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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowRiley Leonard opened the national football championship game with a do-it-all drive that made it appear the University of Notre Dame quarterback could win the title by himself.
As it turned out, Leonard needed more help. Leonard’s two second-half touchdown passes to Jaden Greathouse proved the Fighting Irish were resilient, but the comeback attempt came too late. Greathouse’s first scoring catch came late in the third quarter of Ohio State University’s 34-23 win on Monday night in Atlanta in the College Football Playoff championship game.
Leonard accounted for three touchdowns, passing for 255 yards with two scores. He ran for 40 yards with a touchdown on 17 carries.
Leonard was the workhorse on a monstrous 18-play, 75-yard touchdown drive to open the game. Riley had nine carries for 34 yards, including a 1-yard scoring run, in the drive which lasted 9 minutes, 45 seconds.
Nine carries in one drive? That was half of Riley’s season high for carries in a full game. He had 18 carries for 34 yards and a touchdown in Notre Dame’s 27-24 Orange Bowl win over Penn State in the College Football Playoff semifinal.
Leonard wasn’t complaining about coach Marcus Freeman’s plan.
“If coach wants to call my number and have me run the ball every single time, I’ve got no problem with it,” Leonard said.
Freeman knew he couldn’t keep asking his quarterback to handle so many carries.
“We couldn’t run Riley every play,” Freeman said. “It’s not right for Riley and it’s not going to sustain the success we needed offensively.”
Following the touchdown run to cap the opening drive, Riley pointed to “Matthew 23:12″ on his wristband. The scripture reads ”Whoever exalts himself will be humbled and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.”
Riley may have been indicating it was time for the Fighting Irish to be exalted. Instead, Notre Dame’s proud defense couldn’t stop Ohio State quarterback Will Howard and running back Quinshon Judkins.
The Fighting Irish couldn’t keep up with the the Buckeyes without more support. Ohio State led 21-7 at halftime as Leonard’s teammates combined for only eight yards on six carries. Meanwhile, Leonard passed for only 46 yards in the half.
When Judkins’ 70-yard run set up his 1-yard scoring run for a 28-7 lead, Leonard and the Fighting Irish faced a formidable deficit that couldn’t be addressed on more quarterback keepers.
The three-touchdown deficit left Notre Dame in a state of desperation. An incomplete pass on a fake punt on the first possession of the second half gave the Buckeyes the ball at the Notre Dame 33, only adding to the grim outlook.
Notre Dame trailed 31-7 before finally scoring their first points since the opening drive on Greathouse’s 34-yard touchdown catch from Leonard with 3:03 remaining in the third quarter. Greathouse added a 30-yard scoring catch with 4:15 remaining. The Fighting Irish’s second 2-point conversion left them within eight points, but Howard’s 57-yard pass to Jeremiah Smith with 2 minutes remaining sank the comeback attempt.
It set up a field goal with 26 seconds left that iced the game, and also helped Ohio State cover the 8-1/2-point spread at BetMGM Sportsbook.
Leonard blamed himself for the failure to complete the comeback.
“Everything was just clicking,” Leonard said of the drives that produced touchdown passes to Greathouse. “The next couple of drives maybe I got relaxed a little bit and I can’t let that happen.”
Notre Dame (14-2) saw its 13-game winning streak end. The Fighting Irish are still searching for their first national championship since 1988. Coach Marcus Freeman was denied in his attempt to become the first African American coach to capture a title.
Charles Jagusah was Notre Dame’s fill-in starter at left tackle. Jagusah made only his second career start as Anthonie Knapp was held out with a high ankle sprain. Jagusah missed the regular season with a torn right pectoralis muscle before returning for the postseason.
Big pass play ends comeback attempt
Ohio State quarterback Will Howard hit big-play receiver Jeremiah Smith for 56 yards on a late third-and-11 to lock down the victory. Howard found Smith in single coverage on the right sideline and dropped his best pass of the season into the hands of the second-team All-American.
It set up a field goal that started the celebration in earnest, closing out a seven-week climb from the depths of a loss to 20-point underdog Michigan to the top of college football. Ohio State will bring its sixth “natty” and first since the 2014 season back to the Horseshoe in Columbus.
Howard, a transfer-portal success story from Kansas State, threw for 231 yards and two scores, but nothing will beat the pass to Smith with everything on the line.
The receiver, who had been bottled up by Texas in the semifinals then fairly quiet for most of this game, finally got loose for the kind of play he’s been making all year. He finished with five catches for 88 yards.
Ohio State scored touchdowns on its first four possessions, then added a field goal on its fifth.
When Quinshon Judkins (100 yards, 11 carries, three TDs), a transfer from Mississippi who highlighted Ohio State’s judicious use of the ever-growing portal, busted a 70-yard run to set up the score that made it 28-7, this game looked over.
It wasn’t, and now Irish coach Marcus Freeman will have to answer a few tough questions—one about the failed fake punt in the third quarter that turned into a field goal for a 31-7 lead, the other about sending Mitch Jeter in for a short field goal attempt while down 16 and facing fourth-and-goal from the 9. It might have looked like a better call had Jeter’s kick not clanged off the left upright.
Really, though, Ohio State was the better team. The Buckeyes outgained Notre Dame 445 yards to 308. Howard completed his first 13 passes and never really got stopped. The proof: Ohio State punted a grand total of once.
This marked the first time the Big Ten Conference has taken back-to-back titles since 1942. Last year’s champion was the University of Michigan, which accounted for one of the Buckeyes’ two losses this season.
The Buckeyes rolled through four games in the new, expanded playoff—what great timing for Ohio State that the tournament swelled to a dozen teams in a year it didn’t even play for the Big Ten title—by an average score of 36-21.
Ohio State was seeded eighth, but the seedings were pretty much meaningless. The worse seed won every game in the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds, and the Buckeyes dominated in this title-game showdown of No. 7 vs. No. 8.
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