Two things have been true of the College Football Playoff committee’s first eight years of selections.
First, the committee has almost certainly gotten the top four correct on every occasion. For any debates over Ohio State in 2014 or Alabama in 2017, the eventual results — a national championship for both — served as the final word in any argument.
But the second detail worth noting about the committee’s process is that, in the end, the decisions have almost entirely been easy. Even those mildly controversial choices actually represented the easiest possible solution for the committee. For all the griping and hand-wringing over every rankings release leading up to the final ballot, the stars have always aligned in the end.
That’s not the case this season.
On a championship weekend that seemed to have little chance of disrupting the status quo, TCU and USC threw wrenches into the works. With Ohio State and Alabama relaxed on their respective couches, feet up and a bowl of chips on their laps, they somehow were pulled from the playoff scrap heap, dusted off and found to be playoff-caliber teams after all.
On Friday, Utah demolished USC 47-24, hanging a second loss on the Trojans’ résumé — all because they had to play an extra game that Ohio State, Alabama and Tennessee did not.
On Saturday, Max Duggan‘s heroics fell six inches shy of a win, and TCU’s case is now in the committee’s hands, where it’ll judge the Horned Frogs’ one loss in overtime to Kansas State against Ohio State’s lone defeat vs. Michigan — a blowout from a week ago that now feels like ancient history.
USC has two losses — but it has lost to just one team, same as Ohio State. It lost in a blowout to a highly ranked conference rival, same as Ohio State. It has a Heisman Trophy-caliber quarterback, a cadre of elite receivers, a shaky defense and an impressive win over Notre Dame, same as Ohio State.
TCU took the L, but didn’t that frenetic comeback offer a reminder of the excitement the Frogs have given us all year? (And if it didn’t, just stare deeply into the Hypnotoad’s eyes.) A goal-line stand in overtime was the difference in TCU’s 31-28 loss to Kansas State, but the Horned Frogs remain this season’s Cinderella, even if the committee is now looking back at Alabama’s wicked stepmother in the latest version of that Twitter meme.
Kansas State stuffs TCU at the goal line in overtime.
The committee will need to weigh putting in teams with more talent (Ohio State or Alabama) over teams that almost certainly are more deserving (TCU, USC, Tennessee). They’ll need to weigh whether to punish teams that were so good in the regular season that they earned a spot in their conference title game or admit that everything that happened this weekend ultimately had no impact. They’ll have to weigh whether there’s more value in giving upstarts entry into the most exclusive club in sports or in playing to the TV ratings to create arguably the biggest battle of name brands in the playoff’s brief history.
So, what’s the right answer?
To watch Duggan drag the Horned Frogs back from the abyss and into overtime, bent over, bleeding and gulping for air like he’d just survived Black Friday at Walmart, only the most callous of voters could cast a ballot ignoring TCU’s 12-1 season. The man ran for 95 yards on an 80-yard touchdown drive, after all.
And yet, the committee has never functioned on emotion. Committees, by design, are heartless entities.
To watch Caleb Williams limping through an unimaginably bad second half Friday night, blanketed by an unrelenting Utah pass rush, but still capable of genuine magic on the football field, would anyone fault the committee for punching a ticket for the country’s most exciting player and, in the process, offering the West Coast its first taste of playoff football in six years?
And yet, there’s virtually no case to be made that USC’s defense would hold up against Georgia or Michigan in any playoff matchup.
Would the committee really punish Georgia with a Peach Bowl matchup against Ohio State just to avoid a first-round rematch between the Buckeyes and Wolverines?
Would the committee really hand an invite to 10-2 Alabama over a Tennessee team with the same record and a head-to-head win?
Would the committee really be ready for the blowback of putting Alabama into the playoff at any cost? Wouldn’t that only give confirmation to all the conspiracy theorists who already believe Nick Saban is the puppet master directing the whole sordid affair to begin with?
Yeah, filling out this year’s dance card isn’t going to be easy. The committee should probably send Shane Beamer and South Carolina a nice thank-you card and a fruit basket for ensuring this debate isn’t even more complicated.
