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Wednesday, January 02, 2002

Florida changes QBs for Orange Bowl




The Associated Press

        MIAMI — Rex Grossman is out. Brock Berlin is in. How long will that arrangement last? Everybody will find out tonight in the Orange Bowl.

ORANGE SLICES
  Teams: No. 6 Maryland (10-1) vs. No. 5 Florida (9-2).
  Time/TV: 8 p.m., Ch.9, 2.
  Line: Florida by 16.
  Series record: Florida leads 11-6.
  Last meeting: 1981, Florida 15-10.
  Career bowl records: Maryland 6-9-2; Florida 13-15.
  Last bowl appearance: Maryland tied Louisiana Tech in the 1990 Independence Bowl; Florida lost to Miami 37-20 in the 2001 Sugar Bowl.
  Common opponent this season: Maryland lost at Florida State 52-31 on Oct.27; Florida beat Florida State 37-13 on Nov.17.
  Fast facts: Maryland and Florida are making their third appearances in the Orange Bowl. The Terrapins are 0-2, having lost to Oklahoma in 1954 (7-0) and 1956 (20-6), and the Gators are 2-0, defeating Georgia Tech (27-12) in 1967 and Syracuse (31-10) in 1999. ... This is the 18th meeting between the schools in a series that started in 1927. Florida has won two straight and five of the last six games. ... UM is ranked fourth nationally in turnover margin (plus 2.36), ninth in rushing defense (averaging 90.6 yards a game) and second with 24 INTs. Senior SS Tony Jackson had an Atlantic Coast Conference-leading six INTs.
        Indeed, the latest turn of Florida coach Steve Spurrier's quarterback carousel might be the most curious of all.

        Spurrier shook up a rather routine week Tuesday when he announced he was pulling Grossman from the starting lineup against Maryland because he missed curfew on the team's second night in Miami.

        Grossman's replacement will be Brock Berlin, who is strongly considering transferring to the University of Miami because he doesn't play enough. He suddenly finds himself preparing for his first college start on a mighty big stage.

        During a 20-minute news conference that made for great theater, Spurrier sounded at peace with the decision.

        “Brock and Rex, sometimes at practice you can't tell a difference who's out there,” Spurrier said. “If we lose the game, you can blame it on me. If Rex plays and we lose the game, you're going to blame that on me, too.”

        Spurrier made it clear that Grossman, who started all 11 games this season and came a scant 62 votes short of winning the Heisman, is no sure thing to play when the No. 5 Gators (9-2) face the No. 6 Terrapins (10-1).

        “Whoever starts always gets an opportunity,” Spurrier said. “It doesn't mean they're going to finish it. But I never start a guy and say, 'If you screw up, you're out the next series.' It takes a bunch of screw-ups to take a guy out.”

        Also missing curfew were starting defensive lineman Bobby McCray, backup center David Jorgensen and two other players who wouldn't play anyway.

        “They'll be eligible to play in the game,” Spurrier said of Grossman, McCray and Jorgensen. “Their coaches will put them in accordingly.”

        Spurrier, of course, is the quarterbacks coach.

        The Terrapins, 15-point underdogs, are watching the whole thing with smiles on their faces. The entire week has been filled with news of Florida's problems: the Berlin-Grossman thing, tailback Earnest Graham's knee injury and, of course, Florida's disappointment over not playing for the national title this season.

        Terps coach Ralph Friedgen insists the circus that has become Florida football probably won't hurt the Gators, or help his team.

        “They're so talented, they can probably get away with it,” he said. “We're very happy we're here and I can't control the way they feel. We've got to deal with our players, not theirs.”

        Spurrier insists his team is focused, and the Gators won't miss anything by playing Berlin, who threw for 483 yards and nine touchdowns in mop-up duty this season.

        These prebowl distractions are nothing new for Spurrier. Last year, players from Florida and Miami brawled on Bourbon Street the night they arrived in New Orleans for the Sugar Bowl. Before the 1995 Sugar Bowl, one Florida player landed in the hospital after fighting with a teammate at a team meal.

        Other than Berlin's performance Wednesday, the next big question will be whether this affects his decision to stay or go.

        About 10 days ago, he visited Miami. Berlin and Grossman are both sophomores, and Berlin doesn't want to sit on the Florida bench for another season.

        But Spurrier, who has seen talented quarterbacks Eric Kresser, Bobby Sabelhaus and Tim Olmstead leave under similar circumstances, isn't giving up easily.

        Before the Grossman issue surfaced, Spurrier said Berlin would get playing time in the Orange Bowl, a clear enticement for the sophomore from Shreveport, La.

        The coach said this was not a last-minute ploy to keep Berlin at Florida.

        “I can't worry about what other people think,” Spurrier said. “I've got to do what's best for the team.”

        Neither Berlin nor Grossman could be reached for comment Tuesday.

       



Sports Stories
Coles: Time for Miami to turn around
UK's Smith set to face a former student
- Florida changes QBs for Orange Bowl
Outback Bowl: Ohio State loses big pot on last gamble
Sugar Bowl: LSU 47, Illinois 34
Cotton Bowl: Oklahoma 10, Arkansas 3
Gator Bowl: Florida State 30, Virginia Tech 17
Citrus Bowl: Tennessee 45, Michigan 17
Fiesta Bowl: Oregon 38, Colorado 16
Rose Bowl: Preview of Thursday's game
Confidence defines Notre Dame coach
Prather back in winner's circle
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