Wiedmer: A Tide title no one saw coming at halftime

Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith (6) celebrates his touchdown during overtime of the NCAA college football playoff championship game against Georgia, Monday, Jan. 8, 2018, in Atlanta. Alabama won 26-23 in overtime. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith (6) celebrates his touchdown during overtime of the NCAA college football playoff championship game against Georgia, Monday, Jan. 8, 2018, in Atlanta. Alabama won 26-23 in overtime. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

ATLANTA - It was halftime Monday night at the College Football Playoff national title game inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium and no one except Alabama coach Nick Saban and at least a few of his players probably believed they were going to crawl out of this 13-0 hole they found themselves in against Southeastern Conference brother Georgia.

But Saban did know he never previously had lost to a former assistant and Georgia head coach Kirby Smart had been a Saban assistant for eight years with the Crimson Tide before taking over at his alma mater at the close of the 2015 season.

Saban also knew, or at least hoped, that his true freshman left-handed quarterback from Hawaii, some kid named Tua Tagovailoa, had the kind of live arm that sophomore quarterback Jalen Hurts lacked.

So he gathered his team together and said this: "Tua's going to start the second half, and we'll see how things go."

It went great in the beginning. Tagovailoa hit Henry Ruggs III from 6 yards out to slice the deficit to 13-7. But then Georgia roared back, leading 20-10 at the close of the third quarter.

So you came to the fourth quarter expecting a classic final 15 minutes, these two proud SEC programs playing for league supremacy almost as much as a national championship. After all, this is the same stadium that hosts the SEC title game. And the Tide did make it interesting. They did what championship programs do. They embraced the grind, even if it seemed at times as if at least 75 percent of the 77,430 in the stadium were against them, so much louder did the noise seem each time Georgia did something special rather than those moments Bama beamed bright.

And with under four minutes to play the Tide tied it at 20-all, this true freshman, lefty quarterback from Hawaii hitting Mr. Ridley (Calvin) from 7 yards out on a fourth-and-4 to tie things up on an Andy Pappanastos extra point.

Then the Tide defense stiffened as it rarely had this night, forcing a Georgia punt, which meant Alabama would get the ball back with a chance to win its second CFP championship in three years.

photo Georgia linebacker Lorenzo Carter (7) walks off the field after falling to Alabama in overtime during the College Football Playoff national championship at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018, in Atlanta, Ga.

Bama moved past midfield with 1:45 to go, helped mightily by a 15-yard facemask penalty. This was Georgia's worst nightmare. After the Bulldogs seemingly were in complete control for 59 minutes, the Tide owned the ball in a tie game and a first down at the Georgia 20.

Hold onto the ball and it would, at the very least, come down to the sometimes shaky instep of Pappanastos, the young man who had missed a 40-yarder in the game's first five minutes. It would also come down to a Georgia defense that had blocked an Oklahoma field-goal try in overtime in last week's semifinal to all but guarantee a Bulldogs victory.

You briefly wondered if President Trump was still around to watch this potentially epic ending, a result certain to break the majority of one red state's heart, but which one?

With six seconds to go, Hurts came in to run one play to center the ball for Pappanastos. Georgia couldn't call time out. It could only watch.

From 36 yards, Pappanastos missed.

Up on the giant video screen, a Georgia coed cried happy tears.

Down on the sideline, Saban lowered his head in disgust.

Overtime.

New life for Georgia. A bitter reality for Alabama.

The bad vibes started early for Bama, beginning with the 40-yard missed field goal after a 35-yarder one snap earlier was wiped out by an illegal-procedure penalty.

Instead of taking a quick 3-0 lead five minutes into the game, the Tide had squandered a scoring opportunity. Worse than that, Hurts had overthrown a wide-open Calvin Ridley in the end zone a couple of snaps earlier.

Somehow, despite a 13-0 Georgia halftime lead and a 20-7 second-half deficit against the Dawgs, they had rallied to tie it. But overtime couldn't possibly be a good thing for Bama, could it?

Wasn't this where the Bulldogs had sparkled a week earlier in the Rose Bowl? Wouldn't that come back to prove the difference again, their confidence surely boosted by that missed field goal?

As national championship games go, this one wasn't consistently excellent, as had been the last two years between Alabama and Clemson. But on fourth-and-forever in the opening OT, Georgia kicker Rodrigo Blankenship nailed a 51-yard field goal to hand the Dawgs a 23-20 lead.

Then Tagovailoa was sacked on the Georgia 41 on Bama's first snap of the extra period. Pappanastos might be front and center again in a most unwelcome spot.

But on second down, the freshman QB found freshman DeVonta Smith down the left sideline.

Touchdown.

National championship by a 26-23 final score.

Heartbreak for Georgia.

Another perfect night for SEC football.

"A great win for our players, and I've never been happier in my life," Saban said.

On the other side, the fans of Georgia may never have been less happy.

Contact Mark Wiedmer at mwiedmer@timesfreepress.com.

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