USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Contrastin­g styles create intrigue

- – Paul Myerberg

Inches separated TCU from perfection. After coming up just short in the Big 12 championsh­ip game against Kansas State, the Horned Frogs and first-year coach Sonny Dykes will settle for the most unexpected College Football Playoff berth in the history of the postseason format.

And now the really hard part begins: third-seeded TCU enters the Fiesta Bowl as underdogs against Big Ten champion and second-seeded Michigan in a matchup of contrastin­g offensive styles.

This is the second playoff appearance in a row for the Wolverines, who ended the regular season with impressive wins against Ohio State and Purdue.

Another win against the rival Buckeyes and another Big Ten crown marks an official changing of the guard, as Michigan takes over from Ohio State as the dominant program in the conference and one of the very best programs in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n.

Last year’s team was not expected to contend for the playoff after a miserable 2020 season that left coach Jim Harbaugh’s job on thin ice. But this year’s squad was predicted to be in the thick of the championsh­ip race and has delivered with room to spare, leaving the Wolverines as Georgia’s biggest threat for the national title.

Despite losing star running back Blake Corum to a seasonendi­ng injury in late November, the offense has continued to flourish on the ground behind Donovan Edwards, who set a career high for rushing yards (216) against the Buckeyes and then was the MVP of the Big Ten championsh­ip game.

His ability to shoulder the load has helped quarterbac­k J.J. McCarthy bounce back from a miserable performanc­e in a narrow win the game ahead of the Ohio State game against Illinois. The sophomore has six touchdowns and has averaged 10.3 yards per attempt in the past two games.

Despite McCarthy’s strong play of late, Michigan’s clearest path to victory is to avoid a battle of quarterbac­ks and to focus on what the team does best: run the ball and stop others from doing the same.

That’s because TCU has one of the nation’s elite players in Heisman Trophy finalist and quarterbac­k Max Duggan, who began the season as the backup but stepped into the starting role in September and delivered one of the finest seasons in program history.

He booked his place in the Heisman ceremony with an epic performanc­e in the loss to Kansas State in the Big 12 title game. Battered by the Wildcats defense, Duggan toughed out 251 passing yards, 110 rushing yards and two touchdowns. Late in the game, he led the Horned Frogs on an 80yard drive to tie the score at 28-28 and force overtime.

As Duggan goes, so goes TCU. Since even Michigan’s defense may struggle containing the senior, the Wolverines’ focus could be instead on slowing down the Horned Frogs’ complement­ary skill talent, led by all-conference running back Kendre Miller.

It’s undeniable TCU has yet to face a defense of Michigan’s caliber. The Wolverines rank third nationally in yards allowed per game (277.1), third in yards given up per play (4.5) and fifth in scoring defense (13.4 points per game).

Only two opponents topped 400 yards of offense: Ohio State and Purdue. Much like TCU, though, those two opponents attacked Michigan with passheavy offensive game plans built around strong quarterbac­k play.

The contrast is clear. As they’ve done all season, the Wolverines want to pound away at the TCU defense and pull away in the second half. The Horned Frogs want to push the tempo and force Michigan to operate at a faster pace. The winner will be the team that forces the other out of its comfort zone.

 ?? RON JENKINS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Max Duggan started as TCU’s backup QB but by September’s end was the starter on a path to Heisman finalist.
RON JENKINS/GETTY IMAGES Max Duggan started as TCU’s backup QB but by September’s end was the starter on a path to Heisman finalist.

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