The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Alabama, Clemson prepare to complete classic trilogy

- By Paul Newberry

When you’re in the midst of a historic trilogy, it’s hard to appreciate what it will mean to the ages.

Alabama is focused on beating Clemson.

Clemson is focused on beating Alabama.

Taking time to savor the first two chapters between these college football juggernaut­s — and, ohhh, are they worth savoring — will only get in the way of

preparing for the rubber match.

“I just try to take it day by day,” Alabama center Bradley Bozeman said. “I’ll look back on it when I’m 40 or 50 years old.”

No matter what happens Monday night when the top-ranked Tigers take on the fourth-ranked Crimson Tide in the Sugar Bowl semifinal game, this remarkable three-year run seems assured of joining all those great sporting rivalries that were doled out thrice. Ali-Frazier. Affirmed-Alydar. Nadal-Federer. Warriors-Cavaliers. “We’re in a good place if we’re seeing them,” Alabama safety Minkah Fitzpatric­k said of the Tigers. “So, no, I’m not tired of them.”

For whatever reason, the trilogy holds a special place in the sports lexicon.

Already, Clemson and Alabama have produced a matching set of classics that rank among the greatest national championsh­ip games in college football history. Two years ago, Alabama won, 45-40, in a breakneck affair that featured 40 points, a successful onside kick and a kickoff return for a touchdown in the final 10½ minutes. Last season, Clemson rallied from a two-touchdown deficit and the Tide’s goahead TD with just over 2 minutes remaining to win, 35-31, on Deshaun Watson’s 2-yard scoring pass to Hunter Renfrow with a single second left on the clock.

The stakes are a bit different this time.

Instead of meeting in the title game, Round 3 falls a week earlier in the College Football Playoff semifinals. Clemson claimed the top seed despite a loss to lowly Syracuse back in mid-October, while Alabama stirred up the biggest debate when it landed the fourth seed after a setback to Auburn in its final regular-season game and failing to even qualify for the Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ip .

In the end, it’s hard to fault the selection committee for bending to the will of history.

A deciding game only seems right.

“Oh, it’s a lot of fun,” Tigers defensive lineman Christian Wilkins said.

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