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Sideline bling: Miami adds TD rings to TO chain

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Hurricanes break out new turnover chain (0:43)

Florida fumbles the handoff, allowing Scott Patchan to recover it and wear Miami's turnover chain. (0:43)

ORLANDO, Fla. -- Miami unveiled some new sideline bling Saturday night at Camping World Stadium, and this season the offense is joining the fun.

While the Hurricanes' defense debuted a new turnover chain featuring a large, diamond-encrusted "305" -- continuing a team tradition begun two seasons ago of rewarding defensive players for forcing an interception or fumble -- the offense broke out touchdown rings, which a player will wear if he scores a touchdown.

Miami head coach Manny Diaz said during the spring that he wanted to do something for the offense because the unit was feeling left out.

"We wanted to spice it up," Diaz said after Saturday's 24-20 loss to Florida. "The 305 [chain] came out really well. We talked about offense wanting something else, wanting something different. Hopefully we'll see a lot more of them."

The new "305" chain is a glitzy homage to South Florida, with 305 being the area code in the Miami-Dade area the Hurricanes call home. Just above the 305 is a smaller "U," the school's logo.

Miami unveiled its first turnover chain in 2017 with an orange-and-green U. Last season, the Hurricanes switched it up to a glittering Ibis, the school mascot. Diaz, who helped create the idea during his time as the Hurricanes' defensive coordinator, had promised a third version for this season.

The chain was unveiled for the first time Saturday night after Gators quarterback Feleipe Franks mishandled a handoff in the red zone in the second quarter. Scott Patchan recovered the fumble and went to the sideline for the chain.

As his teammates mobbed Patchan, the video board showed him wearing the new chain, and the Miami fans started chanting "305! 305!"

The Hurricanes got to break out the turnover chain four times Saturday, with the Gators losing two fumbles and tossing two interceptions.

Not to be outdone Saturday, the Miami offense debuted its touchdown rings just before halftime. Wide receiver Brevin Jordan did the honors when he hauled in a 25-yard pass with 45 seconds left for the Hurricanes' first touchdown of the season.

Deejay Dallas added a 50-yard touchdown run early in the fourth quarter to give Miami a 20-17 lead.