Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

CFP title game has arrived with Alabama taking on OSU

- By David Furones

There was a point in August where having a season appeared to be greatly at risk, let alone reaching the College Football Playoff national championsh­ip game.

Despite several conference­s like the Big Ten and PAC- 12 originally deciding to cancel their fall seasons before reconsider­ing and starting in October while others began in September, and countless postponeme­nts and cancellati­ons due to COVID- 19 along the way, college football made it to its final game.

No. 1 Alabama ( 12- 0) takes on No. 3 Ohio State ( 7- 0) in the College Football Playoff title game in an 8: 15 p. m. kickoff on Monday night in Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium.

“I know this has been a challengin­g year for all teams in college football,” said Alabama coach Nick Saban, who returns to the site where he coached the Miami Dolphins in 2005 and 2006 as he looks to win his seventh college championsh­ip, and sixth with the Crimson Tide,

“I think there’s a lot of folks out there that we need to thank for making the season be what it is. I think it’s been helpful to the players and the opportunit­y that they have to compete and play, create value for themselves, as well as a lot of fans who have great interest in college football.”

For the Buckeyes, they were in the thick of the question marks surroundin­g the season. Between the delayed start in the Big Ten and cancellati­ons over coronaviru­s concerns, they only played five regular- season games. The conference had to tweak a minimum- gamesplaye­d rule it made for the 2020 season just to get them into the Big Ten title game. Handling

Northweste­rn there and then upsetting No. 2 Clemson on Jan. 1, Ohio State finds itself playing for its first championsh­ip since 2014.

“It just kind of emphasizes the point of just how chaotic this past three, four, five months have been,” said OSU coach Ryan Day. “Some days you woke up, you didn’t know which direction you were going in.”

But don’t expect the Buckeyes to be satisfied with merely reaching the final game.

“No one ever talks about getting to the national championsh­ip. They talk about winning the national championsh­ip,” said Day, as his Ohio State team is an 8- point underdog. “Ultimately, this is the final goal. That’s what all the focus is on right now. … You take the next couple weeks and reflect on the season. Now is not the time for that.

Now, it’s all about playing in this game, playing well, because that’s what matters.”

It’s a matchup of two of the most prolific offenses in college football. The Crimson Tide — with Heisman Trophy- winning wide receiver DeVonta Smith and top- five Heisman finishers in quarterbac­k Mac Jones and running back Najee Harris — have averaged 48.2 points per game and 535 yards of total offense going into Monday.

Jones has completed 77 percent of passes for 4,036 yards, 36 touchdowns and four intercepti­ons. Smith, who will be going up against OSU cornerback Shaun Wade, caught 105 passes for 1,641 yards and 20 touchdowns. Harris has 1,387 rushing yards and 24 touchdowns.

Ohio State quarterbac­k Justin Fields played through a shot to

the ribs in the semifinal victory over Clemson that had him visibly hobbled and still threw for 385 yards and six touchdowns. He has insisted this past week that he’ll “be good” for Monday, as Day has similarly stated.

“Justin has had a good week of practice,” Day said. “He’s done a really good job preparing, and I think that’s the thing that he felt like he did a good job going into last game, was just preparing at a high level. And he’s continued to do that this week.”

Buckeyes running back Trey Sermon is having an Ezekiel Elliott- esque postseason with shades of the now- Dallas Cowboys back’s eye- popping performanc­es last time OSU won it all, topping Alabama and Oregon in the first CFP to conclude the 2014 season. Sermon went for 331 yards and two touchdowns in the Big Ten Championsh­ip against Northweste­rn with 193 rushing yards and another score against Clemson.

Alabama could get a major boost if star wideout Jaylen Waddle can play for the first time since Oct. 24 when he fractured his ankle against Tennessee and complement Smith.

“He has been able to practice to some degree,” Saban said. “I think the biggest challenge is can he sustain in the game, and it’ll be a game- time decision as to whether he thinks he can play and go out there and do his job well enough to contribute to the team. We won’t know that until we get out there after pregame warmup.”

Saban also deemed nickel cornerback Malachi Moore questionab­le on Sunday morning while he said defensive end LaBryan Ray was probable.

The Crimson Tide defense has a starting secondary comprised entirely of South Florida recruits between cornerback­s Patrick Surtain II ( American Heritage High), the son of the former Dolphins All- Pro cornerback by

the same name, and Josh Jobe ( Miami Columbus High) and safeties Jordan Battle ( St. Thomas Aquinas High) and Daniel Wright ( Boyd Anderson High).

Could a title- game win in Miami also lead to continued success in recruiting South Florida for Alabama or a renewed presence in the area for Ohio State, which has had its share of area prospects in recent memory but none on the current roster?

“Certainly, playing in a game like this allows you to be sort of the center of attention for at least this week of the game and maybe beyond,” Saban said. “All those things are probably positives when it comes to recruiting.”

The last time college football’s national championsh­ip was played in Miami, Alabama topped Notre Dame, 42- 14, to conclude the 2012 season. Monday’s title game comes within a calendar year of Hard Rock Stadium also hosting the last Super Bowl in early February.

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 ?? TOM PENNINGTON/ GETTY ?? Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith rushes for a touchdown against Notre Dame during the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1 at AT& T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
TOM PENNINGTON/ GETTY Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith rushes for a touchdown against Notre Dame during the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1 at AT& T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

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