logo
#

Latest news with #ScottDochterman

Florida all over The Athletic's 100 best college football rivalries list
Florida all over The Athletic's 100 best college football rivalries list

USA Today

time11-07-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Florida all over The Athletic's 100 best college football rivalries list

College sports take rivalries to a whole new level. Geographic boundaries, conference ties and history all play a role when determining just how strong a rivalry is, and it's safe to say that the Florida Gators have their fair share of enemies. The Athletic's Scott Dochterman recently broke down the top 100 rivalries in college football, and it's no surprise to see the Orange and Blue pop up a handful of times. Both in-state rivals made the cut, and a trio of SEC annual matchups are also on the list. Every Gators fan has a different order of most-hated rivals in their head, but this is how Dochterman sees it. No. 64 Florida vs. LSU Loud fans, loud stadiums and upsets galore make the Florida-LSU rivalry one worth scheduling every season. Things will have a different feel next year as the game is played in September for the first time since 1984, but it should still be the same raucous affair as always. Marco Wilson's shoe throw might be the most memorable moment in recent memory from the series, but these teams have met 25 times as ranked opponents. "It doesn't have the lore or regional appeal of other SEC rivalries, but each of these programs has won two national championships over the past 20 years. This is the annual rivalry that neither side really wants, but it's too good for the SEC to let it expire." The series is tied 34-34-3 No. 58 Florida vs. Miami It makes sense for two of the Sunshine State's top three football programs to have some beef, but these teams meet less often than one would think. Only eight games between 1987 and 2025, including September's game, which is the second half of a home-and-home. Conference expansion is the main reason this matchup isn't a yearly affair. "There's plenty of feistiness between these two programs when they take the field. But their meetings have become so sporadic that the rivalry doesn't measure up to their in-state feuds with Florida State." Miami leads the series 30-27 No. 36 Florida vs. Tennessee Credit the Head Ball Coach for making this rivalry what it was in the 90s. "You can't spell 'Citrus (Bowl)' without U-T," Steve Spurrier said after his Gators beat the Volunteers four years in a row. Now considered the early-season measuring stick for both teams, this clash of former SEC East rivals still holds a large place in the hearts of many Gators fans. "Tennessee and Florida barely resonated for either fan base until they were forced to play one another every year in the SEC East. Once they did, the series sizzled and became the SEC's most competitive rivalry in the 1990s. It doesn't measure up when compared alongside these teams' historical feuds, but it's on the map." Florida leads the series 32-22 No. 12 Florida vs. Georgia There's a large portion of Gator Nation that puts the Florida-Georgia rivalry at No. 1 on their list. While things have been fairly one-sided since 2010, Georgia leads 10-4 during that time, there's still something about a neutral-site game with major recruiting impacts on both sides that gets the blood flowing. There's also the constant stream of liquor flowing at what used to be called the World's Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party to consider. "Each team has important in-state rivalries, but this ranks No. 1 for both programs and their fans. They've yet to have a top-five matchup, but the outcomes often lead directly to an SEC championship participant." Georgia leads the series 56-44-2 No. 9 Florida vs. Florida State Another rivalry that exploded in the '90s — Spurrier simply lived to instigate — the Florida-Florida State feud is in-state competition between publicly funded universities at its best. Bobby Bowden and Steve Spurrier are among college football's greatest coaches, and the two programs met as the Nos. 1 and 2 ranked teams in the country in 1996 regular season and again at Nos. 1 and 3 in the Sugar Bowl. "What was a nice in-state nonconference series turned into one of national consequence during the 1990s. With coaching legends Steve Spurrier and Bobby Bowden on opposite sides, Florida-Florida State set the table for many postseasons. Its annual importance may have diminished, but it's still the most prominent SEC-ACC Thanksgiving weekend feud." Florida leads the series 38-28-2 Just Missed the Cut: Florida vs. Auburn "The Gators and Tigers played annually from 1944-2002, and it was a protected series when the SEC first split into divisions. They have played 84 times (Auburn leads 43-39-2), including 18 ranked battles, but have had just four meetings since 2002. It's just too irregular to make the top 100." Which schools have the most top-100 rivalries? Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.

