Home » News » Rematch! Alabama and Georgia clearly win semifinals

Rematch! Alabama and Georgia clearly win semifinals

The College Football Championship Game will re-launch the SEC Championship Game: The Alabama Crimson Tide will face the Georgia Bulldogs in the finals on January 10th. For Michigan, as well as for Cincinnati, one of the big stories of this college season, it was not enough in the semifinals.

As the first team that does not come from a Power 5 conference, Cincinnati had made the jump to the playoffs with a season without defeat. The reward for the Bearcats was a date with Alabama at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas – which Bama won 27: 6.

One of the central questions leading up to the game was whether Cincinnati would be able to stop Alabama’s explosive passing offense; In the SEC Championship Game, Alabama and star quarterback Bryce Young had torn apart the historic Georgia Defense with a firework of big plays through the air.

The Bearcats with their highly acclaimed secondary around top cornerback Ahmad Gardner did a better job in this regard, Young (17/28, 181 YDS, 3 TD, INT) and the receiving corps led by Jameson Williams (7 REC, 62 YDS) dominated nowhere near as impressive as it was against Georgia four weeks ago.

However, it was the front that couldn’t keep up. Bama, who was not as dominant on the ground this year as in previous seasons, ran the ball 47 times for 301 yards; Brian Robinson’s 204 rushing yards set a bowl record for Alabama.

Robinson: “Proved We Are More Physical”

“We have proven that we are the more physical team,” said Robinson afterwards, although he was somewhat surprised: “We knew we would have the opportunity to run the ball. But I did not expect me to in the spotlight. “

Cincinnati’s head coach Luke Fickell, whose defense had only allowed 137 rushing yards per game to date, agreed with Robinson’s first statement: “We knew the duels on the line of scrimmage would be very important. Then the game was won.”

Young’s qualities were particularly important in third down and in the red zone: Two of his three touchdown passes to Slade Bolden (8 yards), and Cameron Latu (9 yards) came within the opposing 10-yard line. The most explosive play of the evening for the Crimson Tide was the second touchdown, a 44-yarder to Ja’Corey Brooks, who made the preliminary decision before halftime.

With his first touchdown pass – number 44 for this season – Young broke Tua Tagovailoa’s record from 2018. The third nine-yard touchdown pass brought Young to over 4,500 passing yards for the season, breaking Mac Jones’ school record from the previous year.

Bearcats-Offense finds no answers

Cincinnati’s offense, on the other hand, could only keep up with the first drive of each half: a 13-play 60-yard march at the start of the game, as well as an 11-play 56-yard drive at the beginning of the third quarter. However, both drives were stopped in the red zone and only yielded field goals.

Quarterback Desmond Ridder (17/32, 144 YDS), who will also be an issue with a view to the upcoming draft, never found a rhythm and the offense as a whole found no answers to the inferiority on the line of scrimmage.

In the middle of the third quarter after Young’s interception – an overthrow under pressure at third down – Cincinnati had a real chance to get back into the game at 6:17. But the Bearcats drive ended after three plays and 16 yards of loss of space. Bama responded with a touchdown drive and the last two drives in the game for Cincinnati ended Alabama’s defense on fourth down.

“We wanted it to end differently,” said Ridder. “I wish it could have ended differently. I hope that other Group of 5 teams can get into the playoffs from some conference and show that they can compete with the best of the best.”

The two semifinals in the box score overview:

1st quarter 2nd quarter 3rd quarter 4th quarter Final score
No. 4 Cincinnati 3 0 3 0 6
No. 1 Alabama 7 10 0 10 27
1st quarter 2nd quarter 3rd quarter 4th quarter Final score
No. 3 Georgia 14 13 0 7 34
No. 2 Michigan 0 3 0 8 11

Georgia vs. Michigan: Bennett shines at the right time

Georgia’s triumph over Michigan in the second semifinals, meanwhile, did not have as much potential tension as Alabama v Cincinnati after Young’s interception. The Bulldogs were too dominant on their way to an undisputed 34:11 win over Michigan.

Georgia led 14-0 after the first quarter and 27-3 at half-time. And not just on the back of a dominant run game (35 ATT, 190 YDS) and its outstanding defense, but above all worn early in the game by quarterback Stetson Bennett (20/30, 313 YDS, 3 TD), who during this Season had been criticized more often.

Bennett played one of his best college games ever on the big stage, running back James Cook praised: “Stetson is a leader on our offense, he doesn’t let the negativity get into his head. He’s not on social media, he has a clamshell phone. He lets the noise go by and just plays football. I love that about him. “

Michigan’s pass rush never found its way into the game: Aidan Hutchinson, for many experts the upcoming number 1 pick in the draft, and Co. were left without a bag and had just two quarterback hurries.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.