INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Angelo Pizzo knows a thing or two about great underdog stories. He wrote the screenplays for “Hoosiers” and “Rudy,” two of the most iconic sports films of all time. He knows a good storyline.
Pizzo, 75, sees a lot of Rudy Ruettiger — the walk-on who played three snaps in one game for Notre Dame in 1975 — in Stetson Bennett, the Georgia Bulldogs‘ undersized star quarterback.
“He’s like Rudy with more talent — a lot more talent,” Pizzo said. “It takes a special person. It takes a special belief. You have to kind of work through all the logic that says, ‘You’re not that. Go play for Georgia State, not Georgia.’ He had this belief and saw things and felt things that no one else did.”
On Monday night, about 11 miles from Hollywood, Bennett put the finishing touches on a storied college career that not even Pizzo could have written. The former walk-on, who left Georgia for a year to play at a junior college then came back when the team needed him, led the No. 1 Bulldogs to a 65-7 victory over No. 3 TCU in the College Football Playoff National Championship presented by AT&T at SoFi Stadium.
Georgia became the fifth team to finish 15-0 and the first to repeat as national champion in the CFP era. The Bulldogs are just the fourth to go back-to-back since 1990; Nebraska (1994 and 1995), Southern California (2003 and 2004) and Alabama (2011 and 2012) were the others.
Bennett, 25, became only the eighth quarterback in the AP poll era to lead his team to back-to-back national titles.
Bennett’s final act was his opus. He completed 18 of 25 passes for 304 yards with four touchdowns and ran for two more scores. Bennett tied former LSU quarterback Joe Burrow for most points responsible for in a CFP title game with 36. According to ESPN Stats & Information research, he is the only player over the past 25 years to have four passing touchdowns and two rushing scores in a game against a top-five opponent.
“Stetson speaks for himself, the way he leads and prepares,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. “His mental makeup is such of a quarterback that believes he can make every throw, and what he did tonight was truly amazing. Probably had his best game of his career, in my opinion, with some of the checks he made, some of the decisions he made, just really elite.”
No one could have anticipated that Bennett’s curtain call would come with about 13½ minutes remaining in the game. With Georgia leading 52-7, Smart called a timeout. Bennett hugged a few of his offensive linemen and tight end Brock Bowers, and then the quarterback walked to the sideline, where he was greeted with another hug from Smart.
During the break, as the Redcoat Marching Band played, Georgia fans saluted Bennett by lighting up their cell phones and waving their arms in unison.
“I told all the guys, ‘What are we doing? Why don’t we have a play?'” Bennett said. “I was, like, they’re letting me walk out of here.”
It was a fitting tribute for a quarterback who started his college career by mimicking Oklahoma‘s Baker Mayfield in bowl practices before playing the Sooners in the 2018 Rose Bowl and ended it as arguably one of the two or three most accomplished players in Georgia football history.
“Any time there’s a conversation, he’s going to be in the discussion about who is the best player and quarterback in Georgia history,” said Buck Belue, who was the last quarterback before Bennett to lead the Bulldogs to a national title, in 1980. “I don’t see anybody else winning back-to-back titles. That’s like a royal flush. Who’s going to top that?”
A year ago, when the Bulldogs had a historically talented defense with five starters selected in the first round of the 2022 NFL draft, some critics wondered whether they won their first national title in 41 years in spite of their quarterback. Some Georgia fans, whether they’ll admit it now or not, were ready for Bennett to move on so that younger quarterbacks like Carson Beck and Brock Vandagriff would have a chance to play.
On Jan. 12, 2022, two days after throwing two fourth-quarter touchdowns to lead Georgia to a 33-18 victory against Alabama in the CFP title game, Bennett walked into Smart’s office and told him he was thinking about coming back.
“I’m trying to decide if I’m going to come back or ride off in the wind,” Bennett told his coach, according to Smart. “I don’t understand everybody’s telling me I should just ride off into the sunset [and] be the legendary quarterback who won a national title. That’s just not who I am I am. I don’t get it. Why should I do that when I have an opportunity to play again? Why don’t we go win it again?”
Smart, who knew the Bulldogs were going to lose 15 players to the NFL, wasn’t as confident as his quarterback.
“I’m kind of thinking, ‘Well, that would be nice, but we lost 15 draft picks,'” Smart said. “Might not be that easy this time.” But Bennett believed Georgia would be good enough again. “He had full conviction that he wanted to come back and go opposite of the mainstream,” Smart said. “He said, ‘I want to go play. I want to go play football and prove to people this is no fluke. We can do this.’ And he did everything that he said he was going to do.”
This season, it was clear that Georgia wouldn’t have won a second national title without him. He was 7-0 against ranked opponents, throwing 20 touchdowns with only three interceptions. During the regular season, he beat Oregon‘s Bo Nix, Florida‘s Anthony Richardson, Tennessee‘s Hendon Hooker and Kentucky‘s Will Levis, who are all considered potential NFL quarterbacks.