Three Oklahoma rivalries among The Athletic's Top 25 all-time in college football
Three Oklahoma rivalries among The Athletic's Top 25 all-time in college football

USA Today

time11-07-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Three Oklahoma rivalries among The Athletic's Top 25 all-time in college football

Before kickoff, college football rivalries bring families, friends and colleagues closer together. The outcome instantly divides those same which ones rise above the rest in the nation? The Oklahoma Sooners have long been one of college football's premier programs. One of the hallmarks of college football has long been intense, iconic rivalries between teams and fanbases that can't stand each other. So, it makes sense that OU is a part of some of the best rivalries in college football history. The Athletic's Scott Dochterman set out to rank the best rivalries in college football earlier this week. He placed three matchups involving OU within his top 25. Of course, Oklahoma's biggest rival is the Texas Longhorns. Dochterman had The Red River Shootout at No. 3 on his list, behind only The Game between Michigan and Ohio State and The Iron Bowl between Alabama and Auburn. OU-Texas absolutely has a strong case for No. 1, as Red River is one of the greatest spectacles in all of sports. The Longhorns lead the all-time series 64-51-5, but since 1999, it's Oklahoma who holds a 17-10 advantage, including a win in the 2018 Big 12 Championship Game in 2018. Next up for the Sooners is their rivalry with the Nebraska Cornhuskers, which Dochterman ranked sixth. OU-Nebraska fell behind Army-Navy and Notre Dame-USC in the pecking order. Unfortunately, due to conference realignment, OU-Nebraska hasn't been played regularly since the Cornhuskers moved to the Big Ten in 2011. It was once one of college football's most anticipated annual games, and the teams played a non-conference home-and-home series in 2021 and 2022, with the Sooners pulling off the sweep. Oklahoma leads the all-time series 47-38-3, with an 8-2 record against the Huskers since 1999. Another great rivalry lost to conference realignment came in at No. 25 on Dochterman's list. The Bedlam game between the Oklahoma Sooners and the Oklahoma State Cowboys has provided so many great memories over the years, but 2023 was the last scheduled playing of the in-state rivalry. Bedlam had become a bigger game over the last two decades as the Cowboys rose to sustained national relevance under head coach Mike Gundy. However, the Sooners have traditionally gotten the better of their little brother to the north. OU's overall record against OSU sits at 91-20-7, with the mark since 1999 at 19-6, also in Oklahoma's favor. One thing's for certain: you can't talk about great college football rivalries for long before the Oklahoma Sooners come up. Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow John on X @john9williams.

What are college football's best rivalries? Readers share top 10 and favorite moments
What are college football's best rivalries? Readers share top 10 and favorite moments

New York Times

time11-07-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

What are college football's best rivalries? Readers share top 10 and favorite moments

