Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

TCU shocks Michigan, critics

Horned Frogs take wild ride to title game

- By Ralph D. Russo

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Texas Christian’s wild ride has one more stop.

The Horned Frogs are headed to Sofi Stadium in Inglewood, California, about 10 miles from Hollywood, just about the perfect place to end a storybook season for the most improbable team to ever make the College Football Playoff.

Max Duggan accounted for four touchdowns, TCU returned two intercepti­ons for scores and the third-ranked Horned Frogs withstood a frenetic second-half surge by No. 2 Michigan to win the Fiesta Bowl 51-45 on Saturday night.

TCU (13-1) will play either No. 1 Georgia or No. 4 Ohio State on Jan. 9 for the national championsh­ip.

Coming off a losing 2021 season and picked to finish seventh in the Big 12 in Sonny Dykes’ first year as coach, the Horned Frogs will try to win the program’s first national championsh­ip since 1938.

It took TCU six weeks to get ranked this season, and almost every step of the way their worthiness was doubted. “At some point, you just kind of quit listening to what everybody says,” Dykes said.

Duggan and the Frogs will no doubt be underdogs in the title game — again. That didn’t matter much against Michigan (13-1) as they took it to the big, bad Big Ten champions and turned the Fiesta Bowl into circa-2010, Big 12-style scorefest.

“We heard all week how they were going to out-physical us,” TCU linebacker Dee Winters said.

It was the highest scoring Fiesta Bowl ever and the second-highest scoring CFP game behind Georgia’s 54-48 Rose Bowl victory against Oklahoma on Jan. 1, 2018. Maybe it was fitting. TCU, the little private school from Forth Worth, Texas, that was left out of the Big 12 when it first formed in the mid-1990s, became the first team from the conference to win a CFP game and will be the first to play for a national title since Texas in 2009.

This one was 34-16 after Dee Winters’ 29-yard pick6 with 2:46 left in the third quarter.

Of course, nothing has come easy for these Frogs. During their unbeaten regular season, they won seven straight games by 10 points or fewer.

What followed was five touchdown drives — with a TCU turnover tucked in between — each taking less than a minute.

“The winner was football,” Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh said.

Roman Wilson’s 18-yard touchdown run on a reverse and a 2-point conversion pulled Michigan within 41-38 with 14:13 left in the fourth quarter.

Back came the Frogs, unleashing their best weapon. Future first-round draft pick Quentin Johnston took a short crosser from Duggan and turned it up the sideline for a 76-yard score that put the Frogs up 10.

Duggan threw for 225 yards and two intercepti­ons and ran for 57. Johnston had six catches for 163 yards and Emari Demercado, picking up the slack for an injured Kendre Miller, ran for 150. All of that against a defense that ranked third in the nation coming in.

After the Frogs and Wolverines combined for 62 points in 20 second-half minutes, the pace was throttled back. But Michigan cut the lead to six with 3:14 left on J.J. Mccarthy’s 5-yard TD pass to Wilson.

Mccarthy was spectacula­r at times with 343 yards passing, 52 rushing and three touchdowns. He also made two killer mistakes, tossing pick-sixes in each half.

 ?? Ross D. Franklin The Associated ?? Texas Christian receiver Quentin Johnston runs for a touchdown Saturday during the Horned Frogs’ 51-45 victory over Michigan.
Ross D. Franklin The Associated Texas Christian receiver Quentin Johnston runs for a touchdown Saturday during the Horned Frogs’ 51-45 victory over Michigan.

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