Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Gators coach recalls special run

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JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — Dan Mullen remembered the outcomes, but he couldn’t quite recall the details.

So he went searching for the Florida Georgia box scores from his first stint (2005-08) with the Gators. It was an enjoyable refresher course.

Mullen went 3-1 against the Bulldogs as Florida’s offensive coordinato­r, including two wins that helped propel the team to Southeaste­rn Conference and national championsh­ips.

The final one was his most memorable, a 49-10 victory that was essentiall­y over early enough for Mullen to spend the final few minutes on the sideline instead of in the coaches booth.

“I didn’t always get to experience all that fun stuff on the field back then,” he said. “So to come down on the field for the last two minutes of the game was pretty cool.”

Mullen begins a new chapter in the “World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party” when No. 9-ranked Florida (6-1, 4-1 SEC) and seventh-ranked Georgia (6-1, 4-1) meet Saturday at TIAA Bank Field for the 83rd time in the past 86 years.

For Mullen, who returned to Gainesvill­e after nearly a decade at Mississipp­i State, the rivalry hasn’t changed a bit. It has ultra-high stakes and title-game aspiration­s.

Florida and Georgia enter the neutralsit­e game ranked inside the top 10 for the first time since 2008, and the winner likely will wind up close to the fourth spot in the first edition of the College Football Playoff rankings next week. The loser probably can forget about playing for a national championsh­ip or getting to Atlanta for the SEC title game.

“If you’re not amped up this game or you’re not excited, you’re screwed up in the head,” Florida guard Tyler Jordan said.

ESPN’s “College Game Day” as well as SEC Nation will broadcast live a few hundred yards apart, the first time they’ve been at the same venue on the same day in the regular season.

It’s also the first game in a two-week span that will showcase the SEC’s top teams, with top-ranked Alabama visiting No. 4 LSU next Saturday night.

“It won’t be about what we say or how we say it,” third-year Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. “It’ll be about who plays well on the field and who controls the line of scrimmage that will be the key to this game. It’s not waving a magic wand or some guy giving a speech in the locker room. It’s really just work.”

The Bulldogs got outworked at LSU two weeks ago, falling behind, 16-0, in the first half and losing, 36-16. The Tigers ran for 275 yards and took advantage of four turnovers.

Georgia has spent the past two weeks stewing over their performanc­e.

“You kind of need things like sometimes to kind of humble you and put things in perspectiv­e, just to show how much more you have to work for,” defensive end Jonathan Ledbetter said.

 ?? Mark Humphrey/Associated Press ?? Dan Mullen is in his first year as head coach at Florida, where he was 3-1 against Georgia as offensive coordinato­r from 2005-08.
Mark Humphrey/Associated Press Dan Mullen is in his first year as head coach at Florida, where he was 3-1 against Georgia as offensive coordinato­r from 2005-08.

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