What's the best rivalry in college football? There's been a lot of debate about The Athletic's top 100 by Scott Dochterman earlier this week, so it's time for readers to have their say, too. Nearly 3,000 people responded to our college football rivalry survey, voting for the best rivalry and the top 10, in addition to offering their favorite memories from rivalry games. It turns out there's a lot of common ground to be found with our list. Advertisement Here's what our readers — and some of our staff members — had to say. Though Michigan-Ohio State failed to get a majority of votes, it was still the runaway winner when readers were asked to name their No. 1 rivalry. Forty percent of reader respondents voted for The Game, easily besting the Iron Bowl's 11 percent. The top five in the poll for No. 1 actually matched The Athletic's top five, in order. Nobody else got more than 2 percent, though 73 series received at least one vote for No. 1 — all the way down to one vote each for Notre Dame-Purdue, Pitt-Syracuse and Richmond-William & Mary, among other curious choices. We also asked readers to submit their top 10 rivalries, in any order. Here's who appeared on the most lists and how they compare to Dochterman's top 100: Again, Michigan-Ohio State led the way, appearing on 85 percent of ballots. The Iron Bowl, Army-Navy, Red River, USC-Notre Dame and Florida-Georgia were the only other rivalries to reach the 50 percent threshold. Readers vaulted Florida-Georgia, Texas-Texas A&M and Harvard-Yale into their top 10, while they are lower on Nebraska-Oklahoma, Ohio State-Penn State and Minnesota-Wisconsin. We informally surveyed a dozen staff members at The Athletic for their takes on some of the most underrated and overrated rivalries and more. Nine series got at least one vote for most underrated: Bruce Feldman chose a different route: Brian Kelly vs. Lane Kiffin. The overrated picks were more condensed, including three for Florida-Georgia and two for Notre Dame-USC, both of which are in the readers' top six. Mandel, however, says: 'There is no such thing.' When asked what dormant (or semi-dormant) rivalry needs to be brought back annually the most, only four series received votes: Four for Nebraska-Oklahoma, four for Oklahoma-Oklahoma State, two for Kansas-Missouri (which returns for a home-and-home this year) and one for Miami-Notre Dame (which is played occasionally, including this year, as part of the Irish's ACC affiliation). Advertisement So what about the future of rivalries amid so much change in the sport? When asked what rivalry could emerge in the coming years, several staffers were bullish on Ohio State-Oregon growing into a true rivalry in the Big Ten. Here are some other thoughts on where rivalries are heading: 'I'm worried that expanded postseasons will lessen the aura of a rivalry game over time, either because of a rematch or because a loss doesn't mean as much.' — Vannini 'Maybe I'm naive, but I think many disrupted rivals will come back together as a bigger CFP gives more margin for error with tough nonconference games.' — Mandel 'The expanded Playoff and superconferences will continue to diminish the impact of rivalry games, unless they're part of the postseason. I look forward to one day watching Michigan-Ohio State or USC-Notre Dame in January.' — Sherman 'The farther the sport gets away from rivalries, the more it risks alienating fans. That's obvious, but it's true. As we move to bigger conferences with fan bases that don't intersect, it's easy for longtime fans to feel left behind and give up. That's the biggest risk for the sport's popularity moving forward. Not NIL. Not the portal. Not paying players. Losing rivalries and axing games that mean the most.' — Baker 'Rivalries enter a new, but still important, phase in college football moving forward. Some will say the Playoff will devalue them, but I think the opposite is true. Instead of merely playing for bragging rights, rivalry games will impact who qualifies for the CFP or conference play-in games. Imagine the Minnesota-Wisconsin or Ole Miss-Mississippi State game determining who will advance to championship weekend. Sign me up.' — Dochterman 'Rivalries are one of the few things remaining that truly separate college and professional football and those who oversee college football would be wise to protect them as best as they can.' — Russo Advertisement So what does college football lose when rivalries fade away? Let's give the final word to readers recounting their most memorable rivalry moments: 'Great rivalry games have to have historical competition. The players have to come to an understanding of why the fans want to win this game more than they do and leave the field never being the same. There have to be moments where we pull our opponent's still-beating heart from their chest and let them watch it beat as their hopes die. Watching Dillon Gabriel hit Nic Anderson in the corner of the end zone or the real Roy Williams go Superman on Chris Simms and Teddy Lehman walk the pick six in are just a few of my favorite memories of Oklahoma-Texas (it's never the other way around).' — Greg W. 