Scott’s monster mash
Hubbard grad powered Michigan State into playoffs
Combined dispatches
L.J. Scott’s late lunge did more than put the ball across the goal line — it put Michigan State into the College Football Playoff.
No matter how many times he got hit, the freshman kept powering forward. And with one final stretch, he reached the ball into the end zone for a touchdown with 27 seconds left that sent the Spartans past No. 4 Iowa 16-13 Saturday night in the Big Ten championship game in Indianapolis.
“I was just trying to make a big play for my brothers,” the Hubbard High School graduate said. “We knew what we had at stake.”
The Spartans’ thrilling victory created a sleepy selection Sunday a college football season filled with fantastic finishes.
Top-seeded Clemson will play No. 4 Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl in the first College Football Playoff semifinal on New Year’s Eve. No. 2 Alabama will play No. 3 Michigan State at the Cotton Bowl in the nightcap of the Dec. 31 doubleheader.
No drama. No complaints. Nothing at all like the week-to-week mayhem — with one once-in-a-lifetime-play after another — that made the season memorable.
Against Iowa, quarterback Connor Cook led the Spartans (12-1) on a 22-play drive that set up Scott’s 1-yard run on third down. A half-dozen Iowa defenders tried to stop Scott and pushed him backward, but he wouldn’t be denied.
In all, it took six seconds for the 233-pound running back to travel that final, season-saving yard.
“He runs like a monster man,” tight end Josiah Price said. “That last touchdown there was nothing there. He spun around a guy and congrats to LJ. I love having him on our team.”
Scott, who finished with 73 yards on 22 carries, said, “I knew I was getting the ball and I had to make a big play and get it in the end zone.
“I got the ball and I saw a lot of Iowa jerseys and had to keep my legs going and show effort.”
Cook finished 16 of 32 with 191 yards, no touchdowns and one interception. He still became the first player chosen the title game MVP twice — largely because of the poise he demonstrated on a methodical 82-yard drive that consumed 9 minutes, 4 seconds and essentially sealed Iowa’s fate.
Michigan State heads into the postseason with lots of confidence after winning four straight, with two coming against top 10 teams.
“Our football team knows how to win. We can play it out,” coach Mark Dantonio said. “We don’t count ourselves out. When some things aren’t going so well, we keep playing as evidence by the game.”
In the end, the only real debate was how to rank the top four teams.
Clemson (13-0) has been No. 1 since the committee began its rankings the first week of November, and committee chairman Jeff Long said that the Tigers were the clear top team in the final rankings. As the top seed, the Tigers get to play as close to home as possible.
The Tigers and Sooners (11-1) met in Russell Athletic Bowl last season and Clemson won 40-6.
“Last year’s game with Oklahoma has nothing to do with this year’s game. They are a different team. We’re a different team,” Tigers coach Dabo Swinney said.
Clemson and Oklahoma have split four meetings, dating to 1963.
Alabama (12-1) began its season at AT&T Stadium in North Texas against a Big Ten team (Wisconsin) and returns to face another in Michigan State (12-1). The Tide and Spartans have played only once, with Alabama winning the Capital One Bowl 49-7 after the 2010 season.
Oklahoma was No. 3 last week after it finished its regular season as the Big 12 champion, but Michigan State’s Big Ten championship game victory over previously unbeaten Iowa pushed the Spartans past the Sooners in the end.
Long said bumping Michigan State past Oklahoma had nothing to do with avoiding the possibility of having the Sooners play close to home in the Dallas area.
And that was it for drama, if you could even call it that. A big difference from last season, when the committee had to choose from Ohio State, Baylor and TCU, and ticked off the Big 12 by jumping the Buckeyes past the Bears and Frogs in the final rankings.
This year, Oklahoma was so sure of its spot that Coach Bob Stoops (Cardinal Mooney High School) and quarterback Baker Mayfield did not even attend the Sooners watch party in Norman. Both were traveling. The Sooners last won a national title in 2000, Stoops’ second season in Norman.
At Clemson, Swinney came through on his promise to throw a pizza party in Memorial Stadium. Thousands were in attendance to feast on the Tigers’ success and pepperoni. Clemson is looking for its first national championship since 1981.
In Tuscaloosa, Alabama, where the Tide is preparing for a second straight playoff appearance, it was just another Sunday. The players were allowed to sleep in for the announcement.
“What I tell our players ... is guys, you really should be happy and you should be excited about what you have been able to accomplish and winning the SEC championship, but now I have a question for you: What do you want to do now?” said Tide coach Nick Saban, who has led Alabama to three national championships and coached at Michigan State from 1995-99.
On Saban’s staff in East Lansing as a defensive backs coach was Dantonio, who now is trying to bring the Spartans their first national title since it finished first in the coaches’ poll in 1965. Michigan State’s last AP national title was 1952.
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