BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA - LSU's victory over Florida last Saturday was the Tigers' first defeat of the Gators since 1997 - long before Nick Saban took over as the Tigers' coach. <br>
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Saban still has a clear memory of what happened after that 1997 victory, however, and he's been reminding his team of it all week long. <br>
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``They lost the next week,'' Saban said. <br>
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That's why as the players and the fans were whooping it up after this year's victory over Florida, Saban was already worrying about South Carolina as he walked off the field in Gainesville. <br>
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``We have a totally new challenge this week in terms of who we play, a very good team in South Carolina,'' Saban said. ``I think what everybody needs to understand - the media, fans, players, coaches and everybody that is associated with the game - is that you can't be selective about when you compete in this league or when you want to play hard and when you need to play well. Because every game you play is a real challenge and an important one. This is the biggest game of the year for us because it is the one we are having now.'' <br>
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LSU (5-1, 2-0 Southeastern Conference) will have an even tougher challenge with starting quarterback Matt Mauck out with a foot injury. <br>
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Mauck injured his right foot late in the Florida game and could miss the rest of the season. <br>
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Sophomore backup Marcus Randall will start in place of Mauck against the Gamecocks. <br>
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``Matt's been coaching me up,'' Randall said. ``I feel real comfortable with all the checks and reads. It's a defense we've faced before.'' <br>
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South Carolina (5-2, 3-1) hits Baton Rouge familiar with the expectations of fans and the problems with injuries. <br>
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``The injury report here reads like a team roster,'' South Carolina coach Lou Holtz said. <br>
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Injuries aside, South Carolina takes a four-game winning streak into Baton Rouge on Saturday. That includes last week's come-from-behind 16-12 victory over Kentucky. <br>
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``I was really proud of our team the way they kept their poise, the way they competed, the way they came back, the way we executed in the second half,'' Holtz said. ``Kentucky had had an open date and was well prepared, did some things that we had not anticipated, threw the ball down field a lot more than they had previously.'' <br>
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Under Holtz, Gamecocks fans have grown used to winning. After going 0-11 in Holtz's first season, South Carolina posted 8-4 and 9-3 records with back-to-back wins over Ohio State in the Outback Bowl. He is the only coach in NCAA history to take six different programs to bowl games. <br>
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``I can't lower expectations, nor do I want to,'' Holtz said. ``What I try to do is temper them with realism.'' <br>
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The Gamecocks still feel they can make it to the SEC title game, despite their loss to Georgia. To do that they need to beat LSU, however. <br>
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After two losses South Carolina players have come together. Four straight victories have renewed their confidence said Cornerback Dunta Robinson. <br>
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There were doubts early on,'' Robinson said. ``But now we all believe in each other.''