Texarkana Gazette

Tide-Tigers has precedents in other sports

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SANTA CLARA, Calif.— LeBron vs. Steph in the spring, Dabo vs. Nick in the winter.

As much as Cleveland and Golden State became annual opponents in the NBA Finals before James left the Cavaliers last summer to join the Los Angeles Lakers after losing the title for the third time in four years to Curry and the Warriors, Clemson and Alabama have squared off in the winter to help determine college football’s champion.

The Tigers are set to square off against the Crimson Tide for the fourth straight year in the College Football Playoff in Monday night’s title game. While most of the players have changed since Alabama won the first meeting for the championsh­ip in January 2016, the coaches have remained the same.

Alabama’s Nick Saban won the championsh­ip the first year before Clemson’s Dabo Sweeney got his first championsh­ip a year later. The Tide won in the semifinals last season and now the teams are set to meet again.

Here are some other noteworthy matchups that happened in four straight postseason­s from around the sports world:

SIBLING RIVALRY: While it doesn’t quite count as postseason matchups, Venus and Serena Williams squared off for the title at four straight tennis majors starting with the 2002 French Open that Serena won in straight sets for her second career grand slam title. Serena followed that by beating her big sister in the final at Wimbledon, the U.S. Open and the 2003 Australian Open, winning the first of her two career Serena Slams. The sisters have met 30 times in all on the court, with Serena winning 18, including seven of nine meetings in slam finals.

GRIDIRON GREATS: Few rivalries were as heated as the one between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Oakland Raiders in the 1970s. The games were physical, memorable and often impacted the championsh­ip. It got so intense that Pittsburgh coach Chuck Noll referred to Raiders safety George Atkinson as part of the “criminal element” in football, leading to an unsuccessf­ul defamation suit.

The teams played in five straight postseason­s starting with the most memorable one in 1972 when Franco Harris’ 60-yard TD on the Immaculate Reception led the Steelers to a 13-7 win. The Raiders got revenge the following year before Pittsburgh beat Oakland in two straight AFC title games on the way to Super Bowl wins. The run ended with Oakland winning 24-7 in the 1976 AFC championsh­ip on the way to the Raiders’ first Super Bowl win. KINGS OF THE COURT: There have been several NBA rivalries that featured four straight playoff meetings, including when Bill Russell’s Celtics took three out of four Eastern Conference finals from Wilt Chamberlai­n and the 76ers from 1965-68.

The Knicks and Bulls played each year from 1991-94 with Michael Jordan and Chicago taking the first three and Patrick Ewing and New York winning the fourth when Jordan was playing baseball.

The Knicks went to the limit four straight times against Miami starting in 1997, with the Knicks winning three of the series that featured fights, suspension­s and plenty of bad blood.

The Lakers and Spurs then traded dominance in the Western Conference with four straight meetings in 2001-04 between teams featuring Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant in Los Angeles and Tim Duncan in San Antonio.

 ?? AP Photo/Chris Carlson ?? ■ Alabama head coach Nick Saban, left, and Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney pose for a picture during a news conference for the NCAA college football playoff championsh­ip game on Jan. 10, 2016, in Glendale, Ariz. While most of the players have changed since Alabama won the first meeting with Alabama for the championsh­ip in 2016, the coaches have remained the same.
AP Photo/Chris Carlson ■ Alabama head coach Nick Saban, left, and Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney pose for a picture during a news conference for the NCAA college football playoff championsh­ip game on Jan. 10, 2016, in Glendale, Ariz. While most of the players have changed since Alabama won the first meeting with Alabama for the championsh­ip in 2016, the coaches have remained the same.

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