I wish I could lay claim to all of this wonderful information but I can't. I copied this from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida_Gators_football
While Alabama and Florida were charter members of the SEC, they have never been annual opponents. Nevertheless, they have had many noteworthy meetings over the years, especially since the SEC Championship Game game was instituted in 1992.
The Gators and Tide have met 7 times for the SEC championship, including the first three games and the last two. These meetings have consistently had significant national title implications: on four occasions, the winner of a Florida-Alabama SEC title game has gone on to win a national championship. Stakes were never higher than in 2008 and 2009, when the teams were ranked #1 and #2 coming into the game. The #2-ranked team won in both instances (Florida in 2008, Alabama in 2009) and went on to win the two most recent BCS National Championship Games. Florida holds a 4-3 edge in conference title games against the Tide.
The teams have had several memorable regular season meetings as well, highlighted by notable upsets. In 1963, an unranked Gator squad handed legendary Alabama head coach Bear Bryant the first of only two losses his teams would suffer in Tuscaloosa, winning 10-6 over the #3 Tide.[49] In 1987, freshman running back Emmitt Smith led the unranked Gators to a 23-14 upset in Birmingham, rushing for a then school-record 224 yards in his first collegiate start. The Tide enjoyed their own upset in the series in 1999, breaking Florida's school record 30-game home winning streak in a 40-39 overtime thriller.
Historically, the Gators have not fared well against Alabama in Gainesville. The Tide won the first seven meetings on the Gator's home field, including Florida's worst-ever home loss: a 40-0 blowout in 1979 that featured an Alabama squad which would go undefeated and win the national championship against a Gator squad which would not win a game all season. The Gators finally beat Alabama on Florida Field in 1991, 35-0, but their 2–8 all-time home record against the Crimson Tide is still their worst against any opponent. They have fared better on the road in the series, posting a 8–9 record on Alabama's home turf.[48]
There is a disagreement about when the schools' first gridiron meeting took place. Alabama counts a 1904 victory, while Florida does not, as the school did not officially begin its football program until 1906.[48][50] According to UF, Alabama leads the all-time series 21–14.
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