Heather Dinich breaks down what USC’s loss means for College Football Playoff hopefuls, Ohio State and Alabama.
Then again, if this championship weekend did little to settle the season’s top four teams, Georgia’s utter annihilation of LSU might have offered a more important lesson: The king is still the king.
For all the sound and fury over TCU and USC, Tennessee and Alabama, Ohio State or virtually any other team in the country, the real monster looming on the horizon is a 5-11 former walk-on who just hung 50 on the 14th-ranked team in the country. To think, LSU coach Brian Kelly has spent the past year chugging sweet tea, pretending to like jazz and using “Bless his heart” in casual conversation, and this is all he has to show for it. Sad, really. Wouldn’t it just be simpler to let Stetson Bennett choose his next victim, like picking a lobster from the tank at some chain seafood restaurant? “Yes, I’ll take TCU … and keep the biscuits coming.”
Georgia remains the elephant in the room (unless Alabama gets into the playoff, too, in which case there’d be two elephants, which would be awkward). But why look so far ahead? Perhaps the real takeaway is: Spending Saturday worrying about Sunday was to miss the good stuff.
Duggan might have earned his share of Heisman votes in a loss. It was as gutty a performance as we’ve seen all year. It was college football at its finest.
Lincoln Riley’s rebuild at USC was no less impressive because it ended on a sour note. The Trojans — and the Pac-12 — were relevant into December for the first time in years. And still, the old-school portion of college football got the last laugh, as throwback Kyle Whittingham and his built-from-scratch Utes staved off the future of NIL-bought championships for at least another year.
Georgia dominated as we’ve come to expect, but it was still Bennett’s first SEC championship. His storybook career would’ve been no less astonishing without it, but it still would’ve felt like reading a novel knowing a chapter was missing, “War and Peace” without the peace.
The committee will figure out where the chips fall. It will require more tough choices than it ever has, and days or weeks or, perhaps, years of righteous outrage will follow.
But Saturday was still the fun part. It always is.
Diabolical Dabo
Dabo Swinney got the last laugh.
For the past year, he’s been fending off a near constant chorus of demands to change QBs, and at each step he’s sworn DJ Uiagalelei was his guy.
After Clemson signed star recruit Cade Klubnik, Swinney was sticking with Uiagalelei. After Klubnik looked great late in a Week 1 win against Georgia Tech, no changes were in order. When Uiagalelei torched Wake Forest in a 2OT win, Swinney demanded an accounting of all those critics who doubted Uiagalelei. Then after he benched Uiagalelei against Syracuse and Notre Dame … well, that was just a test drive. Nothing to see here. Carry on with your business. Even after Uiagalelei completed just 8-of-29 passes in a loss to South Carolina last week, Swinney promised he wasn’t making a change at QB.
All part of the plan to lure North Carolina into a false sense of security in the ACC championship game.
“The greatest trick the devil ever played was convincing the world he didn’t exist.” — Kaiser Soze
“The greatest trick Dabo ever played was convincing the world his backup QB didn’t exist.” — Mack Brown
True to his word, Uiagalelei got the start Saturday, but on the third series of the game, Klubnik took over and Clemson looked more explosive than it has since Trevor Lawrence’s hair was glistening under the South Carolina sun.
Touchdown! Cade Klubnik scores vs. North Carolina
Klubnik finished 20-of-24 for 279 yards and accounted for two touchdowns in Clemson’s 39-10 win. Afterward, Brown said the game plan was to stuff the Tigers’ ground game and make Uiagalelei beat them.
Well, UNC stuffed the run. Clemson finished with 68 yards on the ground. But they hadn’t counted on Klubnik entering a phone booth and coming out with a cape.
Advantage: Dabo.
Oh, sure, losing to South Carolina means Clemson won’t make the playoff. But it was a small price to pay to pull off such a top-notch surprise Saturday. As Swinney has so often said, the playoff was never a team goal. The ACC title is. The clues were there the whole time if any of us had bothered to look. (Gene Chizik drops his coffee cup and on the bottom reads the word: Cade.)
