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Florida's lone loss this season came at the hands of Georgia on Oct. 27.

Hardly overconfident

Florida far from taking Sugar Bowl foe Louisville lightly
Last Updated - January 2, 2013 12:10 GMT
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NEW ORLEANS — Florida seniors Jon Bostic and Omar Hunter are done dwelling on what might have been if not for their lone loss to Georgia.

After finishing third in the BCS standings, one spot too low to play for a national title in Miami, the Gators asserted they remain highly motivated heading into Wednesday night’s Sugar Bowl against two-touchdown underdog Louisville.

Hunter even suggested a victory for fourth-ranked Florida (11-1) against No. 22 Louisville (10-2) would be a “program changer,” because Florida has not been to a BCS bowl game since Tim Tebow left after the 2009 season.

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2012-2013 Bowl Season
Potato Bowl: Utah State 41, Toledo 15
New Mexico Bowl: Arizona 49, Nevada 48
Poinsetta Bowl: BYU 23, San Diego State 6
St. Petersburg Bowl: UCF 38, Ball State 17
Las Vegas Bowl: Boise St. 28, Wash. 26
New Orleans Bowl: La.-Lafayette 43, ECU 34
Hawaii Bowl: SMU 43, Fresno State 10
Little Caesars Bowl: Central Mich. 24, WKU 21
Military Bowl: San Jose St. 29, Bowling Green 20
Belk Bowl: Cincinnati 48, Duke 34
Holiday Bowl: Baylor 49, UCLA 26
Indepedence Bowl: Ohio 45, La.-Monroe 14
Russell Ath. Bowl: Virginia Tech 13, Rutgers 10
Texas Bowl: Texas Tech 34, Minnesota 31
Armed Forces Bowl: Rice 33, Air Force 14
Pinstripe Bowl: Syracuse 38, West Virginia 14
Fight Hunger Bowl: Arizona St. 62, Navy 28
Alamo Bowl: Texas 31, Oregon State 27
Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl: Mich. St. 17, TCU 16
Music City Bowl: Vanderbilt 38, NC State 24
Sun Bowl: Georgia Tech 21, USC 7
Liberty Bowl: Tulsa 31, Iowa State 17
Chick-fil-A Bowl: Clemson 25, LSU 24
Heart of Dallas Bowl: OSU 58, Purdue 14
Gator Bowl: Northwestern 34, Miss. St. 20
Capital One Bowl: Georgia 45, Nebraska 31
Outback Bowl: South Carolina 33, Michigan 28
Rose Bowl: Stanford 20, Wisconsin 14
Orange Bowl: Florida St. 31, Northern Ill. 10
Sugar Bowl: Louisville 33, Florida 23
Fiesta Bowl: Oregon 35, Kansas St. 17
Cotton Bowl: Texas A&M 41, Oklahoma 13
Compass Bowl: Mississippi 38, Pittsburgh 17
GoDaddy.com Bowl: Ark. St. 17, Kent St. 13
BCS Nat’l Championship: Alabama 42, UND 14

Last year, the Gators nearly missed out on the postseason, finishing the regular season 6-6 before posting a 24-17 victory against Ohio State in the Gator Bowl. This season, only a 17-9 loss to Georgia on Oct. 27 got in their way.

“Being able to get this program back to a BCS game and possibly winning the game is big for our program,” Hunter said. “Being able to say that you brought Florida back to the top before you left is going to be special for these seniors.”

The Gators are hesitant to buy into the idea they’ll just roll over the champions of the Big East without much resistance.

One reason is their familiarity with Louisville coach Charlie Strong, who was Florida’s defensive coordinator from 2003-09, a period that included national championships in the 2006 and 2008 seasons.

“I played for his defense and I know how he talked to us and got us ready for games and I know their defense is going to be ready,” Hunter said. “Coach Charlie Strong is a great coach. He’s going to give everything he has to those guys and those guys are going to come out ready.”

Strong has sought to motivate his players by playing up their underdog status.

“Nobody really gives us a chance,” Louisville defensive end Marcus Smith said. “We kind of take that to heart and want to show everybody what we can do.”

Cardinals safety Calvin Pryor said he believes Louisville will “shock the world.”

“I have confidence in my team and the guys who I play with and I feel like this is a big statement game for us,” Pryor said. “I feel like we’re going to make big things happen on Wednesday.”

Strong said he may get a little sentimental when he walks onto the Superdome field and sees some of the players he recruited on the other sideline and hears the Florida band play the fight songs with which he became so familiar over the years.

Yet the importance of the game for Strong has more to do with matching his team against an opponent from the Southeastern Conference, home to national title winners the past six years, than the fact he used to coach in the Swamp.

“It’s going to be key for our program because we have a chance to go play a Southeastern Conference opponent, an opponent that’s one game away from playing for a national championship,” Strong said. “If you look at the Southeastern Conference, look at the national championships over the last few years, it speaks for itself. … Our team, they’re really excited about it.”

Strong had a chance to rejoin the SEC as Tennessee’s head coach, but chose instead to remain at Louisville, an indication of how far he believes he can take Cardinals football, particularly if he keeps prolific sophomore quarterback Teddy Bridgewater around the next couple seasons.

Bridgewater, an exceptional passer and scrambler, ranked eighth in the nation in pass efficiency, throwing for 3,452 yards and 25 TDs. Although he was worn down up by the end of the season, he was tough enough to overcome a broken wrist and sore ankle, and played a crucial part-time role in a 20-17 victory against Rutgers in late November that punched Louisville’s BCS ticket.

He’s now had a little over a month to rest, and is doing better, though Strong was coy about how much better.

“Our game plan is all about Teddy. So Teddy’s healthy now,” Strong said. “I’m not saying he’s 100 percent, but he’s going to be better than he was in the Rutgers game.”

Bridgewater led an offense that scored an average of 31 points this season, and Florida’s defense is assuming the quarterback is healthy. But the Gators aren’t exactly lacking confidence in their ability to slow him down. The Gators rank first nationally in pass defense efficiency, fifth in total defense and third in scoring defense, allowing an average of 12.9 points.

With its defense playing so well, Florida was able to win this season with a ball-control offense that did not ask too much of quarterback Jeff Driskel, who completed about 65 percent of his passes for 1,471 yards and 11 TDs.

The Gators largely rode running back Mike Gillislee, who rushed 1,104 yards and 10 TDs, and who is a threat to break off long runs.

“You look at the big plays he’s had in the open field, he can do a lot of things,” Louisville defensive coordinator Vance Bedford said. “One thing we cannot allow him to do is cut back on us. If he does, he’s probably going to take it to the distance.”

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