The Palm Beach Post

Michel’s TD lifts Bulldogs

Running back scores two plays after Carter blocks FG attempt in second OT.

- By Mark Bradley Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on

PASADENA, CALIF. — The Georgia Bulldogs trailed by 17 points with nearly half the game gone. They trailed by seven inside the final minute. They went to overtime, where offenses are supposed to hold sway, against the nation’s No. 1 offense.

And they won. In one of the greatest moments in the history of a program that, not so long ago, wondered if its great moments had been relegated to history, Georgia beat Oklahoma 54-48 on Sony Michel’s 27-yard touchdown burst in the second overtime to advance to the national title game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium one week hence.

Which means: There could well be one more great moment awaiting these Bulldogs — but it will take some doing to top this. They took a major hit from sleek Oklahoma and the Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield, and they not only stayed upright, but managed to limit the Sooners to one offensive touchdown over the final two quarters plus both overtimes.

If not for Steven Parker’s fumble return off a Michel fumble, Georgia would surely have won in regulation. As it was, the Bulldogs forced a three-and-out when the Sooners had the chance to kill the game, drove 59 yards in seven plays to tie matters on Nick Chubb’s 2-yard run off a direct snap — the freshman quarterbac­k Jake Fromm’s 16-yard slant on third-and-10 was the vital play — and then forced a four-and-out when the Sooners, with 55 seconds and three timeouts at their disposal, could have won it at the end of regulation.

Into overtime. Oklahoma won the toss. Georgia had to settle for a Rodrigo Blankenshi­p field goal. Georgia forced Oklahoma to accept a tie. Then the Sooners were forced to kick yet again, and Lorenzo Carter — one of the four juniors who spurned the NFL to play another collegiate season, Chubb and Michel being two of the others — blocked it. Then Michel won it. Another flashing run off another direct snap and this Instant Classic was done.

Georgia had won the first overtime game in Rose Bowl annals, the first seen so far in the College Football Playoff. Georgia had won a game it appeared, for long and nervous moments in the first half, that Georgia had lost. But what was it that offensive coordinato­r Jim Chaney had said last week? This team simply plays so hard. In the end, effort and talent and coaching carried the day

The Bulldogs were aided and abetted by Lincoln Riley’s end-ofhalf blunder. The game turned just after Oklahoma executed maybe the sweetest plays any Rose Bowl has ever seen — a double-reverse pass to its famous quarterbac­k for the touchdown that gave the Sooners a 17-point lead with six seconds remaining in the half. At that moment, Georgia looked all but beaten. But that moment folded into another moment that changed this game forever.

Even as he was being hailed as the genius of geniuses, the coach made a choice that will haunt the Sooners for as long as they play the sport. A squib kick — do squib kicks ever work? — allowed Georgia to position itself for Blankenshi­p’s 55-yard field goal that closed the half on an upbeat note.

To their credit, the Bulldogs took their gift and ran like crazy with it. On their first snap of the second half, Chubb ran 50 yards to make the score 31-24. On Georgia’s final snap of the quarter, Michel burst 38 yards to tie it at 31-31. On the second play of the fourth quarter, Dominick Sanders intercepte­d a terrible Mayfield pass. Two plays later, Fromm found Javon Wims for the touchdown that gave Georgia a lead that would have seemed unthinkabl­e if you hadn’t grasped that the Bulldogs, in less time than it takes to say “Rodrigo from 55” had gone from being dominated to dominating.

Mayfield, who had been ill, looked sprightly in the first half, throwing two touchdown passes and catching a third. He wore down thereafter, or maybe the irresistib­le Bulldogs simply wore him down. He wound up with a lower quarterbac­k rating than Fromm. Georgia came within four yards of matching Oklahoma in total offense, which only went to show that the pregame analysis had it right: The sounder team won. The team that played good offense and good defense won.

Now Georgia gets the chance to win again, to claim its first national championsh­ip since the 1980 season in the capital city of its home state. It will take some doing for anything to top this breathless day-into-night at the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains, but the beauty of these Bulldogs is that, just when you think they can’t, they do.

They keep playing. They “keep chopping wood,” to use coach Kirby Smart’s phrase. They just felled the stylish Sooners and their swaggering quarterbac­k, and now they’ll face either Clemson or Alabama, who’ve won the past two playoff titles.

 ?? GREGORY BULL / AP ?? Georgia linebacker Lorenzo Carter (7) blocks a field-goal attempt by Oklahoma’s Austin Seibert in the second overtime of the Rose Bowl on Monday. Georgia won 54-48.
GREGORY BULL / AP Georgia linebacker Lorenzo Carter (7) blocks a field-goal attempt by Oklahoma’s Austin Seibert in the second overtime of the Rose Bowl on Monday. Georgia won 54-48.

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