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The oldest tennis rivalry in the Deep South will add another chapter to its history books on Thursday evening when 17th ranked Florida hosts 7th ranked Georgia with 1st serve set to go up at 5:30pm sharp.  Georgia has played Florida more times than any other opponent and the same goes for Florida. One oddity I noticed is that Florida‘s media guide shows it’s played Georgia 100 times while Georgia‘s only lists 75 matches against Florida.  Below is what each shows is the record against the other: 
Georgia shows an all-time record of 56-19 against Florida,
Florida shows an all-time record of 39-60-1 against Georgia.  
So as you can see there is a rather large variance with the start date of the series being the culprit – Florida shows the series started in 1932 while Georgia shows it started in 1955.  Regardless of who counts what they’ve played a lot of times and will lock horns again tomorrow so let’s dive in and look at the individual matches.  As a side note this will be Georgia’s 1st outdoor dual match with all its matches up to this point being played indoors.  

Florida preview
Georgia preview

Georgia went 3-2 in doubles prior to the National Indoors but since Manny Diaz changed his pairings they’ve gone 4-0 with 3 of those double points coming over top 13 teams (#1 USC, #3 Illinois, #13 Columbia).  Florida has gone 4-3 in doubles but has dropped doubles in 3 of the last 4 matches with the same pairings having played in each match.  Florida needs the doubles point more in my book so the Gators have to hope the large rowdy crowd helps put them over the top.

In singles, Florida’s Diego Hidalgo will make his 1st appearance of the year at #1, 2nd all-time, but he’s going to have his hands full against Georgia’s Wayne Montgomery.   Montgomery knocked off Hidalgo 7-5, 6-1 back in October in the Round of 32 at the USTA/ITA Southeast Regional and I think we’ll see a similar scoreline tomorrow with Montgomery picking up the W.

Florida’s Maxx Lipman will make his 1st appearance of the year at #2 after playing at #1 in each of Florida’s 7 matches with the drop due to Lipman starting the year 1-4. Lipman will face Austin Smith who previously beat him 6-2, 6-3 in the semifinals of the Southeast Regional back in October though Smith himself has dropped 3 of his last 5. Smith is 3-0 overall against the Lipman’s having also beaten Maxx’s brother Ryan (Vanderbilt) twice last season and I think Smith will run that streak to 4.

Last year Nathan Pasha and Gordon Watson played each other at #1 singles (Watson won 7-6, 7-6) but this year they’ll meet at #3.  Both guys have been playing well lately with each riding a 4-match winning streak so this one is a near toss up.

Nick Wood and Elliott Orkin played each other at #6 singles last year (Wood won 7-6, 6-4) and this year they’ll meet at #4.  Wood struggled in his final 2 matches at the National Indoors winning only 8 total games but he was able to get back on track last Sunday with a straight set win against an overmatched Jacob Behal (Furman).  Orkin will play at #4 for the 1st time this year after starting at #2 six times and #3 once.  He was able to stop a 2 match slide with a 3-set win over Florida State’s Michael Rinaldi however that match was almost 3 weeks ago.   Wood is the better player in my book but if Orkin can frustrate him into making too may errors, like what Aron Hiltzik and Eric Johnson did, then it could be a long day for the Georgia junior.

Florida freshman Chase Perez-Blanco will get his first taste of this fierce rivalry as he takes on the streaky Georgia junior Ben Wagland.  When Wagland plays with confidence and hits his serve and forehand with authority he’s good enough to beat just about anyone on the court as evidenced by him playing at #1 his freshman year but when he plays tentative he can be pushed around by anyone.  In my opinion Ben Wagland’s style of play will determine whether he wins or loses this one – if he plays aggressive (goes for the lines) he wins in 2 if he plays tentative (slices it into the middle of the court) and waits for the Perez-Blanco error he loses in 2.

This will be a battle between 2 redshirt freshmen as Georgia’s Paul Oosterbaan takes on Florida’s Oliver Landert.  So far these guys have played 5 common opponents with each losing to Georgia Tech’s Michael Kay and USC’s Nick Crystal while both defeated Mercer’s Oliver Snaider.  Landert also beat Georgia Tech’s Cole Fiegel and UCLA’s Joseph Di Giulio while Oosterbaan lost to Fiegel and led Di Giulio before the match was halted due to the clinch.  I’m leaning towards Oosterbaan here because I think his serve will be able to bail him out of the some deciding points.

I’m going to go with Georgia but if Florida finds a way to take 2 of the top 3 I think they probably win the match.  Prediction:  Georgia 4-3

#7 Georgia (7-2) at #17 Florida (5-2) – 5:30pm eastern – Live Scoring
Projected Lineups with UTRs (as of 2/25) after the school abbreviation:
Singles:
1. #17 Wayne Montgomery (UGA 14.65 – 5-2/23-5) vs. #46 Diego Hidalgo (UF 14.04 – 6-0/20-4)  
2. #25 Austin Smith (UGA 14.12 – 5-3/15-7) vs. #103 Maxx Lipman (UF 13.72 – 1-4/12-8) 
3. #16 Nathan Pasha (UGA 14.26 – 5-2/17-8) vs. Gordon Watson (UF 13.74 – 4-2/15-9) 
4. Nick Wood (UGA 13.69 6-3/18-10) vs. #80 Elliott Orkin (UF 13.84 – 3-3/16-5) 
5. Ben Wagland (UGA 13.26 – 3-3/13-11) vs. #123 Chase Perez-Blanco (UF 13.30 – 4-1/15-8)
6. Paul Oosterbaan (UGA 13.57 – 2-3/10-8) vs. Oliver Landert (UF 13.14 – 4-3/14-8)  
Doubles:
1. #10 Smith/Wagland (UGA 4-0) vs. #47 Watson/Hidalgo (UF 3-3/14-4)   
2. Pasha/Diaz (UGA 1-1) vs. Lipman/Orkin (UF 4-3/10-6)
3. Montgomery/Oosterbaan (UGA 2-1) vs. Landert/Wardell (UF 3-2/7-5)
Dual match record is the 1st record after the school abbreviation/overall record is next)