Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Gators comeback falls short

Gators defeat Alabama in every way — except when it comes to the scoreboard

- Mike Bianchi

UF can’t overcome early deficit in 31-29 loss to Alabama in Swamp.

GAINESVILL­E — Four years ago when Dan Mullen accepted the head coaching job at the University of Florida, he talked about re-establishi­ng the “Gator Standard” — a standard of winning SEC and national championsh­ips like the program did when Mullen was offensive coordinato­r under Urban Meyer.

This question must be asked after this Gator-chomping, Swamp-stomping 31-29 loss to Nick Saban’s No. 1-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide in front of a deafening delirious sellout crowd at the Swamp:

Are close losses to Saban’s Cyborgs part of the new Gator standard?

Let’s not forget, it was the Gators who played Alabama closer than any team last season before succumbing 52-46 in the SEC Championsh­ip Game. And now this — a game in which Florida outgained the Crimson Tide (439 yards to 324), outrushed them (258 to 91),

outmuscled them and pretty much outplayed them.

One of my Gator buddies this week told me he hoped UF would just “keep it close” against Alabama, which made me shake my head and give him a lecture on Gator standards. Keeping it close isn’t the standard Steve Spurrier set here when he arrived three decades ago. Al Davis never said, “Just keep it close, baby.” He never said, “Just beat the spread, baby.” No, Davis said, “Just win, baby.

The Gators kept it close and they covered the spread, but they did not win.

In fact, there was never a moment in the game where you felt like Alabama was going to lose.

Yes, the Gators showed guts and grit and persistenc­e and perseveran­ce. They had every chance to fold; they had every chance to get blown out.

Alabama took its first three possession­s and rolled over Florida’s shell-shocked defense en route to a 21-3 lead. Florida’s defense looked hopeless and helpless, and the offense, under new starting quarterbac­k Emory Jones, even got booed at one point early in the second half. I’ve never understood college football fans who boo their own team and players. Sheesh, it’s not like they don’t have enough to worry about trying to block and tackle Alabama.

Give Jones and the Gators credit for never quitting — not even after Alabama had just taken a 12-point lead and UF muffed the ensuing kickoff and took over at its own 1-yard line. Jones drove his team 99 yards on 11 plays and scored himself on a 5-yard TD to make it 28-23 at the end of the third quarter.

Never had the UF tradition of playing late, great Gainesvill­ian Tom Petty’s anthem, “I Won’t Back Down” seemed so appropriat­e.

Most of the entire sellout crowd of 90,887 — the fifth-largest in school history — sang along to the song, perhaps even slightly changing the lyrics:

”Hey, Bama, there ain’t no easy way out.

Hey, Bama, I will stand my ground.

And we won’t back down.”

And they did not. The Gators scored on a 17-yard run by Dameon Pierce to pull within 31-29, but a botched two-point conversion run failed. All the Gator defense had to do was hold Bama, and Jones and UF’s offense would get the ball back for a potential game-winning drive. However, the Crimson Tide ran three plays and got the first down. And then ran three more plays to essentiall­y kill the clock.

And so that ended a pretty miserable weekend for Florida college football teams. UCF got beaten by Louisville and quarterbac­k Dillon Gabriel appears to be out for the season. Miami got pounded by mediocre Michigan State. Florida State get pummeled by mediocre Wake Forest. And Florida suffers a heart-breaking, nail-biting loss to Bama.

But, man, was Florida close. Who knows what might have happened if UF’s fabulous freshman backup quarterbac­k Anthony Richardson had not tweaked his hamstring on an 80-yard run last week against USF? Obviously, Mullen did the right thing by sitting Richardson. Better off having Richardson fully healthy later in the season against Georgia than risk him hurting the hamstring even worse against Alabama.

If you’re scoring at home, the Tide now have won 17 straight overall games and have captured an amazing 32 consecutiv­e games against SEC East opponents. If ever that streak were going to end, this was the time.

Yes, the Gators lost loads of talent, including starting quarterbac­k Kyle Trask, from last year’s team, but guess what? Alabama graduated even more talent. The Crimson Tide lost six first-round draft picks, including starting quarterbac­k Mac Jones and Heisman Trophy winner DeVonta Smith. If ever Mullen, who is 0-11 against Alabama and Saban, were going to beat the Crimson Tide, this was it.

The Gators had been preparing for this game all offseason, had shown nothing in their first two games against two patsy opponents (FAU and USF) and were energized and galvanized by a maniacal sellout crowd of 90,000plus in the Swamp.

“We’re getting closer,” Mullen said, “but we have to start winning these games.”

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 ?? JOHN RAOUX/AP ?? Alabama’sJase McClellan runs past Florida cornerback Avery Helm to score a touchdown during the first half on Saturday.
JOHN RAOUX/AP Alabama’sJase McClellan runs past Florida cornerback Avery Helm to score a touchdown during the first half on Saturday.
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