Baltimore Sun Sunday

Party to remember

Trask tosses 4 more TD passes as Gators roll in rivalry game

- By Mark Long

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — Kyle Trask started jumping up and down on the sideline. His Florida teammates took it to another level, running and leaping into the stands.

Coach Dan Mullen wasn’t going to be left out off the fun. Mullen pulled himself onto the edge of the front row and celebrated wildly with fans.

Mullen clearly understood the magnitude of the victory. Everyone did.

Trask had another four-touchdown night, becoming the first quarterbac­k in Southeaste­rn Conference history to accomplish the feat in five consecutiv­e games, and the eighth-ranked Gators beat No. 5 and undermanne­d Georgia 44-28 on Saturday.

“You’ve got to enjoy it,” Mullen said. “I might be 48 years old, but I’m really young on the inside so I’ve still got to enjoy some of that stuff.”

The Gators (4-1) ended a three-game losing streak in the rivalry known as the

“World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party” — it was Mullen’s most significan­t victory in three years in Gainesvill­e — and now have a strangleho­ld on the SEC’s East Division.

The Bulldogs (4-2), who entered the game as 3 1⁄2- point favorites, were likely eliminated from College Football Playoff considerat­ion and probably have a quarterbac­k competitio­n moving forward.

Florida, meanwhile, has a Heisman Trophy contender.

Trask completed 30 of 43 passes for a career-high 474 yards — 8 yards shy of Tim Tebow’s single-game school record — despite playing much of the night without standout tight end Kyle Pitts.

Pitts was knocked out of the game in the second quarter on Lewis Cine’s crushing hit over the middle. Cine was ejected for targeting, adding to Georgia’s thin defense.

The Bulldogs were without nose tackle Jordan Davis (elbow), safety Richard LeCounte (motorcycle accident) and defensive tackle Julian Rochester (knee) to start the game.

Trask and the Gators took advantage, burning Georgia repeatedly with wheel routes while overcoming a 14-0 deficit. Running backs Malik Davis, Nay’Quan Wright and Dameon Pierce combined to catch 10 passes for 212 yards.

“Kyle Trask does a great job,” Mullen said. “He’s not going to force the ball. If they’re going bracket and take away and double people, he’s going to go to who you’re not doubling or covering.”

Once Trask and Florida got going, the Bulldogs did little to stop them. The Gators scored on seven of eight possession­s after a three-and-out to open the game and finished with 571 yards — the most allowed in Georgia coach Kirby Smart’s five seasons.

“We just can’t let this game define us,“Dawgs receiver Kearis Jackson said. “We’re not in the situation we want to be in right now, but we still have games to be played. There are still plays out there to be made.”

The Dawgs led 14-0 after the freshman’s first career TD reception. Zamir White scored on the game’s first play from scrimmage, going untouched for 75 yards. It looked like it would be a Georgia rout. It ended up being Florida’s night to celebrate.

“I don’t make excuses,” Smart said, pointing out his team is 19-2 in its last 21 East games. “I don’t look at it as cause for concern. I’m not going to say the sky’s falling or everything’s coming down. We’ve got to be better.”

 ?? JOHN RAOUX/AP ?? Florida receiver Justin Shorter runs toward the end zone on a 14-yard touchdown reception against Georgia during the first half Saturday.
JOHN RAOUX/AP Florida receiver Justin Shorter runs toward the end zone on a 14-yard touchdown reception against Georgia during the first half Saturday.

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