GAINESVILLE, Fla. - Scoring fireworks on the field and a post-match fireworks display treated the Donald R. Dizney Stadium crowd Thursday as the Florida soccer team defeated Alabama 6-0.Scoring in Thursdays Match: Both Gator goals in the opening half came off the end of two well-placed balls. The first started when Savannah Jordan played the ball out right. Mayra Pelayo caught up with it and her cross was one-touched in by a sliding Jordan in the 14th minute.With just under 10 minutes left in the opening half, the Gators were awarded a free kick just above the box. The kick by Meggie Dougherty Howard went to the near post. Melanie Monteagudo was moving right across the face of the goal and headed the ball left to score her sixth goal of the season.After the shoelaces of Pelayo and UAs Caroline Alexander got caught, the Gators were awarded their fourth penalty kick of the season. Dougherty Howard successfully converted the penalty kick for her sixth goal of 2016.Then the Gator scoring spark took off, with three goals within a four-minute span. The fourth goal started when Rachelle Smith sent a lofted ball down the left sideline. Freshman Kit Loferski caught up and then sent a square pass to Jordan at near post. Jordan and Alabama goalkeeper Kat Stratton collided as each tried to control the ball. Brooke Sharp took advantage of the free ball to place it in with her left foot at 71:08.Next up, Julia Lester sent a lofted ball to Pamela Begi? who was making a run through the right side of the box. Begi? took a touch to gain control and then put in a right-footed angled shot from 15 yards at 72:18.The final goal of the match started when Monteagudo brought the ball down the right side of the box. She started to move toward goal and was tripped. The ball went to the far side of the six-yard box, where Loferski placed it in from 10 yards at 74:41 with her right foot.Senior Day is next for the Gators when the team plays host to Mississippi State on Sunday, Oct. 23. Match time is set for 1 p.m. at the Donald R. Dizney Stadium. Admission is free for all regular-season Gator home matches.The first 500 fans at Dizney Stadium Sunday get a pack of Gator Soccer Senior Cards.When the two team last met in Starkville in the 2015 season, Florida took at 2-1 win. Mississippi State is 6-10 and is 14th in the SEC standings at 1-8 after its 3-0 loss at Tennessee Thursday.The match streams live on SEC Network + and can be heard on FloridaGators.com.Adidas Yeezy Levně . Its the second straight game Bell has scored in extra time for Kelowna, which beat the Brandon Wheat Kings 6-5 on Friday, and he now has four game-winning goals on the season. Yeezy Boost 350 Damske . "I was fortunate to play many years at this level with a great organization and unbelievable teammates," said Hejduk in a statement. http://www.botyyeezylevne.cz/ . Anthony Davis had 31 points and 17 rebounds in his seventh straight game with more than 20 points, but that was only enough to keep the Pelicans competitive into the final minutes. Andrew Bogut had 10 points and 15 rebounds for Golden State, which rebounded from a loss a night earlier in Oklahoma City and snapped a two-game skid. Yeezy Cena Cz . Down by seven with 90 seconds left in regulation, thats where they looked comfortable. Pánské Boty Adidas Yeezy . The Croatian served 21 aces and hit 42 winners against Sijsling, who double-faulted to give Cilic a 4-3 lead in the deciding set. "All the players, they know me and they were really happy to see me and they were really happy that this is over for me," Cilic said.COLUMBIA, S.C. -- South Carolinas athletic department reported 23 violations of NCAA or Southeastern Conference rules in the past year, nine involving the football team.All but one of the infractions were classified as Level III and outlined by the NCAA as violations isolated or limited in nature; provide no more than a minimal recruiting, competitive or other advantage; and do not include more than a minimal impermissible benefit.South Carolina released its infractions report this week from an open records request by The Associated Press. The time period is from August 2015 through July.Six of the nine violations involving football came since Will Muschamp took over in December. One, though, occurred when ex-coach Steve Spurrier told reporters that the daughter of a former NFL player was visiting campus.The names of athletes or coaches involved were not included in the documents.Most violations are far from those that bring splashy headlines and put schools on probation.The violation of SEC guidelines was when a football quality control coordinator used a headset while in the press box to talk with coaches on the field. The school suspended the quality control coach for one game and the SEC took no additional action, according to the schools documents.In February, a restaurateur classified as a Gamecocks booster was handed a phone by a prospects uncle to leave a voicemail for the prospects father. The next month, a former South Carolina player posed for pictures with two prospects on unofficial visits.In both cases, the school provided those involved with additional education and the NCAA accepted those remedies without taking any additional action.There are two ffootball violations pending, one in May where a football player was found to have gotten impermissible transportation for three-and-a-half months and another in June where prospects got impermissible lodging on an unofficial visit.dddddddddddd.In the first, South Carolina declared the player ineligible and made to pay restitution to charity. In the other, the school provided those staffers involved with addition rules education and requested relief from NCAA penalties.Three infractions were not classified to the football program yet involved the sport.In October, a chapter of the Gamecock Club booster group posted an internet link to a story detailing a prospects verbal commitment to South Carolina. In February, a football manager worked with the team while not enrolled as a full-time student. Also that month, an ex-Gamecocks player wrongly re-Tweeted a prospects post before he had signed a letter of intent.All the schools corrective actions were accepted by the NCAA.Among other sports, the three-time SEC womens basketball champions reported four infractions. One involved a player getting transportation, meals and lodging while not eligible to play. The school declared the player ineligible and made to donate costs of the impermissible benefit to charity.The NCAA imposed additional penalties for one womens basketball violation after an assistant coach texted a 2019 prospect with the same first name as a current player they intended to text. The NCAA banned South Carolina from electronically corresponding with that prospect for two weeks. ' ' '