Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

UF suffers painful loss after rare errant kick

- By Edgar Thompson Staff writer egthompson@orlandosen­tinel.com

GAINESVILL­E – Since the time he stepped on the field at UF, placekicke­r Eddy Piñeiro has been automatic.

Line up an extra-point attempt and chalk up another one for the Gators. Until Saturday. With his team trailing 17-16 after rallying from a 14-point deficit during the span of nine minutes against LSU, Piñeiro missed his first extra point in 47 tries as a Gator. Neither team would score again to end UF’s threegame win streak and deliver the Tigers a muchneeded, if not season-saving win.

“You don’t think that’s going to happen,” UF coach Jim McElwain said of Piñeiro’s miscue. “It’s why they don’t give you the automatic one.”

McElwain said Piñeiro’s stunning miss with 1:45 remaining in the third quarter might have resulted from a bad snap. Whatever the reason, McElwain and his players also made clear Piñeiro’s momentum killing miss did not decide the fate of the No. 21 Gators (3-2, 3-1 SEC).

“We have to finish at the end,” quarterbac­k Feleipe Franks asid. “That starts with me.”

The Gators certainly had their chances against the Tigers as a reported crowd of 88,427 looked on during UF’s homecoming game.

Kept on its heels much of the game against LSU’s speed on the perimeter and the play calling of offensive coordinato­r Matt Canada, the Gators defense held the Tigers to just 36 yards during the fourth quarter and twice gave UF’s offense the ball.

The Gators’ final chance began with 4:01 left in the game from their own 4-yard line. A combinatio­n of poor field position, questionab­le clock management and a young quarterbac­k led to a disorganiz­ed drive when UF needed the utmost precision to pull off yet another final-minute win.

The Gators’ chances ended on their own 25 when Franks threw passes to Brandon Powell were incomplete on third and fourth downs.

“A sense of urgency, it's pretty obvious that we didn't have it there,” McElwain said.

The Tigers, on the other hand, played like a team with something to prove.

LSU (4-2, 1-1) entered Saturday coming off a loss to three-touchdown underdog that led fans to call for head coach Ed Orgeron’s job just five games into his tenure.

“You all know it was tough week,” Orgeron said. “Our guys showed resiliency and blocked out the noise. We believed in each other and got back to work.”

Early on, LSU beat the Gators’ defense on the perimeter with jet sweeps.

With UF failing to set the the edge, the Tigers gained 53 yards on three of them, including by a 30-yard touchdown by Russell Gage to give LSU a 7-0 lead and end an 11-play, 86-yard drive.

Things looked bleak for the Gators after LSU marched 75 yards on nine plays to stake a 17-3 lead early in the third quarter.

A 47-yard completion to LSU receiver DJ Chark appeared to be an intercepti­on by UF cornerback Duke Dawson, but officials ruled the contested, 50-50 ball was in Chark’s possession to move the Tigers to the Gators’ 17.

Five straight runs moved LSU to the UF 2, where LSU quarterbac­k Danny Etling completed a touchdown pass to tight end Tory Carter wide open in the right flat.

Despite having shown few positive signs, the Gators’ offense came alive behind its run game. UF compiled 112 rushing yards during the third quarter, scoring twice on short runs by Lamical Perine to cut LSU’s lead to 17-16.

After a 1-yard touchdown run by Perine, Piñeiro shockingly smother-hooked his extrapoint attempt.

 ?? SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kadarius Toney, left, of the Florida Gators rushes past Eric Monroe of the LSU Tigers during the game at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium on Saturday.
SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY IMAGES Kadarius Toney, left, of the Florida Gators rushes past Eric Monroe of the LSU Tigers during the game at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium on Saturday.

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