Florida silences Tigers

Florida quarterback Tim Tebow (15) runs from LSU linebcker Harry Coleman (24). Florida held off LSU, 13-3, on Saturday in Baton Rouge, La.

? Tim Tebow arrived at raucous Death Valley ready to play. Then No. 1 Florida’s defense left No. 4 LSU in a daze.

Two weeks after suffering a concussion, Tebow — with plenty of help from the Gators’ swarming defense — silenced the largest crowd in the history of Tiger Stadium with a 13-3 victory Saturday night.

The day began with Tebow’s status uncertain for what looked like the defending national champions’ toughest regular-season test.

By the time it was over, Tebow had thrown a touchdown pass, and Brandon Spikes had led a Florida defense that sacked Jordan Jefferson five times.

“I’m feeling great,” Tebow said. “The doctors did a great job. I just want to thank them for the work they put in on me the last two weeks, our trainers, and then all the fans that were praying for me.”

Most of the 93,129 fans who partied all day and roared like a jet engine after kickoff were heading for the exits with 21?2 minutes left, quiet and dejected.

Florida (5-0, 3-0 Southeastern Conference) has won 15 straight games, the best in the nation. LSU (5-1, 3-1) had its 32-game winning streak in Saturday night home games snapped.

Tebow completed 11 of 16 passes for 134 yards with an interception, and ran for 38 yards on 17 carries. Far from his best game, but more than good enough.

After a conservative start, he bounced off tacklers, scrambled away from pass rushers and generally looked like the guy Florida fans have grown to adore and SEC defenses have not quite figured out how to stop.

“On offense, we didn’t execute the best, but we played really hard,” Tebow said.

When he was done beating the Tigers, several of them waited around for him to finish an interview so they could shake his hand at midfield.

The LSU offense looked all too familiar as well. The Tigers came in ranked last in the SEC in total offense and managed only 162 yards. They never even threatened to score in the second half.

The Tebow mystery — would he play or sit for the first time in his college career — raised the drama for a game that hardly needed a subplot to energize the LSU fans. The last time two teams so highly ranked played at Tiger Stadium was 1959, when No. 1 LSU played No. 3 Mississippi.

Tebow took a double-shot to the head — front and back — against Kentucky two weeks ago. He spent the night in a Lexington hospital. During part of the Gators’ week off, he was not even permitted to watch TV.

He returned to practice Tuesday, but Florida made it clear it would take all the time it had to decide whether its star would play.

“You know Tim,” coach Urban Meyer said. “It was, ‘Let me play. Let me play.’ Nonstop.”

Tebow was cleared to play before he arrived at Tiger Stadium.

He was the last Florida player to jog on the field for pregame warmups. He chugged out of the tunnel to cheers from the Florida fans and went down a line of teammates in the end zone, doling out high-fives and hand slaps. Anybody who watched him play catch, run pass patterns and dart up, down and across the field could tell that he was ready to go.