
ReutersGAINESVILLE, Fla. - Tim Tebow’s eye black is waterproof.
His perfect season is starting to look shatterproof.
Tebow accounted for five touchdowns in his home finale, a triumphant farewell that included tears on the field and in the stands, and top-ranked Florida thumped rival Florida State 37-10 Saturday for its sixth consecutive victory in the series.
“I don’t want to say goodbye,” coach Urban Meyer said. “The good thing is we’re not done. The negative is we’re done in this great stadium.”
The Gators stayed unbeaten heading into next week’s Southeastern Conference showdown against No. 2 Alabama, extended the nation’s longest winning streak to 22 games and improved to 12-0 for just the second time in school history.
Tebow may have even secured a third consecutive trip to New York for the Heisman Trophy presentation. He gets one more chance to impress on the big stage next week in Atlanta against the Crimson Tide with a trip to the national championship game on the line.
The Seminoles (6-6) lost for the second time in six games, and longtime coach Bobby Bowden’s likely finale at Florida Field showed exactly why some FSU faithful are urging him to retire: Florida outplayed its in-state rival at every position.
Bowden said he has some “soul-searching” to do before making a decision about his future at Florida State.
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It might be hard to keep images of Tebow embarrassing his defense again out of those thoughts. Tebow completed 17 of 21 passes for 221 yards. He also ran 15 times for 90 yards against a defense that might be Bowden’s worst in 34 seasons.
It was hardly a surprise considering Tebow torched the ’Noles the previous two years, totaling eight TDs in those. This one could have been even more lopsided than the 45-12 drubbing in 2007 and the 45-15 beatdown last year. But Meyer pulled many of his defensive starters late in the third quarter.
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“They have solid players at every position, very fast, very strong, they’re good,” said FSU quarterback EJ Manuel, who threw two interceptions and was sacked three times. “We’ll get to that level one day. Our energy level wasn’t high enough to match their energy level. They’re a high energy team.”
Manuel’s TD pass to Jarmon Fortson was the team’s only cause for celebration on a day that belonged to Tebow, linebacker Brandon Spikes and their fellow seniors who have more wins (47) than any other class in SEC history. They also improved to 12-1 against their four traditional rivals — Tennessee (4-0), Georgia (3-1), Florida State (4-0) and Miami (1-0).
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Fans paid tribute to Tebow, the 2007 Heisman Trophy winner, by wearing his famed eye black patches. Meyer’s wife and two daughters also donned the little ovals under their eyes.
“That was special,” Tebow said.
So was the rest of his day.
He had two TD passes to Aaron Hernandez and another to Cooper, his roommate. Tebow scored on an 18-yard run in the second, then added the 56th rushing TD of his career early in the fourth. The stadium was lit up by camera flashes as he zipped across the goal line.
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