LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY - When the season began, the thought of Kentucky winning the Southeastern Conference was far-fetched at best. <br>
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But even though they're coming off a loss in their SEC opener, a 41-34 setback at Florida on Sept. 28, the Wildcats are talking like a league title is still well within reach. <br>
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``If we win out, we win the SEC, bottom line,'' senior cornerback Derrick Tatum said. ``We don't want any two- or three-way ties, or ties for second place. We want to win all our games and say, 'We're the champs.''' <br>
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The Wildcats (4-1, 0-1) are off to their best start since 1984, but the rugged heart of their schedule begins Saturday against South Carolina (4-2, 2-1). <br>
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Kentucky has lost two straight to the Gamecocks and hasn't beaten an SEC team other than lowly Vanderbilt since 1999. <br>
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The combined record of the four teams they've defeated this year is 7-15. <br>
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None of that has dimmed their optimism. <br>
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``If we don't make the mistakes that got us beat in Florida, we are going to be pretty successful in the coming weeks,'' junior receiver Chris Bernard said. <br>
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``We are very good team. We just have to go out and prove it to everybody,'' junior quarterback Jared Lorenzen said. <br>
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South Carolina coach Lou Holtz is a believer, too, although Holtz is known to gush about every opponent his team faces. <br>
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``Kentucky might be the first- or second-best team in the (SEC's) Eastern Conference,'' Holtz said. ``Georgia is awfully good, but I look at Kentucky, and I look at their chemistry, their togetherness and the way they do little things. It's very impressive.'' <br>
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Lorenzen said the chemistry has been forged by what the Cats have endured over the past two seasons back-to-back 2-9 campaigns and stinging NCAA penalties, including a bowl ban. <br>
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The Wildcats say the lowest of the low points may have been last year's game at South Carolina. <br>
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The Gamecocks scored touchdowns on four of their first six possessions and cruised to a 42-6 victory, Kentucky's most lopsided loss of the season. <br>
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``Worst game we played in a long time,'' senior defensive end Otis Grigsby said. <br>
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``We played terrible,'' Tatum said. <br>
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Unlike the current squad, Tatum said the Wildcats were a splintered group that week. A handful of players violated team rules, further distracting a team already reeling from a 1-3 start. <br>
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``We had some problems during the week that shouldn't have happened,'' Tatum said. ``It's within the family, so I can't tell you what happened, but there were things that happened that shouldn't have happened.'' <br>
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A personal foul on Tatum triggered the onslaught. The first-half penalty kept alive South Carolina's first touchdown drive. <br>
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``Everything went downhill from there,'' he said. <br>
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Kentucky was competitive in every game that followed, taking LSU, Mississippi State and Tennessee to the wire. <br>
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``It was a turning point,'' Grigsby said. ``You wonder why you get beat like that, then you go and look at the film, and you think it could only get better from there.'' <br>
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A year later, the Wildcats have shed what receiver Aaron Boone called ``a losing mentality.'' <br>
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``Last year, we looked for confidence through our losses, because we lost a lot of games,'' said Boone, who leads the team with four touchdown catches. ``This year, we've started to remember how bad it is to lose. That's where we're getting confidence. <br>
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``Last year, we went into every game hoping we could win, but not knowing if we could win. This year, we think we should win every game we play.'' <br>
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Holtz said Kentucky's confidence starts with Lorenzen, who leads the SEC in passing efficiency and touchdown passes (14). <br>
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Not to mention he's 6-foot-4, 275 pounds. <br>
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``Trying to sack Lorenzen's like trying to tackle an elephant,'' Holtz joked. ``How do you get him down? Do you grab him by the trunk?'' <br>
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South Carolina counters with quarterback Corey Jenkins, fourth in the SEC in total offense, averaging 239 yards per game. Jenkins is the league's seventh-best passer (158 yards per game) and its fifth-leading rusher (81 yards per game).<br>
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Holtz said Jenkins suffered a high ankle sprain in last week's 34-10 win over Mississippi State, but the Wildcats expect to see a lot of him. <br>
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``I don't want to say he scares me, but their quarterback, every time he drops back, there's a great chance he's going to run. We can't have him just running all over the field,'' said Grigsby, who leads the team with eight quarterback hurries. <br>
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Holtz said South Carolina's offense is fine until it reaches the red zone. The Gamecocks have botched eight of 26 trips inside their opponents' 20-yard line, fumbling four times, throwing one interception and missing three field goals. <br>
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``Our main problem is we haven't been able to score,'' Holtz said.
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