'I've attended the Oklahoma-Texas games in the Cotton Bowl at Fair Park in Dallas the second Saturday in October for 55 consecutive years now (even during the pandemic). Hard to pick one moment. Every game is a classic.' — David S. 'The kickoff of any Texas-OU game. Both sides are going crazy — split from 50 to 50-yard line — like no other game played. Both sides know how much is at stake, regardless of the records or rankings. Wild, nothing like it. Go to the game if you are a college football fan.' — Steve C. 'Arriving at Montana State's stadium knowing that there will be more Montanans in Bozeman than out-of-staters on this day, which only happens once every two years. We get to see friends and enemies, and they are us.' — Dale W. 'Iowa fans storming the field, dismantling and parading around the Metrodome with Minnesota's goal post — until the goal post, finally in pieces, gets carried up the stairs and out of the indoor stadium.' — Bill G. 'As a Pitt grad, easily 13-9 over WVU in 2007. Can't get much better than ruining your arch rival's chances of playing in and potentially winning a national championship. For a Pitt fan base that is most certainly cursed, this result will always be cherished, even if the team that year sucked.' — Mike T. Advertisement '2007: Todd Reesing is sacked in the end zone for a safety to clinch the Border War for Mizzou. The turf hanging from the face mask of his helmet was pure art.' —Marty W. 'Illinois topping No. 1 Ohio State on the road in 2007, by simply running out the clock over eight minutes, remains one of the program's signature victories of all time.' — Marc A. 'Mine involved the K-State marching band, a formation designed to look like a Jayhawk mascot and 48 hours worth of debate about whether it was a spaceship or part of the male anatomy attacking said Jayhawk.'— Wes M. 'It's gotta be Elijah Moore (fake peeing) on the field during the Egg Bowl. An eternal image and perfect distillation of not only the pure, uncut, seething hatred between the Mississippi schools, but a shining, beautiful testament to what makes College Football the best damn sport on the planet.' — Sam M. 'I was a senior at Tennessee (after growing up a Vol) for Tennessee beating Alabama in 2022. Getting to share my first victory cigar on the field with some of my best friends and one in the stands with my family are both moments I'll remember forever.' — Jack F. 'Tim Tebow's 'bloody' jersey from the Florida-FSU game in 2008 stands out. He dominated the Noles in a downpour in Tallahassee, and his white uniform was stained with paint from the Doak Campbell Stadium field.'— Scott K. ''Trouble with the snap' in 2015 Michigan State-Michigan. Truly a 'where was I?' moment in my sporting life. Lifelong memories from that evening, pure chaos.' — Grant B. ''Trouble with the snap' was the biggest 'oh s—' moment from a rivalry I've seen, even though blocked punts are much more common than returning a FG.' — Dan K. 'As an LSU fan who was up in the nosebleeds of Kyle Field for the seven-OT game, it was glorious to be in Death Valley one year later to watch Joe 'Burreaux' cap off the 2019 regular season with a 50-7 walloping which somehow wasn't even as close as the score indicated.' — Cody F. Advertisement 'USC-Notre Dame … 1974 … 55-24. ND scored 24 points in the first half. USC scored just before halftime. The stadium stood the entire third quarter as USC scored 49 points against the No. 1 defense in the nation. I have never heard that depth of sound — loud enough to walk upon — since.' — Linda B. 'The 1977 ND-USC Green Jersey game. When the Irish came out of the tunnel dressed in green jerseys behind the Trojan horse … the stadium was already at a 10 — it went to a 15 at that moment and remained that way through the whole game.' — Kathryn T. 'The Catholics vs. Convicts game in 1988: Notre Dame's defensive stand in the final seconds to deny Miami's two-point conversion attempt. That game embodied college football rivalry. Both teams laid everything on the line, and fans are either basking in glory or bitter to this day. — Alyssa H. 