NEW YORK -- Surprise! Surprise!
Two straight weekends of
seismic upsets not only sent tremors throughout college football from
the Deep South to the Pacific Northwest, they've all but cleared the way
for two marquee teams and best-known brands to play for the national
title.
Notre Dame was No. 1 in The Associated Press college
football poll released Sunday and Alabama was No. 2 after a pair of
stunning Saturday night upsets rearranged the rankings. When the BCS
standings came out later Sunday, they lined up the same way.
Notre
Dame needs only to beat struggling rival Southern California (7-4),
with its star quarterback injured, to secure a spot in the BCS title
game for the first time. In the 76-year history of the AP poll, Notre
Dame has been crowned national champion by the media panel eight times,
the last in 1988.
"It's like being selected for the playoffs,"
Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly said. "Now you know you're in if you take
care of business."
The only other school with as many AP
championships is Alabama. The Crimson Tide potentially has two more
games left. The Tide is at home Saturday against rival Auburn (3-8) and,
if it beats the
Tigers, advances to the Southeastern Conference
championship game against No. 3 Georgia on Dec. 1.
Win that one, too, and it will be Notre Dame and Alabama playing in Miami on Jan. 7 for the championship.
Sounds
simple enough. But when it comes to college football, the last two
weeks of the season have been a consistent reminder that it's best to
expect the unexpected.
Oregon and Kansas State were in the front
row of the BCS race as of Saturday. All the Ducks and Wildcats had to do
was win the rest of their games and they would have played for the BCS
crown. No easy task for sure, but considering they had been walloping
opponents, winning their first 10 games by an average of more than three
touchdowns per game, it looked like a solid bet that they'd close the
deal.
A week earlier, the same was said about Alabama -- before it
was upset at home by Texas A&M, a loss that cleared the way for
Oregon to be No. 1 for the first time this season.
Saturday's first shocker came when then-No. 2 Kansas State lost at Baylor after barely putting up a fight.
The Bears (5-5) ran out to a 28-7 lead behind Nick Florence,
the quarterback who replaced last year's Heisman trophy winner Robert
Griffin III, and won 52-24. Not only did the Wildcats lose all hopes of
playing for a national championship, its much-heralded quarterback, Collin Klein, lost his front-runner status in this year's Heisman chase.
This
was all wonderful news for Notre Dame, which was sitting at No. 3, had
shut out Wake Forest earlier in the day, and needed only Oregon or
Kansas State to lose to have a chance for the national title.
One down, one to go.
While
Kansas State was lamenting its lost opportunity in Waco, Texas, over in
Eugene, Ore., Stanford was pushing around the top-ranked Ducks as no
opponent had this season. The Cardinal (9-2) tied up the score with 1:35
remaining in regulation on a touchdown pass that many Ducks fans likely
will be seething over for years.
Tight end Zach Ertz caught Kevin Hogan's
pass, juggled it on the way down, landed on an Oregon defender, and
rolled out of bounds. Incomplete was the ruling on the field. After
video review, the call was overturned. TD Stanford, 14-all.
In overtime, Oregon missed a field goal try, Stanford made one, and the upset was complete: Stanford 17, Oregon 14.
If they listened hard, Stanford players might have heard the Alabama fans yelling and screaming from clear across the country.
Alabama wide receiver Amari Cooper tweeted as the dominoes were falling: "I don't think I've ever been this excited before haha."
The
Crimson Tide wasn't the only SEC team lifted by the upset, but Bama
benefited most. A week after giving up control of the national
championship race, the Tide is back in charge, looking for a third BCS
title in four seasons. A win would be seven in a row for the
Southeastern Conference.
If Alabama can get past lowly Auburn on
Saturday, and Georgia can avoid a K-State-like loss to Georgia Tech
(6-5), the Tide and Bulldogs game will essentially be a national
semifinal, with the winner advancing to the BCS title game.
No. 6
Florida (10-1), another SEC team, has a chance now, too. The Gators play
No. 10 Florida State (10-1) in Tallahassee on Saturday, and the
Seminoles think they have a shot to reach the BCS title game as well.
Oregon
slipped to No. 5 in the rankings, and probably believes it can still
get a second chance, the way Alabama did, but time is running out. Same
goes for No. 7 Kansas State.
A Notre Dame-Alabama BCS championship
game would mark the first meeting between the storied programs since
1987, and the biggest since the 1973 Sugar Bowl.
That year, coach
Bear Bryant's Crimson Tide was No. 1 and Ara Parseghian's Irish were No.
3 when they met in New Orleans. The lead changed hands six times and
Notre Dame won it 24-23 and was voted No. 1 in the poll to win the
national championship.
Now the question is: With two more weeks to
go in college football's regular season, can the Irish and Tide calm
the chaos and set up what could be the most-hyped national championship
game in history?
Stay tuned.
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