Bennett threw four touchdowns in the first half of a 50-30 rout of LSU in the SEC championship game. He had two fourth-quarter touchdown passes against Ohio State in the CFP semifinal, including the game winner to Adonai Mitchell with 54 seconds left, to bring Georgia back from a 14-point deficit in a 42-41 victory.
Ironically, it was a walk-on quarterback who got Smart to open up his offense. During Smart’s first couple of seasons as coach of his alma mater, he leaned on what he had learned at Alabama as Nick Saban’s defensive coordinator. The Bulldogs ran the ball and played stout defense.
But when the Bulldogs were struggling to land highly coveted quarterbacks and game-changing wide receivers, Smart changed his philosophy. After the 2019 season, Smart shook up his coaching staff and hired offensive coordinator Todd Monken, who had just been fired by the Cleveland Browns.
“[Smart] wanted a certain amount of structure, a certain amount of NFL experience,” Monken said. “How would you be explosive? Maybe change the narrative. Just that you’re conservative, you don’t want to be explosive. You’ve got to get good skill players; you’ve got to get quarterbacks. How do we do that?”
Eventually, Monken and Bennett became the perfect partnership, but it took a while to get there. Bennett took over the offense only after Justin Fields transferred to Ohio State, Wake Forest transfer Jamie Newman opted out and Southern California transfer JT Daniels got hurt.
Together, Monken and Bennett produced two of the most prolific offenses in Georgia history. This season, Bennett became the Bulldogs’ first 4,000-yard passer. In four CFP contests, he completed 67.8% of his passes for 1,239 yards and 12 touchdowns with one interception, and he tallied two scoring runs.
“He’s at the top — the very top,” Georgia offensive tackle Broderick Jones said when asked where Bennett ranks among Bulldogs players. “Stetson has done so much for this program it’s crazy. All the way from giving [the defense] scout looks to playing to throwing game-winning balls. He’s done everything he could at the University of Georgia.”
“I think he goes down as the top,” McConkey said. “He won two national championships, back to back. He showed up in every way possible and has done so much for this program. I think he should go out on top.”
Less than an hour after confetti stopped falling from the ceiling of SoFi Stadium, Smart was asked, of all things, about Bennett’s ineligibility for the College Football Hall of Fame. Because he was never named an All-American, Bennett won’t receive the sport’s highest post-career honor. He was 29-3 as a starter. He was named the offensive MVP of two CFP semifinals and two CFP national championships.
“I don’t know about the prerequisites,” Smart said. “I know he’s got GOAT status in Athens, Georgia, forever.”
When Smart walked into his office at SoFi Stadium after Monday night’s game, he found his 10-year-old son, Andrew. Thinking somebody had hurt his feelings, Smart asked him, “Why are you crying? You’re going to ruin my moment.”
“Stetson is leaving,” Smart’s son said. “He’s going to go.”
“He’s 25 years old,” Smart said. “He’s got to go. He’s got to leave.”
And now the Bulldogs will have to try to win another national championship without him.
NASCAR did not approve 65-year-old driver Mike Wallace, who hasn’t competed in a Cup Series race since 2015, to get behind the wheel for MBM Motorsports at the Daytona 500.
Had he been approved, Wallace would have been the second-oldest driver to start the race.
A NASCAR spokesperson said that Wallace has not raced on any intermediate or larger tracks since 2015, leading to his rejection for Daytona consideration. It would also have been Wallace’s first time racing in NASCAR’s Next Gen car, which was introduced in 2022.
NASCAR did not shut the door on Wallace entering the race for 2026, but the driver said he was stunned by the rejection in a Facebook post late Monday.
“This comes as a total shock as the President of NASCAR last week in a real phone call told me all was good and he will see me in Daytona,” Wallace said in his post. “I owe this posting to all my fans and non fans who were so supportive through the great messages and postings of support as they say I inspired them!”
Wallace wrote that he was not approved to race in the Cup, Xfinity or Truck series in 2025. He also said there were sponsors committed to MBM Motorsports and him specifically for the Daytona 500 effort.
Wallace made 197 career starts in the Cup series, with the last coming at the 2015 Daytona 500. He notched 14 top-10 finishes on NASCAR’s top circuit but never won a Cup race.
The police report said Matusz’s mother found him in his home on Jan. 6 when she went to check on him. The report states that Matusz, who was 37, was on his back on a couch with a white substance in his mouth and aluminum foil, a lighter and a straw on the floor near his hand.
There were no apparent injuries, trauma or signs of foul play, according to the police report. But as part of the death investigation, Matusz’s body was taken to the medical examiner in Maricopa County.
Matusz, the No. 4 pick in the 2008 MLB draft, spent almost his entire eight-year career with the Orioles. He pitched in 279 games for Baltimore, making 68 starts.
