The Commercial Appeal

Alabama football advances to CFP championsh­ip game

- Brett Hudson Reach Brett Hudson at 205-722-0196 or bhudson@tuscaloosa­news.com or via Twitter, @Brett_hudson

ARLINGTON, Texas — Taking a 14-point lead in the first 11 minutes was all Alabama needed to put Notre Dame at arm’s distance and keep it there, coasting to a 31-14 win to advance to the College Football Playoff national championsh­ip game.

The Crimson Tide will play in the title game Jan. 11 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

Here are the three most pivotal plays from Alabama’s win in the Rose Bowl College Football Playoff semifinal.

Jordan Battle stuffs Kyren Williams

Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly did not hide his intention to keep Alabama’s offense off the field as much as possible with a ball-control offense. There wasn’t much controllin­g of the ball on the early possession­s.

The Fighting Irish’s opening possession lasted five plays, and Alabama scored a touchdown in seven — proving why Notre Dame came to Arlington, Texas, with the offensive game plan it did. The next possession presented a chance to right the ship, and the Fighting Irish were well on their way, converting on a third-and-2 and getting ahead of the chains with a 7-yard run on the ensuing first down.

Alabama safety Jordan Battle put an end to that, squaring up Notre Dame running back Kyren Williams and forcing him back for a loss. Notre Dame could not convert the third-and-7 and punted, meaning an offense intent on controllin­g the ball lasted a total of 11 plays on its first two possession­s, with both ending in punts.

Najee Harris takes flight

Alabama’s second possession presented it an opportunit­y to change the game for good. Already up 7-0, it held Notre Dame to 19 yards on six plays and forced a punt, getting the ball back with more than six minutes left in the first quarter. A touchdown drive for the Crimson Tide would put the Fighting Irish in the tough task of mounting a comeback against one of the nation’s most prolific offenses.

The problem for UA: Tuscaloosa native Jay Bramblett’s punt pinned Alabama on its own 3-yard line.

A 15-yard run by Najee Harris got UA out of trouble immediatel­y, and completion­s to Slade Bolden and Devonta Smith moved UA out of dangerous sack territory.

Then Harris busted a 53-yard run instantly made famous by a hurdle over a nearly-vertical Notre Dame cornerback

Nick Mccloud. Alabama scored on the next play, taking a 14-0 lead.

The early two-possession lead proved critical, given the only Notre Dame score of the first half came on a laboring 15play drive that took more than eight minutes.

Christian Harris picks off Ian Book

After a rare offensive breakdown from Alabama, Notre Dame got the ball 90 yards away from a touchdown that could’ve brought the game within a possession well before the end of the third quarter.

Notre Dame quarterbac­k Ian Book, scrambling on a second-and-7, found tight end Michael Mayer isolated one-onone with UA inside linebacker Christian Harris, but the throw was much easier for Harris to catch than Mayer, resulting in an intercepti­on.

As was the case with the Najee Harris hurdle, Alabama immediatel­y seized its opportunit­y, this time with a 40-yard pass from Mac Jones to John Metchie to put the Crimson Tide on the precipice of the red zone. The ensuing touchdown turned what could have been a one-possession Notre Dame deficit into a three-possession one in fewer than three minutes.

 ?? GARY COSBY/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Alabama’s Devonta Smith dives over a tackle attempt for a touchdown Friday.
GARY COSBY/USA TODAY SPORTS Alabama’s Devonta Smith dives over a tackle attempt for a touchdown Friday.

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