The Tigers will head to the Orange Bowl now, and Klubnik figures to be the starter.
Or, maybe that’s just what Swinney wants you to believe.
Virtually every contender for the award stumbled to the finish line with a loss — be it Hendon Hooker in Week 12, C.J. Stroud in Week 13 or Max Duggan and Caleb Williams in conference championship games.
Does that mean the Heisman betting should be completely upended? Well, someone has to win, and a little recency bias shouldn’t overshadow some terrific seasons.
1. Ohio State QB C.J. Stroud
Separating Stroud and Williams at this point is entirely about splitting hairs. Stroud is just a tick better in Total QBR. Williams has two fewer picks. Stroud completed 66.2% of his passes. Williams completed 66.1%. Stroud averaged 9.4 yards per pass. Williams averaged 9.1 They both threw 37 touchdowns. They both were exceptional, but what puts Stroud ahead here is this: He did it all with Jaxson Smith-Njigba playing just three games and TreVeyon Henderson missing four games. As deep as Ohio State is at the skill positions, Stroud made every one of a parade of emerging stars who stepped into bigger roles better. And he did it all in spite of having to spend half of every game watching other Big Ten offenses. Do you know how hard it is to stay awake through all that?
2. USC QB Caleb Williams
If he’d beaten Utah, would he be a clear-cut No. 1? Perhaps. But Williams rolled the dice moving to the Pac-12, knowing that nothing ends well there, so he must live with the consequences.
3. TCU QB Max Duggan
Yes, Duggan lost Saturday. But the loss was hardly on him. The man ran himself into near hypothermia, and if he’d made it six inches further in overtime, TCU might be 13-0 right now. Duggan’s performance was herculean even if the reward hardly matched the effort, like those guys who finish a 64-ounce steak just to get a free t-shirt and their photo on the wall of the restaurant. If it wasn’t ultimately enough to win him the Heisman, it was certainly enough to secure his spot in New York for Heisman weekend — and in the hearts of TCU fans forever.
There was one QB who finished the season on a high note, and that’s Bennett. The Heisman is not intended to be a lifetime achievement award, even if Bennett’s life is the stuff of legend. But his numbers warrant consideration on their own. His 86.3 Total QBR is just a fraction shy of Williams’ 86.4. He’s accounted for more than 3,500 yards and added 27 touchdowns. He’s led Georgia to a 13-0 record and he’s done it with a supporting cast that hardly looks like the cadre of superstars at USC or Ohio State (no offense to Brock Bowers, because honestly, we’re terrified of Brock Bowers). To vote for Bennett couldn’t be simply about the stats or the legacy. His case is somewhere in the margins, in understanding he possesses some rare magic that can’t be quantified or understood but that makes him just about the coolest human being since Miles Davis.
There’s a reason only one player in history has won multiple Heisman trophies. Not only is it hard to repeat an elite performance, but rather than being judged against the other contenders, he’s inevitably judged against his prior year’s success. Such is the case for Young, who lost two games and missed a sizable chunk of two more, and that’s simply not enough to get in done when the standard is so incredibly high. But Alabama’s offense was not the wrecking ball we were used to seeing, and Young was the spark that kept the Crimson Tide’s season alive. He won’t win the award, but there’s still a good case to be made he was the best player in the country in 2022.
Sanders leaves with SWAC title
Deion Sanders landed a trophy and a new job Saturday, leading Jackson State to a SWAC title with a 43-24 win over Southern before officially accepting the head-coaching job at Colorado.
Sanders’ son, Shedeur Sanders, threw for 305 yards and four touchdowns in the win. Sanders wrapped his Jackson State coaching career with a record of 27-5.
Colorado AD Rick George confirmed Sanders’ hiring Saturday night, which allowed Coach Prime enough time to rent a party bus for all the players he’s likely to take with him to road trip out to Boulder that will also be filmed for a new Netflix special. On the plus side for Jackson State, however, Sanders did leave a nice note on his desk reading: “Thanks for the memories. IOU 1 recruiting class. Love Coach Prime.”
