There's no love lost between the University of Florida and Miami's fanbases ahead of the two Sunshine State rivals' season-opening showdown on Aug. 24 in Orlando.

And Hurricanes supporters are already encroaching on the Gators' sacred grounds four months out from college football's kickoff extravaganza for some unwelcomed pre-game ribbing.

The SW 34th Street wall, a popular 1,100-foot art wall in Gainesville, was sprayed with Miami-centric graffiti this week in bold fashion. “Gators Suck” was painted in white lettering with a thumbs down emoji and cartoonish Gator logo on opposite ends of the phrase:

According to VisitGainesville.com, the wall is covered with layers of graffiti up to as many as 250 layers of paint in some areas and was originally constructed in 1979 to prevent erosion of a hill at the University of Florida's golf course after 34th Street was widened from two lanes to four.

Originally scheduled for Week 1 of the new season, both universities agreed to play the game a week early as part of college football's 150th anniversary celebration, representing arguably the highest-profile Week 0 game ever.

Florida, likely ranked inside the preseason Associated Press Top 10, opened as an 8.5-point favorite in the neutral site affair inside Orlando's Camping World Stadium, where Miami held one of its spring scrimmages this year.

“ESPN approached both UM and Florida with the unique idea to broadcast this matchup as the culmination of a daylong celebration of college football’s 150th anniversary season,” Miami Director of Athletics Blake James said. “After consulting with Manny, we agreed that this would be a tremendous opportunity to showcase Hurricanes football – both our present team and our long, storied tradition – on a national stage."

Miami and Florida don’t play one other often, but they are rivals on the recruiting trail and there's bad blood between the two programs. The Hurricanes lead the all-time series between the schools, 29-26, and Miami won seven of the last eight match-ups.

The Hurricanes won the previous contest vs. Florida in 2013, 21-16, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami. The game in August will mark the firs for Manny Diaz as the Hurricanes' new head coach.

“I don’t know if we want it any other way,” Diaz said when the matchup was announced earlier this year. “Those are the games at Miami where you have to prove yourself. I will say this, you come to Miami to win those games. If you are not winning those games, you can’t say it is somebody else’s fault.

"That has been the consistent theme of all the former players that have talked to us — this thing takes off when you guys take off. Stop waiting around. This place was built on player accountability.”