'Back in 2012 when the refs gave a ranked BYU team multiple chances to beat the unranked Utes in the final seconds, only to have the football gods deny them each time. Final Score: 24-21. Go Utes!' — Marcus P. 'Being in Husky Stadium with my brother on Oct. 14, 2023, for the Oregon-Washington game. Seeing Michael Penix Jr. hit Rome Odunze in the corner of the end zone to take the lead against Oregon late in the fourth, followed by storming the field after Cam Lewis missed the game-tying field goal and dancing to 'Purple Rain' with thousands of Husky fans? Both my favorite rivalry moment and one of my favorite memories ever.' — Jacob M. 'The 1995 Army-Navy game. Army was down 13-7 and went on a 19-play, 99-yard drive to win the game. The key play was a fourth-and-24 conversion with a pass from Ronnie McAda to John Graves. What an amazing moment, and I was at the game in person.' — Anthony F. 'My dad played football for West Point in the '70s and had a career as an Army officer. No matter where we were stationed in the world, we always made it a point to watch the Army-Navy game with other Army families. I went to a different service academy and was commissioned into the Navy while still rooting for Army in the Army-Navy game (I rationalize it as rooting for USMA, not against my service). I watched a lot of the games while deployed on the other side of the world, at sea, in the desert or wherever Uncle Sam figured to send me, and Army would always find some way to lose. In 2016, I was the aide to an admiral at the Pentagon whose wife was responsible for ordering tickets for the Army-Navy game; she was supposed to get three tickets at the club level with the other admirals and two at the regular level with other alumni/students. She got the order backward, and so she, the admiral and their daughter sat in the 'cheap seats' while my date and I sat with the admirals; the irony wasn't lost on me. It was my first Army-Navy game in-person, and I got to watch Army break the streak of 14 consecutive Navy wins while surrounded by the leaders/admirals of the U.S. Navy. I did not make my rooting interests a secret to the admirals. It was an incredible game, a special experience and would only have been made better had my father been at the game with me!' — Ben C. Advertisement 'My favorite moment is followed by my worst moment. It comes when Brady Quinn, as the sun sets over Notre Dame Stadium, runs in from 5 yards out, getting pulled back by his collar, and falling into the end zone to give Notre Dame the lead against USC in 2005. I was in the Air Force at the time, 21 years old, stationed at Langley AFB, wearing my green ND jersey. I jumped out of the chair in my dorm room, landed on my knees and pointed to the sky like I scored. It was incredible. I immediately called my father, my mother answered and said he was cleaning up his spilled drink, the drink he knocked over when he also jumped out of his seat when Quinn got across the goal line. The worst moment came a few moments later, when Matt Leinart completed an improbable pass on fourth down. A few moments later, the Bush Push, and that was all she wrote.' — Sean O. 'Not favorite, but most defining. I was a freshman at Notre Dame in 2005 when we prematurely stormed the field as Leinart fumbled the ball out of bounds on the penultimate play of the game and the time went to zero. I watched the 'Bush Push' standing on the field with my classmates in the opposite end zone of the stadium. I've never been more heartbroken and will never bring myself to like anything about Southern Cal.' — Keith C. 'Bush Push, when I was banished to the basement of my grandparents' house as the sole USC fan in a ND household. The victory climb out was glorious.' — Andrew P. 'Last two minutes of Harvard-Yale game 1968. We flew in on an early-AM flight on Mohawk Airlines from Detroit to Hartford. My parents drove up from New Jersey to pick us up in Hartford and then drove all of us to Cambridge. We picked up two tickets left under a doormat at an apartment and arrived at Harvard Stadium just in time for kickoff. Tickets were on Yale's 'away' side. (My husband was Harvard '68.) Many Yalies left early because they were 16 points ahead with less than 2 minutes to go. Harvard put in its second-string quarterback. Then we witnessed the most exciting under 2 minutes of football ever!!! My husband is watching the documentary again now as I write this.' — Cindy R. 