GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- Trey Burton switched numbers this week, going from 13 to 8. Maybe he should have put on Florida's familiar No. 15.

He sure looked like Tim Tebow. A smaller, faster version anyway.

Burton scored six touchdowns, breaking the 2007 Heisman Trophy winner's school record, and the ninth-ranked Gators beat Kentucky for the 24th consecutive time, 48-14 Saturday night.

The freshman became the fourth player in Southeastern Conference history to score six times in a single game and first since Auburn's Cadillac Williams in 2003.

"Trey Burton was just fantastic," coach Urban Meyer said. "There's a lot of great players that have played in this stadium. I think he broke some record. That's tremendous."

Burton's big night helped Florida end its offensive slump and gave Meyer a memorable milestone.

Meyer became the sixth fastest coach in NCAA history to reach 100 career wins. He improved to 100-18 at Florida, Utah and Bowling Green, hitting the century mark faster than anyone except Gil Dobie (108 games), George Woodruff (109), Bud Wilkinson (111), Fielding Yost (114) and Knute Rockne (117).

"I feel very blessed," Meyer said. "Thinking about some of these coaches who I've known for a long time don't get to coach players like I get to coach and don't get to coach at places like I get to coach, so I'm very humbled and appreciative and I told our players that."

Now, Meyer and the Gators (4-0, 2-0 SEC) get their long-awaited rematch with defending national champion and top-ranked Alabama.

The Crimson Tide hammered Florida in last year's SEC title game and ended the Gators' shot at winning back-to-back national championships. Florida would love a little payback.

The Gators can only hope they play like they did against Kentucky (3-1, 0-1).