Gamecocks find ways to pull out close games

COLUMBIA, S.C. - Once again, No. 21 South Carolina found just enough offense to keep its stellar season moving forward.

Coach Steve Spurrier has searched all season for reliable playmakers and a dependable point-scoring attack to take the team toward the top of the SEC. Looks like South Carolina's head ball coach will have to settle for a timely, mistake-free offense that may not rout opponents like his old Florida "Fun-'n-Gun," but gets off the field with the win.

The latest example came Saturday when the Gamecocks (6-2, 3-2 SEC) put together a 99-yard, fourth-quarter touchdown drive - and little else - to outlast Vanderbilt 14-10.

"Somebody told me today we never got inside the 20," Spurrier said Sunday.

The Gamecocks, who play at Tennessee (TV: ESPN, 7:45 p.m.) didn't need to in this one, continuing the season-long script where South Carolina's defense keeps it close and makes the efforts of a so-so offense - ranked 67th in the Football Bowl Subdivision - stand up.

Against Ole Miss and Kentucky, the Gamecocks two other conference wins, the defense stuffed fourth-quarter chances.

Vanderbilt had its opportunity, too. Down 14-10, it drove to the Gamecocks' 23 with two minutes left before South Carolina's pressure forced quarterback Larry Smith into an intentional-grounding penalty as he was about to get sacked, effectively ending the game.

Spurrier said his offense didn't play smart against a Vanderbilt defense eager to break what's become a six-game SEC losing streak.

Perhaps the most intelligent thing that happened on offense was getting the ball to South Carolina's receivers.

Freshman D.L. Moore earned a game ball for his juggling, sideline-stradling, 35-yard grab in the end zone for the Gamecocks first touchdown. The catch, Moore's first career TD, survived an official review and put South Carolina ahead 7-0.

But it was two bigger catches by freshmen Tori Gurley and Alshon Jeffery that rescued Spurrier's offense.

After getting pinned at the 1 by Brett Upson's punt, South Carolina quarterback Stephen Garcia threw a perfect ball that Gurley brought in for a 43-yard gain. Garcia followed that with 23-yard pass to Jeffery into Vanderbilt territory. A holding penalty and a sack pushed the Gamecocks into third-and-20 when Jeffery struck for perhaps his biggest play of the season, catching the ball in stride and taking it 43 yards for the go-ahead touchdown.

Garcia called Jeffery one of the best receivers in the country. Garcia may not be far off.

Jeffery has caught five touchdown passes in South Carolina's past four games and emerged as the team's best threat since record-setting wideout Sidney Rice.

Spurrier acknowledged he didn't hold out much hope of landing Jeffery after he pledge to go to Southern Cal. Spurrier's glad assistants Shane Beamer and Steve Spurrier Jr. kept chasing.

"I didn't know he could do things he's doing right now," Spurrier said of Jeffery. "He's a special player out there."

The Gamecocks have dramatically cut down on mistakes with just four interceptions and five lost fumbles. They didn't have a turnover against Vanderbilt, which Spurrier says was a big factor on the outcome.

South Carolina also got the benefit of two big reviews. Besides confirming Moore's touchdown catch, replay officials overturned a ruling on a first-quarter fumble that allowed the Gamecocks to keep possession deep in their territory.

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Comments » 1

cumberlandVOL writes:

if the gamegeese can only score two touchdowns against vanderbilt, they're gonna struggle against the big orange swarm. since both teams have great defenses, it sounds like the first team to score a touchdown wins.

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