USA TODAY US Edition

OSU vs. Clemson: Heavyweigh­t bout

- Paul Myerberg @paulmyerbe­rg USA TODAY Sports

The Fiesta Bowl will pit No. 2 Clemson and No. 3 Ohio State to decide one national championsh­ip game participan­t, with the Peach Bowl matchup of No. 1 Alabama and No. 4 Washington deciding the other.

From a widescreen perspectiv­e, the Fiesta matches two of the strongest programs in college football. Clemson and Ohio State inhabit elite ground in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n as two groups built for annual championsh­ip contention.

They are led by coaches defined by the big picture. Clemson’s Dabo Swinney and Ohio State’s Urban Meyer chase championsh­ips not just on fall Saturdays but from January through December, bolstering their title chances through hard work, developmen­t and, above all else, top-of-the-line recruiting.

This talent, and the intriguing matchups they present, will be on full display Dec. 31. Both teams are seasoned by College Football Playoff experience: Clemson reached last season’s title game, losing to Alabama, and Ohio State lifted the trophy after the 2014 season, defeating Oregon.

Both teams tout next-level ability. Clemson is led by junior quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson, who has been critiqued this fall for his unexpected number of intercepti­ons but remains a quarterbac­k capable of carrying his team to a championsh­ip.

Ohio State will meet this challenge with the nation’s best secondary, a ballhawkin­g and turnover-causing group led by junior Gareon Conley and sophomores Malik Hooker and Marshon Lattimore.

The Buckeyes will look to rattle Watson and the Tigers offense with an intimidati­ng defensive front. Clemson will combat Ohio State’s depth and explosiven­ess with an offensive line that rounded into form during season-ending wins against Wake Forest, South Carolina and Virginia Tech.

The comparison in talent might be a tossup, with Ohio State holding a slight but not too meaningful edge. Clemson might hold the advantage in experience, however, even as the Buckeyes’ young core gains valuable knowledge each week.

What should truly define the Fiesta Bowl, however, lies in each team’s narrow margin for error. Two elite programs, two elite coaches. Two elite quarterbac­ks, with Watson joined by the Buckeyes’ J.T. Barrett. Two elite defenses: Ohio State ranks third nationally in yards allowed per play and Clemson sixth. Two of the most talented teams in the country.

To beat Ohio State demands a near-perfect performanc­e; like- wise with beating Clemson. It’s a dream matchup, one that in another postseason format — the Bowl Championsh­ip Series, for example — would have yielded a memorable title-game pairing.

As it is, the winner will have vanquished one elite rival only to face another, whether it’s stillunbea­ten Alabama or a Washington squad fresh off a significan­t upset.

But that’s the beauty of the Playoff: Four elite teams enter, but only one lifts the trophy.

 ?? MIKE CARTER, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Urban Meyer has Ohio State in the College Football Playoff for the second time in three years.
MIKE CARTER, USA TODAY SPORTS Urban Meyer has Ohio State in the College Football Playoff for the second time in three years.

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