In 1998, Tulane went 12-0 and won Conference USA. For the next 23 years, the Green Wave went without a conference title, and there were no celebrations in New Orleans as far as we’re aware.
But that torment came to a rollicking end Saturday as Tulane demolished UCF in the American Athletic Conference championship game, securing a New Year’s Six bowl bid in the process.
Michael Pratt threw for 394 yards and four touchdowns, and Tyjae Spears rushed for 199 yards and a score in the 45-28 win, earning revenge after UCF won their regular-season matchup three weeks ago.
Tulane racked up 649 yards in the game, its second most since that 1998 season, according to ESPN Stats & Information research, and the bludgeoning could’ve been even worse. The Green Wave turned the ball over three times and failed to convert a fourth down deep in their own territory that led to a UCF touchdown.
Tulane now enters its bowl game with 11 wins for just the second time in its history, just one year after a miserable 2-10 campaign.
We only hope the Green Wave will be able to find a few establishments willing to host a party.
Unbelievable scenes. UCF’s swan song from the AAC ends in a 45-28 loss to Tulane in the championship game pic.twitter.com/Mikus2WmXl
As the committee’s highest-ranked team from the Group of 5, Tulane is set for a bid to a New Year’s Six bowl, but if one of the year’s most iconic plays hadn’t happened way back in Week 3, it might be Troy celebrating this week.
The Trojans dominated Coastal Carolina in the Sun Belt championship on Saturday, 45-26, despite the return of Chanticleers QB Grayson McCall, who had been out since Nov. 3 with an injury.
Troy is now 11-2 on the season and has won 10 straight, each of the past three by at least 21.
So, why isn’t Troy in the conversation for a New Year’s Six bowl? Blame Chase Brice.
Back in Week 3, Appalachian State had just pulled off a stunning upset of Texas A&M and hosted “College GameDay,” but the Mountaineers trailed Troy 28-26 with just 2 seconds to play. That’s when Brice heaved a Hail Mary that Christian Horn caught short of the goal line before he looped around to the sideline and found the end zone for a chaotic 32-28 win.
It was the last time Troy lost, but it was also likely enough to keep the Trojans well behind Tulane in the Group of 5 pecking order this season.
And yet, Troy isn’t likely to even be the biggest story about a Trojans team narrowly missing out on a top bowl invite.
Justin Marshall climbs the ladder and makes a spectacular snag for a Buffalo touchdown.
Marshall finished with two touchdown grabs in the game, and Quian Williams scored from 16 yards out with 1:15 to play to carry the Bulls past Akron 23-22.
The game was originally scheduled for Nov. 22, and Buffalo finally finished shoveling snow off its field Friday to allow the teams to play. The win gets the Bulls to 6-6 and bowl eligible, too, and if there’s any fairness in the world, they’ll get to go some place much, much warmer than Buffalo.
Under-the-radar game of the week
Six days ago, New Mexico State hopped onto College Football Tinder and updated its profile: “FBS independent, bowl eligible and ready to mingle.”
Valparaiso quickly swiped right, and on Saturday, we learned that, perhaps, the Beacons weren’t actually ready for a relationship.
New Mexico State had already gotten a waiver from the NCAA to become bowl eligible at 5-6 after its Oct. 22 game against San Jose State was shelved. Still, the Aggies had a shot to get to .500 with the make-up date against Valpo and they didn’t waste the chance.
New Mexico State won 65-3 — a score that surely puts Valpo head coach Landon Fox on Auburn‘s radar when the Tigers are looking again in 2025 — and secured the Aggies’ second six-win season in the past 20 years.
With New Mexico State assured a bowl bid — its second since 1960 — and Buffalo knocking off Akron on Friday, 81 of the 82 bowl bids were will be filled by teams 6-6 or better. That leaves Rice — at 5-7 — as the final team to make a bowl courtesy of having the highest APR among five-win teams.
Ohio State opened as a 9.5-point favorite over Notre Dame in the College Football Playoff National Championship Presented by AT&T, per ESPN BET odds.
