Miami Herald

Alabama, Notre Dame move Rose Bowl clash to Texas

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Playing a Rose Bowl game deep in the heart of Texas is anything but normal. Top-ranked Alabama being in a College Football Playoff semifinal game is nothing new.

The SEC champion Crimson Tide (11-0) are in a familiar position despite the chaos of playing during the pandemic. No. 4 Notre Dame, which finished runner-up in the ACC after temporaril­y giving up its cherished independen­t status, gets another playoff chance two years after a big thud in the same stadium.

“We’re going to keep knocking at the door. We don’t listen to the narratives about what Notre Dame can and can’t do,” Fighting Irish coach Brian Kelly said Thursday. “We’re just excited that we’re going to keep banging at this door and we’re going to get through.”

These Irish (10-1) go into the relocated Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day as threetouch­down underdogs against Alabama and the Tide’s Heisman Trophy finalists, quarterbac­k Mac Jones and receiver DeVonta Smith. The game was moved to AT&T Stadium in arlington, Texas, from its traditiona­l home in Pasadena because of COVID-19 restrictio­ns in California that would have kept family — and any other fans — from attending.

When the Cotton Bowl at AT&T Stadium was a semifinal two years ago, Notre Dame lost 30-3 to eventual national champion Clemson in its only previous CFP appearance. The No. 2 Tigers, who avenged their only loss by beating the Irish 34-10 in the ACC title game, play Ohio State in this season’s other semifinal Friday night at the Sugar Bowl.

The semifinal winners are scheduled to play Jan. 11 in Miami Gardens, where eight seasons ago in the

BCS national championsh­ip game Alabama trounced Notre Dame 42-14 in the last meeting between the storied programs.

Notre Dame is still trying to catch up with Alabama, which is in a CFP semifinal for the sixth time after missing the final four for the only time last year. The

Tide are 4-0 at the home of the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys, including 38-0 over Michigan State five seasons ago on the way to a national championsh­ip. They won another title, their fifth overall under coach Nick Saban, three seasons ago.

“It means a lot to come back here reach our destinatio­n, to keep on building the standard here,” All-American cornerback Patrick Surtain II said.

“We just want to take advantage of where we’re at,” said Jones, the junior who has thrown for 3,739 yards and 32 touchdowns with four intercepti­ons in his first full season as the starter. “We’re finally where we want to be.”

●Sugar Bowl: Everybody loves a comeback story, and both No. 2 Clemson and

No. 3 Ohio State arrive at the Sugar Bowl looking for redemption of sorts.

For Trevor Lawrence and the Tigers, this College

Football Playoff semifinal brings them back to the site of last season’s national championsh­ip game loss to LSU.

For Justin Fields and the Buckeyes, the Sugar Bowl is a chance to avenge their last defeat, a thrilling semifinal against Clemson last year that effectivel­y ended with Ohio State’s star quarterbac­k being intercepte­d in the end zone.

“You’ve got to face a little bit of adversity and sometimes you’re a little bit blinded by success if you don’t have any hiccups along the way,” Lawrence said this week.

Clemson (10-1) and Ohio State (6-0) meet in the playoff for the third time on Friday night, with the winner moving on to the national championsh­ip game against either No. 1 Alabama or No. 4 Notre Dame on

Jan. 11 in suburban Miami.

Clemson has won both the previous CFP meetings with Ohio State. Throw in an Orange Bowl with the Buckeyes that the Tigers also won in 2014 and Ohio State-Clemson feels like a budding rivalry.

It certainly sounded like one at times leading up the game, starting with Clemson coach Dabo Swinney’s insisting that Ohio State’s six-game schedule in this pandemic-altered season should not have been enough to earn a playoff spot.

Swinney slotted Ohio State 11th in his final coaches’ poll ballot, explaining he didn’t put any team with fewer than nine games in the top 10 — while also showering praise on the Buckeyes and coach Ryan Day.

“So people take it personal, but it’s nothing personal at all,” Swinney said.

Rivalry? The Tigers do not seem to have really bought into the idea.

“They have more beef with us than we have with them,” Clemson receiver Amari Rodgers said.

It has all made for an interestin­g subplot to a game that will almost certainly be the final one in college for the losing junior quarterbac­k. Lawrence and Fields, both Georgia natives and former five-star recruits in the same freshman class, are expected to be among the first few players selected in the 2021 NFL draft.

Lawrence is a Heisman Trophy finalist and the presumptiv­e No. 1 overall pick. He led the Tigers to a national championsh­ip as a freshman and got them back to the title game last season. Clemson is 34-1 with Lawrence as the starter.

“He’s as good as there’s ever been,” Swinney said. “I’ll let other people argue if he’s the best ever.”

Fields was a Heisman finalist last year and followed that up with a mostly excellent performanc­e in the playoff. In the first game he and Lawrence ever played against each other, Fields passed for 320 yards. His final throw was picked off in the end zone after the intended receiver slipped.

ARMED FORCES BOWL

●Mississipp­i 28, No. 22 Tulsa 26: True freshman Will Rogers scored his first

rushing touchdown of the season and had a 13-yard TD pass to lead the

Bulldogs (4-7) past the Golden Hurricane (6-3, No. 24 CFP) at Fort Worth Texas.

ARIZONA BOWL

●Ball State 34, No. 19 San Jose State 13: Antonio Phillips returned an early intercepti­on 53 yards for a touchdown, Drew Plitt accounted for two scores and the Cardinals (7-1) beat short-handed Spartans (7-1, No. 22 CFP) at Tucson, Arizona.

LATE WEDNESDAY

●Cotton Bowl — No. 8 Oklahoma 55, No. 10 Florida 20: Spencer Rattler threw three touchdown passes and ran for another score, Rhamondre Stevenson rushed for 186 yards and the Soonersbla­sted the Gators (8-4, No. 7 CFP) at Arlington, Texas. The 55 points were their most ever in a bowl game, while piling up a Cotton Bowl-record 684 total yards. Rattler threw a 27-yard TD pass to fellow freshman Marvin Mims on the game’s opening drive, and Florida’s first possession ended with Tre Norwood’s 45-yard intercepti­on return for a touchdown. That was the first of three picks thrown by Heisman Trophy finalist quarterbac­k Kyle Trask in the first quarter, after only five all season.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on ?? Mac Jones, quarterbac­k of the top-ranked and undefeated Alabama Crimson Tide, is a Heisman Trophy finalist, along with teammate, wide receiver DeVonta Smith.
CURTIS COMPTON Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on Mac Jones, quarterbac­k of the top-ranked and undefeated Alabama Crimson Tide, is a Heisman Trophy finalist, along with teammate, wide receiver DeVonta Smith.

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