Everywhere Brandon Hicks and his Florida Gators teammates turned this week, they saw replays of last year's demoralizing loss at LSU. In the weight room. In the training room. In the hallways. Everywhere. Coach Urban Meyer wanted the 11th-ranked Gators to relive every missed tackle, every blown coverage, every one of those fourth-down conversions by LSU that turned out to be the difference. "It really did challenge our manhood," Hicks said. "It's one of those games you get frustrated because everything is going their way (and) nothing feels like it's going your way. They had the momentum." The Tigers converted five times on fourth down, with two going for touchdowns and three more keeping alive drives that ended with touchdowns. Meyer showed the 28-24 loss on a continuous loop in the football facility, hoping it would motivate his team heading into Saturday night's rematch in The Swamp _ the first meeting between the two previous national champions since Miami and Notre Dame in 1990. The Gators (4-1, 2-1 Southeastern Conference) are looking for every advantage they can get, knowing they can't really afford to lose to No. 4 LSU (4-0, 2-0) again. "It's huge," Florida quarterback Tim Tebow said. "Just for momentum, just for confidence, just for defending The Swamp again, I think it's huge. Probably other games might be more important as far as losing in the SEC East or something, but this game is huge just based on everything else, on us losing last time we were in The Swamp, on us losing to LSU last time we played them, on so many things like that." Florida lost 31-30 to Mississippi at home two weeks ago, a humbling, error-filled collapse that left players, coaches and fans searching for answers. The Gators rallied around the fact that the outcome didn't affect their chances of winning the SEC East. A second loss could change that drastically. "We're expecting their best, and we're going to respect that by playing our best," LSU running back Charles Scott said. "We're preparing for a knockdown, drag-out, fist-fight." That's a metaphorical fist-fight, not a real one. Though LSU defensive lineman Ricky Jean-Francois made himself Public Enemy No. 1 in Gainesville this week when he told The Orlando Sentinel, "If we get a good shot on (Tebow), we're going to try our best to take him out of the game." Meyer didn't appreciate the comment. Tebow blew it off. Jean-Francois said he was misunderstood and sort of apologized. Oh, the drama. There's was plenty of that on the field last year in Baton Rouge, when the Gators visited. Continued... |