GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) No series between Florida and Florida State has ever meant as much.<br>
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The Gators and Seminoles have played nearly every year since 1956 and have even been pitted against each other in the postseason. But never have the two rivals played a series with a berth in the College World Series at stake.<br>
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That will change Friday night, when Florida hosts Florida State in one of eight NCAA super regionals. The winner of the best-of-three series advances to Omaha.<br>
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``I don't think we would want to play anybody else to get there,'' Florida outfielder Brian Leclerc said. ``The intensity jumps up a notch when you're playing against your rival.''<br>
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The series typically draws sellout crowds in Gainesville, with fans unable to get seats clamoring for spots to watch the games. They have stood two-deep and peered through the chain-link fence surrounding the complex. They have climbed trees for a less-obstructed view. They have even scaled the batting cage overlooking right field to get a peek.<br>
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And those games didn't have nearly as much on the line.<br>
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``I can only imagine how crazy it's going to be,'' Leclerc said.<br>
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The last time the teams met in the postseason was 1996, when the Gators beat the Seminoles twice and eliminated them from the College World Series.<br>
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Miami has become much more of an annual postseason foe for Florida, with the Hurricanes knocking the Gators out of the NCAA tournament three consecutive years.<br>
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Still, the Florida-Florida State rivalry stirs up more passion for both teams.<br>
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``It's weird because we know everybody on the other team,'' Florida State catcher Aaron Cheesman said. ``We've grown up playing against each other, but when you put on the Florida State uniform for us and the Florida uniform for them, it just gets the goose bumps going.''<br>
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The Seminoles beat Florida twice in three meetings this season, but each team managed 15 runs and 32 hits in the series.<br>
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Bryan Henry (9-2, 1.61 ERA) will start for Florida State in the series opener. Mark Sauls (6-1, 3.68) will take the mound Saturday.<br>
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Henry allowed eight hits and two earned runs in 7 1-3 innings against Florida in April. Sauls pitched two scoreless innings of relief against the Gators in March and allowed three earned runs in 5 1-3 innings and got a victory against Florida in May.<br>
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The Gators will counter with Tommy Boss (7-4, 4.48) on Friday and Alan Horne (8-2, 4.05) on Saturday.<br>
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Boss has been at his best in the NCAA tournament, tossing a four-hitter against UCLA in regional play last year and then going the distance in a 5-2 victory against North Carolina last weekend. Horne is 7-0 in his last nine starts.<br>
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``Pitching is really setting the tone for us right now,'' first baseman Matt LaPorta said.<br>
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The Gators insist they have an advantage in the pitching matchups because none of their starters has faced Florida State this season.<br>
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``That could be huge for us,'' Boss said.<br>
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A trip to Omaha would be huge for both clubs. The Gators, the No. 7 seed nationally, are looking for their fifth College World Series appearance. Florida State, meanwhile, is trying to end a four-year drought between trips to Omaha and return for a 19th appearance.<br>
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``In any sport it is a bitter rivalry, and this is just going to make it even bigger because the winner gets the big prize,'' Henry said. ``When we put the cleats on in August, when we all first got here, that was the goal: we wanted to go to Omaha. Now we have to go through Florida to get there and it does not get any better than that.''<br>
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(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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