New York Post

Hail of a crazy finish

Final desperatio­n heave boosts Florida over Tennessee in stunner

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GAINESVILL­E, Fla. — Feleipe Franks heaved a 63yard touchdown pass to Tyrie Cleveland as the clock expired, and No. 24 Florida beat No. 23 Tennessee, 26-20, in a wild, wacky and sometimes unwatchabl­e rivalry game Saturday.

Franks scrambled away from the rush on a firstand-10 play with 9 seconds remaining and found Cleveland behind safety Micah Abernathy for a Hail Mary that no one — especially the Volunteers — saw coming.

The final play capped a crazy fourth quarter in which the teams combined for 37 points and little, if any, defense.

“Oh my gosh, it’s indescriba­ble,” Franks said. “You grow up waiting for moments like that to happen in your life, and when it does happen, you don’t have any words to describe it.” Here’s one: Unpredicta­ble. Tennessee (2-1, 0-1 SEC) can blame three missed field goals for not being ahead late. The Gators (1-1, 1-0) looked as if they had the game in hand early in the final frame, but found a way to let the Volunteers get back in it.

Franks had one huge mistake — an intercepti­on in Florida territory that set up Tennessee’s tying field goal. The Vols had three plays from the 9, but failed to get in the end zone and settled for three points with 50 seconds left.

It looked for sure as if it was headed for overtime — and then Franks found Cleveland.

“It’s crazy, it’s crazy,” Cleveland said. “I think this is about the fastest I ever ran.”

Fellow receiver Brandon Powell was the first to congratula­te Cleveland in the end zone. Powell slapped him so hard upside the helmet that it knocked his mouthpiece out. Their teammates and coaches piled on a few seconds later. It was a surreal scene, especially for a team that didn’t score an offensive touchdown in the first seven quarters of the season.

Cleveland was one of the last players on the field. As he walked into the tunnel and toward the locker room, he turned and waved a final time to cheering fans. He could have taken a bow. “It was nothing to do with me,” coach Jim McElwain said. “Sometimes things like that are really special. I’ve got some burned images in my mind that I will carry with me the rest of my life.”

 ?? AP ?? CLEVELAND ROCKS: Florida’s Tyrie Cleveland, who got behind Tennessee’s Micah Abernathy, catches the game-winning pass as time expires in an otherwise lackluster SEC contest.
AP CLEVELAND ROCKS: Florida’s Tyrie Cleveland, who got behind Tennessee’s Micah Abernathy, catches the game-winning pass as time expires in an otherwise lackluster SEC contest.

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