Coach Bruce Pearl can't help but notice the irony when his Tennessee basketball game visits Florida on Wednesday night."Florida's got 21 wins, and they're probably in (the NCAA tournament), but with a win over Tennessee, it's a shoo-in," Pearl said. "I remember about this same time last year when we were in that situation. We knew what a win over Florida was for our resume. That (win) got us over the top. This would get Florida over the top."Tennessee (26-3, 12-2 SEC), which dropped from No. 1 in the national polls to No. 4 on Monday, has its motivation to beat Florida (21-8, 8-6) at the O'Connell Center."Florida is fighting for their NCAA lives," UT All-American Chris Lofton said. "But we need this to win an outright SEC title."The teams' records and rankings from a year ago are almost identical when reversed; The Gators were 25-4, 12-2 in the SEC, and ranked No. 5. UT was 21-8, 8-6 in the SEC, when the teams met in Knoxville on Feb. 27.Tennessee pulled off an 86-76 victory over what appeared to be a tired Florida team that had lost two of three entering the contest.Sound somewhat familiar?"This last week was tough because we've been tired and worn down," Lofton said. "When we get some days off, we'll be fine."By Wednesday night?"I hope so, but we really haven't had a day off," Lofton said. "Last Wednesday was supposed to be a day off, but we couldn't get back from Vandy because of weather Tuesday night and then our bus broke down on the way back."We were stuck on the side of the road for about an hour and ended up in a Hardee's in some town we'd never heard of."The Vols will need all the energy they can muster against a hungry, young Gators team that proved willing to run with UT for 40 minutes in the teams' first meeting -- a 104-82 Tennessee win in Knoxville on Feb. 5.Florida is second to UT in scoring in SEC games, averaging 75.8 points per game to the Vols' 78.9 points."I remember that first Florida game this year was a fun game, up and down," UT center Wayne Chism said. "But they spread us out, and there was a lot of running around. I don't want to get tired like that again."(Contact Mike Griffith of The Knoxville News Sentinel in Tennessee at www.knoxnews.com.)
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Gators, Vols pull role reversal from a year ago
Submitted by SHNS on Tue, 03/04/2008 - 14:37
Paying taxes unites us. It also divides us. People can pay five and even six times more in state and local taxes than other folks in similar circumstances making similar incomes.
Who's got your number?
In one of the fastest-growing forms of identity theft, crooks are stealing tax refunds by swiping personal information and using it to trick the Internal Revenue Service.




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