On the last day of 2021, college football presents the semifinals of this season’s
playoffs. Though the CFP may expand and eventually include
eight or even 12 teams, for now we have four. Despite
two first time
participants and another that hasn’t won a title, betting people likely see a
familiar face – Alabama coach Nick Saban – hoisting
the trophy on January 10 in Indianapolis.
December 31’s semifinals match Alabamaagainst path breaking Cincinnati in one game
and, in the other, two bluebloods with something to prove. Alabama meets the
upstart Bearcats in what’s technically the Cotton
Bowl
in Arlington, Texas. Georgia and Michigan play the other semi in Miami in a
game otherwise known as the Orange Bowl.
They’re intriguing contests, but those hoping somebody other than Alabama wins
it all probably must wait at least another year. We say “at least” because
people who know college football think Alabama will have a better team next
year than this year’s edition which struggled through late-season close calls
against LSU, Arkansas, and Auburn and
lost to Texas
A&M.
Alabama-Cincinnati:
Thinking the Unthinkable
By
beating Georgia in the Southeastern
Conference championship game, Alabamaearned the number one seed
in the tournament and a game against fourth seeded Cincinnati. The Bearcats
broke the glass ceiling by becoming the first Group
of Five (American
Athletic Conference, Mountain
West
Conference, Mid-America
Conference, Sun
Belt Conference, Conference-USA)
member picked for the CFP. Schools in
these conferences
play solid football, produce NFL prospects,
and nurture successful coaches. They play, however, in smaller stadiums,
attract less television exposure, and survive on thriftier budgets. When they
play a team from the Power
Five
(Big 10, Pacific 12, Atlantic
Coast Conference, Big 12, Southeastern
Conference, plus Independent Notre Dame), they usually lose,
sometimes by a lot.
Cincinnati’s near miss against Georgia in last
Despite less than convincing
wins over Navy, Tulsa, and Tulane, Cincinnati has
talent throughout its lineup. First,
there’s quarterback Desmond Ridder, who
hasengineered
two straight undefeated regular seasons. Ridder is good enough that some NFL
team might make him the first quarterback off the board next April, especially
since this quarterback draft class lacks last year’s overall talent and depth. After
Ridder, Cincinnati
has
two outstanding cornerbacks – Ahmad “Sauce” Gardner and Coby Bryant. Both
are tall and fast and will pose a challenge for the Tide receivers. Alabama
likely won’t have the dangerous John Metchie
because of a knee injury suffered in the SEC Championship game. Cincinnati, therefore,
may have a chance at throttling the Alabama passing game led by
Heisman Trophy
winning quarterback Bryce
Young. Finally,
Cincinnati has athletic, 300-pound linemen who give the Bearcats the look of a
high level, Power Five football team.
So, with all this, why is Alabama a two-touchdown favorite? Because Alabama has Nick Saban and Cincinnati doesn’t.
Michigan – Georgia: Exorcists Needed
Aside
from the really good teams Michigan and Georgia have
and aside from the tradition each represents in college football (Michigan has
more victories than any other program), the intrigue around this game centers
on the redemption both coaches seek. Before thisyear, Michigan hadn’t been to
the CFP (Alabama has missed only once and has won three times). Georgia has
been to the CFP, but suffered an excruciating 26-23 overtime loss to Alabama in
2017.
This
year, in fact, has been something of a redemption tour for Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh.
Brought to Ann Arbor from the NFLwith great fanfare, he’s been seen by many as
a disappointment. Until this year’s team took down arch rival Ohio
State, Harbaugh had lost to the hated Buckeyes five years in a row.
He’s gotten the Wolverines to bowl games, but none in the CFP and not to the
Big 10’s cherished consolation prize, the Rose Bowl.
Harbaugh can exorcise ghosts by beating Georgia, then take his chances against
Alabama, assuming a Tide win in the semifinals.
Georgia’s Kirby Smart occupies
the same boat, but for different reasons. He’s won 81% of his games in six
seasons in Athens. There’s one problem. He
can’t beat Alabama. Despitetop notch recruiting class after
top notch recruiting class, Smart has zero victories over the Tide. This was
supposed to be the year he put all that to bed. Georgia dominated everyone they played – until
Alabama. That loss resurrected the old story lines.
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