'The 0-0 tie in Oregon vs. Oregon State in Eugene in 1983. It poured down rain the entire game, featuring 11 turnovers and four missed field goals between the two teams. This game was the last 0-0 tie game in college football before overtime was instituted … AKA the Toilet Bowl.' — Melvin P. '1969 Michigan-Ohio State. This was Bo Schembechler's first season and his first game against Woody Hayes, and Michigan was a big underdog. At the end of the first half, I was exhausted from cheering. I thought that if the players were as exhausted as I was, they would not make it through the second half. After the game, I was walking home, and there was a drive-through carwash near the Big House. Some Michigan fans were so excited that they had just driven through the carwash in a convertible with the top down.' — George H. ''Hello Heisman!' When Desmond Howard struck the pose — perfect weather for football, perfect call from Keith Jackson. Ultimate college football moment. — Dan E. 'Jim Tressel, at his introductory press conference, telling everyone he was going to win against Michigan (without using those words) in order to make sure we could be proud. And then doing it.' — Tyler B. 'The interception to seal the 2002 version of The Game and send the Buckeyes to the title game. Just absolute catharsis for the '90s and a continuation of the magic moments from that whole season.' — Jason T. Advertisement 'Storming the field and walking home amid a snow storm when Michigan finally beat Ohio State in 2021 is the greatest moment of my life — even better than watching the confetti fall in Houston for the national championship in 2024 (and that's why Michigan-OSU is the best rivalry in sports).' — Daniel G. 'Michigan-Ohio State, 2023. It was the biggest game in the series, as it was the last where college football was still college football, and the last where everything was on the line. It was also going to decide the narrative for the whole season and recent rivalry. I'd say the game-sealing interception, but the ref took so long to confirm it was more nervous than anything. So when Zak Zinter went down, the crowd chanted his name as he was carted off, and Blake Corum took the next play to the house and signaled his number after the TD … that.' — Chris C. 'Michigan finally getting the monkey off its back and beating Ohio State in 2021. Absolute catharsis. The 2024 upset was pretty great too. Michigan had no business winning that game with zero passing game and on the road against the No. 2 team in the country. Still can't believe it happened.' — Tyler A. 'I was deployed during the 2024 football season, so a lot of games started/ended at ridiculous hours for me. So it was hard to beat watching Michigan beat Ohio State (a surprise for all!!) at 2 a.m. yelling like a maniac in the office'. — Terra S. 'It doesn't get much better than 'The Play' between Stanford and Cal. Forty-plus years later, and it is just as magical watching on YouTube as it was for fans in the stands (or the band on the field).' — Andrew B. 'Two words. Kick Six.' — Jasper S. 'Though I have no dog in this particular fight, I have to go with the Kick Six in the Bama-Auburn game. How does it get more devastating/exhilarating than that?' — Dan R. ''AUBURN'S GONNA WIN THE FOOTBALL GAME!'' — Haig N. 'I'm a Notre Dame fan, so it's got to be the Kick Six. Even though we weren't involved, watching Nick Saban whine to get that extra second put back on the clock only for it to spectacularly blow up in his face was beautiful entertainment.' — Jeff H. Advertisement 'As a Georgia grad, I never like to see Auburn succeed at anything. Even so, the Kick Six against Alabama in 2013 was an all-timer in terms of sheer what-the-f$&?-did-I-just-watch madness. I have an Auburn buddy whose tombstone is probably going to feature a video screen playing that play on an infinite loop.' — Doug G. 'Auburn. Kick Six. Saw it in a sports bar and one of the Alabama fans just put his hands on his head surrender-cobra style, and with his mouth hanging open, walked out of the bar without making a sound and never came back. I like to think he's wandering the streets in that same dumbfounded state to this day.' — Tim A. 'I don't live in the South, but the Kick Six has to be the biggest kick in the stones any fan base has suffered at the hands of their biggest enemy. I can't imagine my school losing in that fashion to our rivals.' — Eric A. ''AUBURN'S GONNA WIN THE FOOTBALL GAME!''— Sarah D. (Illustration: Will Tullos / The Athletic; Kevin C. Cox, Aaron J. Thornton, David Cruz / Getty Images)

