Calhoun Times

QB Trask gives No. 8 Fla. hope vs No. 5 Georgia

- By Mark Long

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — Florida’s Kyle Trask has one of the most impressive streaks in school history going right now.

The fifth-year senior has at least four touchdown passes in four straight games, a feat no other Gators quarterbac­k has accomplish­ed. Not even Tim Tebow, Rex Grossman or Danny Wuerffel.

Trask is the main reason the eighth-ranked Gators (31) like their chances against No. 5 and slightly favored Georgia (4-1) on Saturday in the “World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party.”

“I believe he needs to be in the Heisman race, first in the Heisman race,” receiver Trevon Grimes said. “He’s breaking records. He’s doing everything he needs to do. He’s playing phenomenal. … He’s going out there, he’s doing his thing and he’s playing with a confidence I haven’t seen before.

“I’m excited for him and looking forward to seeing what he does next.”

Trask and Florida have been nearly unstoppabl­e this season, scoring on 28 of 41 drives and averaging 42 points a game. Of course, they haven’t faced a defense with as much talent and depth as the Bulldogs have.

Georgia is giving up 16.2 points a game, and that number would be even better without a 41-24 loss at No. 2 Alabama last month.

But the Bulldogs, who have won three straight in the series, will be short-handed in Jacksonvil­le. Safety Richard LeCounte, who is recovering from a harrowing motorcycle accident on Halloween night, and defensive tackle Julian Rochester (knee) are out. Nose tackle Jordan Davis (elbow), safety Lewis Cine (ankle) and linebacker­s Quay Walker (neck) and Monty Rice (foot) also are banged up and could be limited or unavailabl­e.

“It’s a laundry list,” coach Kirby Smart said.

Added running back Zamir White: “The guys know their role and they know they need to step up this week and do their part.”

Nonetheles­s, Florida’s highscorin­g offense against Georgia’s usually stout defense is the matchup to watch in a rivalry that likely will determine the Southeaste­rn Conference East Division. The winner will have a chokehold on the East, hardly a surprise since the victor has advanced to the league’s showcase event 10 times in the last 14 years.

“It doesn’t clinch it or seal anything, but certainly whoever wins this game certainly is putting themselves in the driver’s seat to get to Atlanta,” Florida coach Dan Mullen said. “You’re two games up on this team and you’re really two games up on everybody else in the league at that point. So it makes it a big game.”

It’s probably bigger for the Gators, who have lost six of the last nine and need a victory to get back to Atlanta for the first time in four years and put themselves in the mix for a spot in the College Football Playoff.

“This is the biggest game of the season,” Trask said. “It has a lot of implicatio­ns.”

FIGHT FALLOUT

The Gators will be without starting defensive end Zach Carter in the first half against Georgia. Carter and linebacker Antwuan Powell drew automatic half-game suspension­s for being ejected for fighting in last week’s win against Missouri.

GROUND GAINS

While some Georgia fans may be wishing for a more dynamic passing game with quarterbac­k Stetson Bennett, history shows the team with the most success on the ground will win the game.

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