He eventually became a reliever and was most known for his success against Hall of Famer David Ortiz, who went 4-for-29 (.138) with 13 strikeouts in his career against Matusz.
Matusz pitched in the 2012 and 2014 postseason for the Orioles and was traded to the Atlanta Braves in May 2016 and released a week later.
He signed with the Chicago Cubs, where he pitched in the minors except for one three-inning major league start on July 31, 2016.
The first 12-team College Football Playoff is down to the final two contenders: Notre Dame and Ohio State.
The seventh-seeded Fighting Irish and eighth-seeded Buckeyes will meet Jan. 20 at Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium for the CFP National Championship Presented by AT&T. Whichever team wins will end a championship drought. Notre Dame aims for its first title since 1988. Ohio State’s lull isn’t nearly as long, as the Buckeyes won the first CFP championship a decade ago, but given how consistently elite they are, it seems like a while.
Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman and Ohio State’s Ryan Day are also aiming for their first championships as head coaches, and Freeman’s past will be in the spotlight. Freeman and the Irish lost to the Buckeyes and Day in each of the past two seasons. But after a masterful coaching job this season, Freeman now will face his alma mater — he was an All-Big Ten linebacker for Ohio State under coach Jim Tressel — with everything on the line. Day, meanwhile, can secure the loftiest goal for a team that fell short of earlier ones, but never stopped swinging.
Here’s your first look at the championship matchup and what to expect in the ATL. — Adam Rittenberg
When: Jan. 20 at 7:30 p.m. ET. TV: ESPN
What we learned in the semifinal: Notre Dame’s resilience and situational awareness/execution are undeniably its signature traits and could propel the team to a title. The Irish have overcome injuries all season and did so again against Penn State. They also erased two deficits and continued to hold the edge in the “middle eight” — the final four minutes of the first half and the first four minutes of the second half — while dominating third down on both sides of the ball. Notre Dame can rely on front men such as quarterback Riley Leonard, running back Jeremiyah Love and linebacker Jack Kiser, but also on backup QB Steve Angeli, wide receiver Jaden Greathouse and kicker Mitch Jeter. These Irish fight, and they’re very hard to knock out.
X factor: Greathouse entered Thursday with moderate numbers — 29 receptions, 359 yards, one touchdown — and had only three total catches for 14 yards in the first two CFP games. But he recorded career highs in both receptions (7) and receiving yards (105) and tied the score on a 54-yard touchdown with 4:38 to play. A Notre Dame offense looking for more from its wide receivers, especially downfield, could lean more on Greathouse, who exceeded his receptions total from the previous five games but might be finding his groove at the perfect time. He also came up huge in the clutch, recording all but six of his receiving yards in the second half.
How Notre Dame wins: The Irish won’t have the talent edge in Atlanta, partly because they’ve lost several stars to season-ending injuries, but they have the right traits to hang with any opponent. Notre Dame needs contributions in all three phases and must continue to sprinkle in downfield passes, an element offensive coordinator Mike Denbrock has pushed. And they finally did start seeing results against Penn State. The Irish likely can’t afford to lose the turnover margin, although they can help themselves by replicating their third-down brilliance — 11 of 17 conversions on offense, 3 of 11 conversions allowed on defense — from the Penn State win. — Rittenberg
What we learned in the semifinal: The Buckeyes have a defense with championship mettle, headlined by senior defensive end Jack Sawyer, who delivered one of the biggest defensive plays in Ohio State history. On fourth-and-goal with just over two minutes remaining, Sawyer sacked Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers, forcing a fumble that he scooped up and raced 83 yards for a game-clinching touchdown, propelling Ohio State to the national title game. The Buckeyes weren’t perfect in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic, and they struggled offensively for much of the night against a talented Texas defense. But Ohio State showed late why its defense is arguably the best in college football, too.
X factor: The play two snaps before the Sawyer scoop-and-score set the table. On second-and-goal from the Ohio State 1-yard line, unheralded senior safety Lathan Ransom dashed past incoming blockers and dropped Texas running back Quintrevion Wisner for a 7-yard loss. After an incomplete pass, the Longhorns were forced into desperation mode on fourth-and-goal down a touchdown with just over two minutes remaining. All-American safety Caleb Downs, who had an interception on Texas’ ensuing drive, rightfully gets all the headlines for the Ohio State secondary. But the Buckeyes have other veteran standouts such as Ransom throughout their defense.
How Ohio State wins: Texas took away Ohio State’s top offensive playmaker, true freshman wide receiver Jeremiah Smith, who had only one reception for 3 yards on three targets. As the first two playoff games underscored, the Buckeyes offense is at its best when Smith gets the ball early and often. Notre Dame is sure to emulate the Texas blueprint, positioning the defensive backs to challenge Smith. Ohio State offensive coordinator Chip Kelly has to counter with a plan that finds ways to get the ball into Smith’s hands, no matter what the Fighting Irish do. — Jake Trotter