GAINESVILLE, Fla. – The city of Jacksonville can try to push the “River City Showdown” as the new nickname of the Florida-Georgia game, but to the fans it will always be the World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party.

While Gators fans are enjoying a few adult beverages outside EverBank Field, these 10 moments are likely to come up in conversation.

10. Punter Chas Henry kicks the game-winning field goal (2010)

Since the NCAA introduced overtime in 1996, only one Florida-Georgia game has extended beyond regulation. The Gators and Bulldogs finished the fourth quarter tied at 31. Florida won the overtime coin toss and elected to go on defense. In his only loss to the Gators, UGA quarterback Aaron Murray threw an interception that nearly ended the game. Will Hill ran down the sidelines thinking he had scored but was ruled to have stepped out on the 4-yard line.

The Florida offense couldn’t score a touchdown either, so it came down to Henry, the punter who was 1-of-2 on the day, trying a 37-yard field goal. He made it, and the Gators celebrated their third straight win over the Bulldogs by carrying Henry on their shoulder.

9. World’s Largest Outdoor Interception Party (2015)

In his last Florida-Georgia game, former UGA coach Mark Richt made the interesting decision to start his third-string quarterback Faton Bauta over starter Greyson Lambert and backup Brice Ramsey. He hoped it would boost the Bulldogs’ offense, instead it led to a boost in stats for the Gators’ defense.

Bauta was picked off by Jarrad Davis, Vernon Hargreaves III, Marcus Maye and Keanu Neal. It was almost good enough for a shutout as Florida won, 27-3.

8. Jack Youngblood strips Ricky Lake (1970)

Florida trailed Georgia 17-10 in the fourth quarter, and the Bulldogs were looking to make it 24-10. Gator great Jack Youngblood forced a key fumble on UGA’s Ricky Lake that prevented the score and started a Florida rally.

“I just snatched it away from them. Heck, they do it all the time in the pros,” Youngblood said after the game.

The Gators would go on to score a pair of touchdowns for a 24-17 win.

7. HBC makes it 11-1 (2001)

The 2001 Florida-Georgia game isn’t one of the most memorable in and of itself. It was filled with penalties, and Georgia had multiple key drops while trailing only 17-10 much of the second half. But it’s the game that made it 11-1 for Steve Spurrier against the Bulldogs.

Saturday’s game marks the first time in 25 years that neither Steve Spurrier nor Mark Richt will be on the sidelines. Spurrier’s final Florida-Georgia game was Richt’s first.

6. Anthone Lott’s timeout (1993)

Georgia QB Eric Zeier thought he had Jerry Jarmon for a game-tying touchdown pass, but Lott — a UF freshman CB — had signaled for a timeout just before the snap, and the officials granted it even though the ball was snapped and played out by everyone on the field as if it counted.

After the timeout, the Bulldogs were unable to get the touchdown. The Gators held on, and Spurrier got his fourth straight win in the series.

5. Bell to Nattiel (1984)

Florida’s 1984 SEC title doesn’t count in the official record books, but it was very real for interim coach Galen Hall’s squad. A big part of that 1984 season was the Gators’ 27-0 win over the Bulldogs.

The highlight of the game came on a 96-yard pass play in which freshman quarterback Kerwin Bell connected with Ricky Nattiel.

4. The eighth time’s the charm (2014)

Poor Will Muschamp. In his first seven Florida-Georgia games, he came out on the losing end – four times as a Georgia player and three times as the Florida head coach.

Muschamp’s eighth time in the rivalry came two weeks after UF’s miserable 42-13 homecoming loss to Missouri. Muschamp and offensive coordinator Kurt Roper decided to simplify the offense drastically, focusing on the run. While QB Treon Harris threw only six passes, running backs Matt Jones and Kelvin Taylor combined for 389 yards and 4 TDs on 50 carries.

The Gators pulled off the upset for Boom, 38-20.

3. Zooker the spoiler (2002)

When it came to Florida-Georgia, Ron Zook had a lot to live up to as Spurrier’s successor. The Gators were up and down in Zook’s first season, while the Bulldogs, 8-0 and ranked No. 5, were in the hunt for a BCS title.

If you bring up the 2002 game to a Georgia fan, they’ll probably mention something about D.J. Shockley, possibly giving him a middle name that starts with F. Richt made the questionable call to sub in Shockley even though UGA great David Greene was his starting quarterback. Shockley threw a pick-six to Gus Scott in his second-quarter series, a play that helped the Gators come away with a 20-13 victory.

Georgia would finish 13-1, the Florida loss keeping them out of the national championship game.

2. Half a hundred between the hedges (1995)

As a former player, no one appreciated Florida’s rivalries quite like Spurrier. As Jacksonville made renovations to the Gator Bowl in preparation for the Jacksonville Jaguars, the Florida-Georgia game became a home-and-home series for 1994-95.

In 1995, Spurrier wanted to do something no other team had done to Georgia: put up half a hundred between the hedges (score 50 points at Sanford Stadium). In a move that didn’t boost his popularity in Athens, Spurrier kept his foot on the gas right up until the end. Backup QB Eric Kresser threw a touchdown pass with only 1:10 remaining that made it 52-17.

Asked about it years later, Spurrier offered a classic zinger to the Florida Times-Union.

“It wasn’t that big of a deal at the time because Georgia people had already left the stadium,” he said. “I guess there might have been a couple thousand Georgia people in there. Most of them didn’t even see it.”

1. The 2008 game, start to finish

While he only coached against the Bulldogs six times, one could say Urban Meyer had a special appreciation for the rivalry. After Georgia’s infamous celebration penalty in 2007, Meyer wrote in his book that he would never forget. In typical Meyer fashion, Gators players were reminded of the loss all offseason with various signs and videos around the weight room and other facilities.

When Brandon Spikes tackled Knowshon Moreno on Georgia’s first offensive series, it was like a year’s worth of Gator Nation’s frustrations were let out on one play. The score said 0-0, but this writer – just a UF student celebrating his 21st birthday at the time – knew after that one hit that the Gators were getting revenge.

Flash forward seven Florida offensive touchdowns later, the Gators had the ball up 49-10 with 44 seconds left. Meyer used his final two timeouts to savor the moment (or rub it in). On the way to the second national title in three years, it was a Cocktail Party that Gators everywhere didn’t want to come to an end.