Miami Herald (Sunday)

LSU ROLLS INTO FINAL

- BY PAUL NEWBERRY Associated Press

ATLANTA

Joe Burrow turned in the greatest performanc­e yet in his Heisman Trophy season, throwing for seven touchdowns and 493 yards as No. 1 LSU romped to a breathtaki­ng 63-28 victory over No. 4 Oklahoma in the Peach Bowl semifinal game Saturday.

The Tigers (14-0) headed to the national championsh­ip game against either No. 2 Ohio State or No. 3 Clemson clicking on all cylinders, having dismantled the Sooners (12-2) with a first half for the ages.

Burrow tied the record for any college bowl game with his seven TD passes — which all came before the bands hit the field for the halftime show at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Justin Jefferson was on the receiving end for four of those scoring plays, also tying a bowl record.

For good measure, Burrows scored an eighth TD himself on a 3-yard run in the third quarter, thoroughly dominating his expected duel with Oklahoma quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts, the Heisman runner-up.

All that as the Tigers played with heavy hearts. Shortly before the game, LSU offensive coor

Joe Burrow, the Heisman Trophy winner for No. 1 LSU, threw for a record seven TDs in the first half to lead the Tigers to a 63-28 victory over No. 4 Oklahoma and a berth in the CFP national title game.

dinator Steve Ensminger learned that his daughterin-law, broadcaste­r Carley McCord, was among five people killed in a plane crash in Louisiana.

The small plane went down shortly after takeoff for what was supposed to be a flight to Atlanta for the game.

Emsminger had tears running down his cheeks during warmups, but he was in his usual spot high above the field when the game kicked off, calling plays along with passing game coordinato­r Joe Brady.

It was a brilliant, poignant performanc­e in the face of such tragedy.

“He’s the MVP right now,” LSU head coach Ed Orgeron said in a halftime interview with his team leading 49-14.

 ?? GREGORY SHAMUS Getty Images ?? LSU quarterbac­k Joe Burrow, left, and offensive lineman Adrian Magee celebrate one of Burrow’s bowl-record seven TD passes in the first half.
GREGORY SHAMUS Getty Images LSU quarterbac­k Joe Burrow, left, and offensive lineman Adrian Magee celebrate one of Burrow’s bowl-record seven TD passes in the first half.
 ?? GREGORY SHAMUS Getty Images ?? LSU wide receiver Justin Jefferson leaps for one of his four TD catches against Oklahoma in the Chick-fil-A Bowl. Jefferson racked up 227 yards on receptions from Joe Burrow.
GREGORY SHAMUS Getty Images LSU wide receiver Justin Jefferson leaps for one of his four TD catches against Oklahoma in the Chick-fil-A Bowl. Jefferson racked up 227 yards on receptions from Joe Burrow.

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