-3. The Gators have won
each in the past three, including a 38-24 victory in
Gainesville, Fla., last year.
--Field Level Media
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