Albuquerque Journal

Michigan, South Carolina seek big finish

- BY FRED GOODALL ASSOCIATED PRESS

TAMPA, Fla. — Don’t try to sell Jim Harbaugh or Will Muschamp on the notion that New Year’s Day games that are not part of the College Football Playoff are irrelevant.

The coaches for Michigan (8-4) and South Carolina (8-4) expect to contend for national championsh­ips moving forward, but they also feel it’s important to finish this season strong in the Outback Bowl.

“I’m for the bowls. I’m for postseason play,” Harbaugh said. “I don’t think bowl games are meaningles­s, and I would like to see an expanded playoff to 16 teams.”

Michigan was ranked as high as No. 7 following a 4-0 start but wound up going 5-4 with losses to Michigan State, Penn State, Wisconsin and Ohio State in Big Ten play.

The Wolverines lost two straight to end the regular season and head into today’s matchup against South Carolina trying to avoid their first threegame skid under Harbaugh.

Muschamp agrees with Harbaugh that bowl games matter, regardless of where a team plays.

“First of all, anytime you hit the football field, it’s meaningful,” said Muschamp, finishing his second season at South Carolina.

“This is a huge game for our program, an opportunit­y to win nine games, an opportunit­y to play Michigan, a team that we’ve got great respect for,” Muschamp added. “But I think the bowls are really important to college football.”

It’s just the fourth meeting between the Wolverines and Gamecocks, the first since the 2013 Outback Bowl.

South Carolina won that matchup 33-28 and leads the series 2-1, with Michigan’s win coming in 1985.

Muschamp concedes that winning today would give his bid to rebuild the Gamecocks a boost because Michigan is, well, Michigan.

“Absolutely,” the coach said. “I think you see the progress we’ve made in Year 2 and continue to move forward.”

UNDER CENTER: Michigan quarterbac­k Brandon Peters has a chance to make it more difficult for Harbaugh to replace him next season — even if Shea Patterson is also one of his options.

Peters is expected to face South Carolina after missing the last game, a loss to Ohio State, with a concussion. When the Wolverines open the 2018 season at Notre Dame, he may have to hold off Patterson to keep his job.

Patterson plans to transfer to Michigan from Mississipp­i, a program hit with sanctions, and to petition the NCAA to allow him to be eligible immediatel­y. He will enter a competitio­n along with Dylan McCaffrey, son of former NFL player Ed McCaffrey and brother of Carolina Panthers running back Christian McCaffrey, after he redshirted as a freshman with the Wolverines.

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