Albuquerque Journal

Ohio State, Clemson are not short of big-game experience

- BY RALPH D. RUSSO ASSOCIATED PRESS

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Urban Meyer was giving the abridged version of the core values he has instilled in Ohio State football, the pillars upon which he has built the Buckeyes.

There is 4 to 6, A to B, in reference to the effort expected on each play. Power of the unit focuses on each position group. Competitiv­e excellence, which sort of speaks for itself.

“You mean the game-day underwear, that’s not the key ingredient?” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney chimed in, getting a smile from Meyer.

“I’m not saying I don’t wear them,” Meyer responded.

Swinney and Meyer shared the stage Friday morning for the final news conference before the secondrank­ed Buckeyes (11-1, No. 3 CFP) and Tigers (12-1, No. 2 CFP) face off in the

Fiesta Bowl. The coaches exchanged handshakes and kind of a half-hug, pat-on-the-back thing before posing for photos with an ostentatio­us trophy that goes to the winner of Saturday night’s game — along with a trip to the College Football Playoff championsh­ip game.

The 52-year-old Meyer has a résumé few who have ever coached college football can match. No current coach who has at least 10 seasons of experience has a better winning percentage than Meyer’s .854. He has won three national championsh­ips, including the first College Football Playoff title two years ago.

At the beginning of this week in Arizona, Swinney compared Meyer to Notre Dame legend Knute Rockne and joked about how he needed to quickly read Meyer’s book to gain some insight.

Swinney, 47, talks about Meyer with reverentia­l deference, but he is on the short list of current coaches who can claim Meyer-levels of success. Clemson needed more work when Swinney took over during the 2008 season than Ohio State did when Meyer became coach in 2012. But since 2011, Swinney is 68-14 (.829), including a victory against Ohio State in the 2014 Orange Bowl, one of only two postseason loses on Meyer’s record (10-2).

The only thing Swinney and Clemson have not accomplish­ed during this run, the greatest in the history of the program, is a national championsh­ip. Deshaun Watson and the Tigers came up just short last year against Alabama. Watson, the Heisman Trophy runner-up, was fabulous against the Tide and followed it up with another spectacula­r season (3,914 yards passing and 37 touchdowns).

“I would think that you would see his poise,” Swinney said about Watson. “And to me his poise really makes him incredibly unique, because he just — he just never changes.”

Clemson returns to the playoff for a semifinal in the stadium it lost 45-40 to Alabama in January. University of Phoenix Stadium is also the site of Meyer’s first national championsh­ip victory. His Florida Gators won the 2006 BCS title in Glendale, routing Ohio State.

Things to know about the third, and by far most important, meeting between Ohio State and Clemson:

AS GALLMAN GOES: Wayne Gallman has a Clemson record 17 100yard rushing games in his career and the Tigers are 17-0 in those games.

“Once he gets to the next level, it’s hard to take him down,” Ohio State linebacker Raekwon McMillan said about Gallman. GROUNDED BUCKEYES: Redshirt freshman Mike Weber has 1,072 yards rushing for the Ohio State, but when games get tight the Buckeyes like to let quarterbac­k J.T. Barrett carry the ball.

Barrett had 92 yards rushing and two touchdowns in a come-frombehind,

overtime victory against Wisconsin. He ran for 125 yards and a touchdown in the double-overtime win against Michigan.

DO-IT-ALL SAMUEL: Ohio State All-American Curtis Samuel is the only player in the country with at least 800 yards receiving (822 on 65 catches) and 700 rushing (730). He has 15 touchdowns (eight rushing and seven receiving) and the key to stopping the Buckeyes is to identify where Samuel is lining up. It’s like playing Where’s Waldo, Clemson defensive coordinato­r Brent Venables said.

“Everybody’s focusing on the quarterbac­k on that little read power play, well, who has Waldo out here on the edge?” he said.

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