If that line holds, it would be tied for the second-largest spread in a CFP national championship game and the fourth largest in the CFP/BCS era. Georgia was -13.5 against TCU in the 2022 national championship, while Alabama showed -9.5 against none other than Ohio State to decide the 2020 campaign. Both favorites covered the spread in blowout fashion, combining for a cover margin of 63.
Notre Dame is 12-3 against the spread this season, tied with Arizona State (12-2) and Marshall (12-1) for the most covers in the nation. The Irish are 7-0 ATS against ranked teams and 2-0 ATS as underdogs, with both covers going down as outright victories, including their win over Penn State (-1.5) in the CFP national semifinal.
However, Notre Dame was also on the losing end of the largest outright upset of the college football season when it fell as a 28.5-point favorite to Northern Illinois.
Ohio State is 9-6 against the spread and has been a favorite in every game it has played this season; it has covered the favorite spread in every CFP game thus far, including in its semifinal win against Texas when it covered -6 with overwhelming public support.
The Buckeyes also have been an extremely popular pick in the futures market all season. At BetMGM as of Friday morning, OSU had garnered a leading 28.2% of money and 16.8% of bets to win the national title, checking in as the sportsbook’s greatest liability.
Ohio State opened at +700 to win it all this season and is now -350 with just one game to play.
ARLINGTON, Texas — Quinshon Judkins ran for two touchdowns before Jack Sawyer forced a fumble by his former roommate that he returned 83 yards for a clinching TD as Ohio State beat Texas28-14 in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic on Friday night to advance to a shot for their sixth national title.
Led by Judkins and Sawyer, the Buckeyes (13-2) posted the semifinal victory in the same stadium where 10 years ago they were champions in the debut of the College Football Playoff as a four-team format. Now they have the opportunity to be the winner again in the debut of the expanded 12-team field.
Ohio State plays Orange Bowl champion Notre Dame in Atlanta on Jan. 20. It could be quite a finish for the Buckeyes after they lost to rival Michigan on Nov. 30. Ohio State opened as a 9.5-point favorite over the Irish, per ESPN BET.
“About a month ago, a lot of people counted us out. And these guys went to work, this team, these leaders, the captains, the staff,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said. “Everybody in the building believed. And because of that, I believe we won the game in the fourth quarter.”
Sawyer got to Longhorns quarterback Quinn Ewers on a fourth-and-goal from the 8, knocking the ball loose and scooping it up before lumbering all the way to the other end. It was the longest fumble return in CFP history.
Ewers and Sawyer were roommates in Columbus, Ohio, for the one semester the quarterback was there before transferring home to Texas and helping lead the Longhorns (13-3) to consecutive CFP semifinals. But next season will be their 20th since winning their last national title with Vince Young in 2005.
Texas had gotten to the 1, helped by two pass-interference penalties in the end zone before Quintrevion Wisner was stopped for a 7-yard loss.
Judkins had a 1-yard touchdown for a 21-14 lead with 7:02 left. That score came four plays after quarterback Will Howard converted fourth-and-2 from the Texas 34 with a stumbling 18-yard run that was almost a score.
Howard was 24-of-33 passing for 289 yards with a touchdown and an interception.
Ewers finished 23-of-39 for 283 yards with two TD passes to Jaydon Blue and an interception after getting the ball back one final time.
Bill McCartney, a three-time coach of the year in the Big Eight Conference who led the Colorado Buffaloes to their only national football title in 1990, has died. He was 84.
McCartney died Friday night “after a courageous journey with dementia,” according to a family statement.
“Coach Mac touched countless lives with his unwavering faith, boundless compassion, and enduring legacy as a leader, mentor and advocate for family, community and faith,” the family said in its statement. “As a trailblazer and visionary, his impact was felt both on and off the field, and his spirit will forever remain in the hearts of those he inspired.”
After playing college ball under Dan Devine at Missouri, McCartney started coaching high school football and basketball in Detroit. He then was hired onto the staff at Michigan, the only assistant ever plucked from the high school ranks by Bo Schembechler.
