New York Daily News

TIGERS RIDE A

Clemson TD with 1 second left dethrones

- CLEMSON ALABAMA 35 31

TAMPA, Fla. — College football’s first national championsh­ip rematch was fitting sequel to the original, with an unusual twist at the end.

Deshaun Watson and Clemson dethroned the champs and became the first team to beat Nick Saban’s Alabama dynasty in a national title game, taking down the top-ranked Crimson Tide 3531 Monday night in the College Football Playoff.

Watson found Hunter Renfrow for a 2-yard touchdown pass with a second remaining to give the Tigers their first national championsh­ip since 1981. A year after Alabama won its fourth title under Saban with a 45-40 classic in Arizona, Clemson closed the deal and denied the Tide an unpreceden­ted fifth championsh­ip in eight seasons.

The lead changed hands three times in the fourth quarter, but Watson got the ball last. Likely playing in his final college game, the junior quarterbac­k threw for 420 yards and three touchdowns.

Coach Dabo Swinney had built an elite program at Clemson that was missing only one thing, and now the Tigers can check that box, too.

The Tigers took a 28-24 lead with 4:38 left in the fourth quarter when Wayne Gallman surged in from a yard out.

The Tide’s offense, which had gone dormant for most of the second half, came to life with the help of a sweet call from newly promoted offensive coordinato­r Steve Sarkisian. Receiver ArDarius Stewart took a backward pass from Jalen Hurts and fired a strike to O.J. Howard for 24 yards.

On the next play, Hurts broke free from a collapsing pocket and weaved his way through defenders for a 30-yard touchdown run to make it 31-28 with

TAMPA, Fla. — Steve Sarkisian dialed up a timely trick play, a pass that worked to perfection and plenty of hand-offs to Bo Scarbrough.

The combinatio­n nearly added up to a triumphant debut for Sarkisian as Alabama’s offensive coordinato­r — on the biggest stage in college football. Almost.

Eight days after jumping into the job, his offense struggled mightily in the second half but produced a go-ahead touchdown with 2:07 left that wasn’t quite enough in Monday night’s 35-31 loss to Clemson in 2:07 left.

More than enough time for Watson, who hooked up with Mike Williams and Jordan Leggett for great catches and big gains to get to first-and-goal.

A pass interferen­ce on Alabama made it first-and-goal at the 2 with six seconds left. Time for one more play to the national championsh­ip game.

For a change, the nation’s top defense couldn’t overcome the Tide’s offensive deficienci­es. Deshaun Watson hit Hunter Renfrow for the winning 2-yard touchdown with 1 second left.

Sarkisian, a former USC and Washington head coach, was given the reins of the Tide offense a day after the Peach Bowl when coach Nick Saban ushered Lane Kiffin on to his new job at Florida Atlantic. That three-year pairing ended one game earlier than expected. avoid a tying kick and potential overtime. Renfrow slipped away from the defense at the goal line and was alone for an easy toss. It was the walk-on receiver’s second TD catch of the night, adding to the two he had last season against Alabama.

When it ended, Clemson’s

Mostly, Alabama stuck to the same offensive script — good and bad — as it had under Kiffin.

Freshman quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts, the Southeaste­rn Conference offensive player of the year, struggled to complete anything more than short passes most of the game. The Tide finished 2 of 15 on third downs, and only Scarbrough had much consistent success before going down with a right leg injury late in the third quarter.

The biggest test for Sarkisian came with four minutes left and Alabama facing its 315-pound defensive lineman Christian Wilkins did a cartwheel and Ben Boulware, one of the toughest linebacker­s in the country, was in tears.

The Tigers had snapped Alabama’s 26-game winning streak and beaten a No. 1 team for the first time ever. —AP first fourth-quarter deficit since last year’s title game against the Tigers. He passed that one with flying colors.

Alabama converted a fourth down with a Damien Harris run. Then Hurts threw a lateral to receiver ArDarius Stewart, a former high school quarterbac­k who fired a 24-yard completion to tight end O.J. Howard.

Then Hurts did what he does best, running for a 30-yard touchdown that gave ‘Bama back the lead.

But it didn’t last. —AP

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