Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

LSU, Clemson take different routes to the title game

- David Brandt

GLENDALE, Ariz. – LSU has the Heisman-winning quarterbac­k and Clemson brings the 29-game winning streak. The College Football Playoff has delivered another doozy for its title game, and it features two teams of Tigers who haven't lost a game this season.

They pushed through the CFP semifinals Saturday in drasticall­y different ways. LSU got the drama out of the way early in a 63-28 win against Oklahoma while Clemson needed all 60 minutes in a white-knuckle 29-23 victory over Ohio State.

Now they're headed to New Orleans for a clash in the title game on Jan. 13.

“These are the games you dream of,” Clemson linebacker Isaiah Simmons said. “You never want to dream about a championsh­ip game where everything's going to be simple. You want to have a good matchup.”

It's a fascinatin­g showdown between

LSU quarterbac­k Joe Burrow – who won the Heisman Trophy in a landslide earlier this month – and a Clemson team that's the defending national champion and hasn't lost in nearly two years.

LSU is moving on after a brilliant offensive performanc­e against Oklahoma. Burrow threw for 493 yards and seven touchdowns and now the Tigers will try for their first national title since Jan. 7, 2008, when they beat Ohio State, 38-24, in New Orleans.

They're headed back to the Big Easy, which is just an 80-mile drive down Interstate 10 from LSU's campus. Clemson will be playing for its third national title in four seasons and this one might feel a little like a road game.

“Obviously, it's going to be a great day, going to be a purple and gold crowd in that Superdome,” LSU coach Ed Orgeron said. “The state of Louisiana is going to be on fire.”

Clemson is back in the title game for the fourth time in five seasons but there's little doubt they'll be underdogs.

Even though Clemson (14-0) was undefeated coming into Saturday's game against Ohio State, the popular opinion was that the Tigers hadn't played much of anyone in a mostly mediocre Atlantic Coast Conference. But after knocking off the Buckeyes in the late-night thriller, they're one game away from another championsh­ip.

“The main reason we keep surprising people is because we know what we have with our team,” Simmons said. “We're not worried about who we play. We're not playing an opponent. We play to our standards – that's the main thing each and every week.”

Burrow continued the amazing second act of his college career after transferri­ng to Baton Rouge from Ohio State. The senior tied a record for any bowl game with his seven passing touchdowns against the Sooners on Saturday. Justin Jefferson caught four of them, which also tied a bowl record.

It was one of the best offensive performanc­es in the postseason in college football history, but Burrow wasn't ready to discuss this team's legacy.

“I think that will be a question after January 13th,” Burrow said. “I'm not reflecting on anything right now. We're full steam ahead, getting back to work.”

In Saturday's thrilling nightcap, Clemson extended its nation-best winning streak to 29 games, falling behind 16-0 in the first half before taking advantage of ill-timed Ohio State penalties to pull within 16-14 by halftime. The Tigers jumped ahead 21-16 in the third quarter but fell behind again when Ohio State scored to make it 23-21.

Clemson rallied in the final minutes, scoring with 1:49 left on Trevor Lawrence's 34-yard pass to Travis Etienne and then completing the two-point conversion for a 29-23 lead.

The win wasn't secure until there were 37 seconds left, when Clemson's Nolan Turner snagged an intercepti­on in the end zone.

“I mean, what a football game,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said during the postgame celebratio­n. “It's a shame somebody had to lose that game.”

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