APATLANTA - As silver confetti blew all around them, the Florida Gators celebrated their first Southeastern Conference championship since the “Fun ’n’ Gun” days.
The party didn’t last long, though.
It was time to start lobbying for a chance to play for the biggest title of all.
Making their pitch for a trip to the desert, the Gators got an unexpected assist from the West Coast, held on for a topsy-turvy win over Arkansas and quickly deemed themselves the most worthy opponent to face top-ranked Ohio State in the BCS championship game.
“We’re going to tell a group of young men who just went 12-1 with the most difficult schedule against six ranked opponents that they don’t have a chance to go play for a national championship?” Florida coach Urban Meyer asked incredulously. “I’m going to need help with that one.”
His players agreed, of course, feeling the No. 4 Gators are more deserving of a shot at the Buckeyes than third-ranked Michigan, which lost to Ohio State two weeks ago in their regular-season finale.
“Michigan already had its chance,” said freshman Percy Harvin, who was MVP of the Gators’ 38-28 win over No. 8 Arkansas on Saturday night. “I think we deserve a chance.”
One team Florida doesn’t have to worry about: Southern California. The No. 2 Trojans were knocked out by a 13-9 loss to UCLA, which finished off its stunning upset while the Gators were in the locker room at halftime.
“It was definitely motivation,” Harvin said. “We wanted to go out and finish off the game.”
That they did. Harvin scored two touchdowns and Florida put up two more scores off a blocked punt and a botched return, winning its first SEC crown since 2000.
The Gators trailed Michigan in last week’s BCS standings but hope they did enough to leapfrog the Wolverines in the one that really matters. The media, coaches and computers will answer that question Sunday night.
When everything is settled — and no matter what happens, there will be plenty of griping — Florida either heads to Arizona for the Jan. 8 BCS championship game or settles for a spot in the Sugar Bowl.
Arkansas coach Houston Nutt threw his support to the Gators.
For those who complained that Florida didn’t play an exciting brand of football, relying a little too heavily on its defense, there was a little something for everyone in this one — starting with big plays galore and plenty of razzle-dazzle.
“That has to be one of greatest football games ever as far as momentum shifts,” said Meyer, who rebuilt a program that dominated the SEC when Steve Spurrier was coaching at The Swamp but fell on hard times after Ron Zook took over.
Harvin caught a 37-yard touchdown pass and broke off a 67-yard run to the end zone. Florida scored its first touchdown after Jarred Fayson broke up the middle to block a punt, then went ahead for good when Wondy Pierre-Louis fell on a fumbled punt in the end zone late in the third quarter.
Three touchdown passes were thrown by someone other than a quarterback.
Florida receiver Andre Caldwell hooked up with Tate Casey on a 5-yard score. Arkansas’ star running back, Darren McFadden, threw a 2-yard TD to fellow runner Felix Jones, who also hauled in a 29-yard scoring pass from receiver Cedric Washington.
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“The last two times we were here, it wasn’t a real ballgame,” Nutt said. “This was a real ballgame.”
The Razorbacks got on the board just before halftime when Casey Dick threw a 48-yard TD pass to Marcus Monk. In the third period, they came up with two interceptions against Florida’s senior quarterback, Chris Leak — the first setting up a TD, the second returned 40 yards for a score by 255-pound defensive end Antwain Robinson.
But in the end, Florida made a few more plays than the Razorbacks, who will have to settle for a spot in either the Capital One, Outback or Cotton Bowl.
“BCS, give us a shot!” one Florida fan pleaded toward the press box, aware that some voters who will have a hand in that decision were covering the game.
Early in the second quarter, there was a smattering of applause among the Florida contingent when they got word that UCLA had gone ahead. At halftime, the Georgia Dome erupted — at least the sections where fans were wearing blue and orange — when the Bruins preserved their stunning upset with a late interception.
Brian Johnson, who led Utah to an upset of Alabama in the 2009 Sugar Bowl, is ready for his first season as the Utes' offensive coordinator. At 25, the ex-QB will be the youngest with that job at the FBS level.
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