Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields gets hit by Clemson linebacker James Skalski during the first half of the Sugar Bowl Friday night in New Orleans. Skalski was ejected from the game for targeting. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)

Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields gets hit by Clemson linebacker James Skalski during the first half of the Sugar Bowl Friday night in New Orleans. Skalski was ejected from the game for targeting. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)

COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYOFF: Six years later, Ohio St. and ‘Bama face off in a CFP rematch

  • By Stephen Hawkins The Associated Press
  • Saturday, January 2, 2021 11:44am
  • Sports

ARLINGTON, Texas — When Ohio State upset Alabama in the semifinals of the first College Football Playoff on the way to the Buckeyes’ last national title, it seemed like the start of budding postseason rivalry between the two traditional powers.

Instead, Clemson became the Crimson Tide’s nemesis and the biggest challenger to Nick Saban’s Alabama dynasty over the next five years.

Six years later, Ohio State and Alabama meet again, the Tide still rolling and the Buckeyes again looking for an upset.

After the SEC champion Crimson Tide rolled past Notre Dame 31-14 in a Rose Bowl played deep in the heart of Texas, the No. 3 Buckeyes of the Big Ten beat Clemson 49-28 in the other CFP semifinal at the Sugar Bowl on Friday night behind Justin Fields’ six touchdown passes.

How Fields is feeling will be the main story line heading into the title game. He took a hard short to the side in the second quarter against Clemson, but managed to play through the pain.

“He couldn’t do everything, but what a gutsy performance, what a tough and special young man Justin Fields is,” said Ohio State coach Ryan Day, in his second season after taking over from Urban Meyer.

Clemson was trying, like Alabama, to get to the title game for the fifth time in the seven seasons of the four-team playoff. It would have been the fourth Tigers-Tide game for the CFP championship.

Instead it’s a matchup of storied programs playing Jan. 11 in suburban Miami to determine the champion of this most unusual season played in the shadow of a pandemic.

Alabama was the top seed in the first four-team playoff after the 2014 season, but Ohio State beat the Tide 42-35 in the semifinal Sugar Bowl behind Meyer, Ezekiel Elliott and Cardale Jones.

Those Buckeyes faced doubters of their playoff worthiness like these. In 2014, Ohio State had to come back from an early season loss to Virginia Tech to slip into the final playoff spot on the last weekend of the regular season.

After beating Alabama, the Buckeyes went on to win the national title 42-20 over Oregon that year, but they had lost twice to Clemson in the semifinals since.

While this season’s CFP has provided a third consecutive title-game matchup of undefeated teams, this one is a little different.

Alabama has played 12 games, getting through a conference-only regular season before holding off Florida 52-46 in the SEC championship game and then winning the relocated Rose Bowl. That semifinal was moved from Pasadena because of COVID-19 restrictions that would have kept family — or any fans — from attending the game.

Ohio State’s overwhelming win in the Sugar Bowl was only its seventh game this season.

The Buckeyes had three regular-season games canceled because of virus issues after the Big Ten didn’t start its season until late October. The league altered its rules to let them represent the East Division in the conference championship game after only five regular-season games, instead of the six that had been initially mandated.

That Ohio State even got to play at all was surprising after the Big Ten canceled its fall season in August only to reverse course in September,

“With everything this team has been through this last 10 months or so, I’m just so happy for this group of guys,” Ohio State linebacker Tuf Borland said.

Alabama opened as a touchdown favorite over Ohio State, riding a prolific offense that features two Heisman Trophy finalists.

DeVonta Smith, the favorite to win the Heisman next week, caught three touchdown passes from fellow finalist Mac Jones against Notre Dame.

Smith had seven catches for 130 yards, while Jones completed 25 of 30 passes for 297 yards.

“Smitty has done as much for our team as any player could do for any team,” said Saban, who will be looking for his sixth national championship with Alabama and seventh overall.

The Heisman votes had already been cast before the semifinal. Alabama running back Najee Harris finished fifth in the voting and the order of the final four with Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence and Florida’s Kyle Trask will be revealed Tuesday night.

Playing only six game kept Fields out of the Heisman conversation. Especially after a poor performance in the Big Ten title game against Northwestern.

Fields looked like one of the best players in the country in the Sugar Bowl as the Buckeyes avenged last season’s painful CFP loss to Lawrence and Clemson.

“In life, you don’t typically get an opportunity to get a second chance,” Day said. “But you can’t miss the second time. So I don’t know what we’re more excited about, the fact that we have a chance to play for a national championship or the fact that we avenged that loss.”

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