College football rivalry quiz: Test your knowledge of trophies, traditions and lore!
College football rivalry quiz: Test your knowledge of trophies, traditions and lore!

New York Times

time10-07-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

College football rivalry quiz: Test your knowledge of trophies, traditions and lore!

All week, The Athletic has been diving deep into the wonderful world of college football rivalries after Scott Dochterman ranked the top 100 on Monday. College football may be in a state of constant change, but rivalries — and the traditions, history and lore that come with them — still serve as a foundation of the sport. Advertisement We've covered the state of Michigan-Ohio State, the best rivalry names, Texas A&M chasing Texas, Big Ten trophies and much more, and on Friday we'll publish readers' top 10 rivalries. Now, you can put your college football rivalry knowledge to the test below. Let us know how you did — and check out Connections: Sports Edition daily, too. (Illustration: Will Tullos / The Athletic; photos: David Purdy, Ralph Freson, Lon Horwedel / Getty Images)

Florida football has five rivalry games included in The Athletic's top-100 rankings
Florida football has five rivalry games included in The Athletic's top-100 rankings

USA Today

time09-07-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Florida football has five rivalry games included in The Athletic's top-100 rankings

One of the most important aspects of college football that has helped entrench it into American culture is the rivalry game, for which every school has at least one. Many of these matchups have been played for over 100 years — longer than the current forms of the NBA, NFL, and NHL have existed, and sometimes contemporaneous with early Major League Baseball. That has allowed generations of sports fans to continue a long and storied tradition with their favorite colleges and universities. The Florida Gators officially started competing on the collegiate gridiron in 1911 as an independent team, before joining the Southern Conference in 1922 along with a large proportion of their future Southeastern Conference peers — a league that began play in 1932. Those early years provided the Orange and Blue with three of the five foes that The Athletic's Scott Dochterman included in his rankings of the top 100 college football rivalries. Dochterman chose to feature Florida's matchups with the Florida State Seminoles (No. 9), Georgia Bulldogs (No. 12), Tennessee Volunteers (No. 36), Miami Hurricanes (No. 58) and LSU Tigers (No. 64) among the best rivalries in the sport. Many Gators fans may disagree with the rankings of the top two — UGA should be among the top-10 and arguably ahead of FSU, but it is what it is. Below is a look at how Florida's five top rivalries break down in Dochterman's eyes. Florida–Florida State: No. 9 What to know: "What was a nice in-state nonconference series turned into one of national consequence during the 1990s," Dochterman offers. "With coaching legends Steve Spurrier and Bobby Bowden on opposite sides, Florida-Florida State set the table for many postseasons. Its annual importance may have diminished, but it's still the most prominent SEC-ACC Thanksgiving weekend feud." Biggest game: "In the 1996 regular-season finale, No. 2 Florida State edged No. 1 Florida 24-21 and the quarterback hits rankled Spurrier," he recalls. "After Florida won the SEC title game, the Bowl Alliance lined up the No. 1 Seminoles and No. 3 Gators for the fifth time over a three-year span, again in the Sugar Bowl. Florida led by four points in the third quarter, then scored four second-half touchdowns in a 52-20 win. The Gators won the national title while Florida State fell to No. 3." Georgia–Florida: No. 12 What to know: "Each team has important in-state rivalries, but this ranks No. 1 for both programs and their fans," Dochterman offers. "They've yet to have a top-five matchup, but the outcomes often lead directly to an SEC championship participant." Biggest game: "No. 2 Georgia's hopes of an unbeaten season appeared dashed approaching the final minute of its 1980 clash with the No. 20 Gators," he begins. "Down 21-20 and facing third-and-11 at the 7-yard line, Bulldogs QB Buck Belue rolled right and threw across his body to Lindsay Scott at the 25-yard line. With Georgia announcer Larry Munson shouting, 'Run Lindsay!' the receiver outraced the defense for a 93-yard TD and a 26-21 victory. The Bulldogs later won the national title." Tennessee–Florida: No. 36 What to know: "Tennessee and Florida barely resonated for either fan base until they were forced to play one another every year in the SEC East," Dochterman says. "Once they did, the series sizzled and became the SEC's most competitive rivalry in the 1990s. It doesn't measure up when compared alongside these teams' historical feuds, but it's on the map." Biggest game: "After five straight top-15 losses to the Gators, No. 6 Tennessee hosted No. 2 Florida in 1998," he writes. "The Vols picked up a 20-17 OT win when Florida's game-tying attempt said wide left. The win propelled Tennessee to the first BCS championship." Miami–Florida: No. 58 What to know: "There's plenty of feistiness between these two programs when they take the field," Dochterman notes. "But their meetings have become so sporadic that the rivalry doesn't measure up to their in-state feuds with Florida State." Biggest game: "Following the 2000 season, the teams met in the Sugar Bowl with the SEC champion Gators facing the Big East champion Canes," he offers. "No. 7 Florida led early in the third quarter, but a combination of penalties, turnovers and special teams errors propelled No. 2 Miami to 24 second-half points in a 37-20 win." LSU-Florida: No. 64 What to know: "It doesn't have the lore or regional appeal of other SEC rivalries, but each of these programs has won two national championships over the past 20 years," Diotcherman notes. "This is the annual rivalry that neither side really wants, but it's too good for the SEC to let it expire." Biggest game: "Their 2007 battle in Baton Rouge stands out as first among equals," he continues. "Top-ranked LSU trailed No. 9 Florida 24-14 with 10:15 left in the game before rallying for two TDs to take a 28-24 lead. Florida moved into LSU territory but Heisman winner Tim Tebow's final pass attempt fell incomplete, and the eventual BCS champion Tigers — who went 5-for-5 on fourth downs — held on for the win." The Athletic's top 25 best college football rivalries Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store