Schembechler chose wisely. As the Wolverines’ defensive coordinator during the 1980 season, McCartney earned Big Ten “Player” of the Week honors for the defensive scheme he devised to stop star Purdue quarterback Mark Herrmann.
“When I was 7 years old, I knew I was going to be a coach,” McCartney told The Gazette in 2013. “My friends, other kids at that age were going to be president, businessmen, attorneys, firemen. Ever since I was a little kid, I imitated my coaches, critiqued them, always followed and studied them.”
In 1982, McCartney took over a Colorado program that was coming off three straight losing seasons with a combined record of 7-26. After three more struggling seasons, McCartney turned things around to go to bowl games in nine out of 10 seasons starting in 1985, when he switched over to a wishbone offense.
His 1989 team was 11-0 when it headed to the Orange Bowl, where Notre Dame dashed Colorado’s hopes of a perfect season. McCartney and the Buffaloes, however, would get their revenge the following season.
After getting off to an uninspiring 1-1-1 start in 1990, Colorado won its next nine games to earn a No. 1 ranking and a rematch with the Fighting Irish. This time the Buffaloes prevailed, 10-9, and grabbed a share of the national title atop the AP poll (Georgia Tech was tops in the coaches’ poll).
McCartney won numerous coach of the year honors in 1989, and he was also Big Eight Coach of the Year in 1985 and 1990. His teams went a combined 58-11-4 in his last six seasons before retiring (1989-94).
The Buffaloes finished in the AP Top 20 in each of those seasons, including No. 3 in McCartney’s final year, when the team went 11-1 behind a roster that included Kordell Stewart, Michael Westbrook and the late Rashaan Salaam. That season featured the “Miracle in Michigan,” with Westbrook hauling in a 64-yard TD catch from Stewart on a Hail Mary as time expired in a win at Michigan. Salaam also rushed for 2,055 yards to earn the Heisman Trophy.
McCartney also groomed the next wave of coaches, mentoring assistants such as Gary Barnett, Jim Caldwell, Ron Dickerson, Gerry DiNardo, Karl Dorrell, Jon Embree, Les Miles, Rick Neuheisel, Bob Simmons, Lou Tepper, Ron Vanderlinden and John Wristen.
“I was fortunate to be able to say goodbye to Coach in person last week,” Colorado athletic director Rick George, who worked under McCartney and was a longtime friend of his, said in a statement. “Coach Mac was an incredible man who taught me about the importance of faith, family and being a good husband, father and grandfather. He instilled discipline and accountability to all of us who worked and played under his leadership.
“The mark that he left on CU football and our athletic department will be hard to replicate.”
McCartney remains the winningest coach in Colorado history. He retired at age 54 with an overall record of 93-55-5 (.602) in 13 seasons, all with Colorado.
He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2013. His family announced in 2016 that McCartney had been diagnosed with late-onset dementia and Alzheimer’s.
“Here’s what football does: It teaches a boy to be a man,” McCartney told USA Today in 2017. “You say, ‘How does it do that?’ Well, what if you line up across from a guy who’s bigger, stronger, faster and tougher than you are? What do you do? Do you stay and play? Or do you turn and run? That’s what football does. You’re always going to come up against somebody who’s better than you are.
“That’s what life is. Life is getting knocked down and getting back up and getting back in the game.”
In recent years, McCartney got to watch grandson Derek play defensive line at Colorado. Derek’s father, Shannon Clavelle, was a defensive lineman for Colorado from 1992-94 before playing a few seasons in the NFL. Derek’s brother, T.C. McCartney, was a quarterback at LSU and is the son of late Colorado quarterback Sal Aunese, who played for Bill McCartney in 1987 and ’88 before being diagnosed with stomach cancer in 1989 and dying six months later at 21.
Growing up, Derek McCartney used to go next door to his grandfather’s house to listen to his stories. He never tired of them.
When playing for Colorado, hardly a day would go by when someone wouldn’t ask Derek if he was somehow related to the coach.
“I like when that happens,” Derek said.
ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg and The Associated Press contributed to this report.