The redemption run continues
On the final, glorious football play of the 2018 Rose Bowl,
Sony Michel completed his own redemption journey on this magical mystery tour
that is the still-unfolding Bulldog season.
Michel’s jaunt measured a mere 27 yards, but its worth far
outweighed its length. It ended a wrenching College Football Playoff semifinal,
earning for the University of Georgia a place in the title game, by virtue of a 56-48 comeback win over Oklahoma.
Michel’s touchdown run was entirely in character. This proved
to be the penultimate game of a career that adds up to a resume equaled by few
and surpassed mathematically only by two of his UGA predecessors.
If you are interested in the raw numbers, he traversed 181
yards over the beautiful Rose Bowl turf on a mere 11 attempts. Counting a pass
from his precocious quarterback, Michel reached the Promised Land four times.
But for a while, it appeared that he might go home
remembering one disastrous carry.
Midway in the fourth quarter, he had uncharacteristically
fumbled the football. Oklahoma defender Steven Parker was fortuitously in the
neighborhood and was able to scoot 47 yards with the pilfered pigskin, rallying
his Sooners to a 45-38 lead.
In his four years, Michel has been entrusted with the
football hundreds of times, enough to cover 3,540 yards. Usually, he has
responded with alacrity and dependability. In fact, we learned after his
ill-timed fumble, that he had not lost a fumble since his freshman season.
Well, this has been the year of redemption for Georgia,
avenging the blemishes of Kirby Smart’s first season. Tennessee, Vanderbilt,
Florida, Georgia Tech—victors last year—became the vanquished this year by a
combined 168-28 score. Only Ole Miss by virtue of scheduling escaped payback,
and perhaps their in-state rival Mississippi State took the punishment instead.
The theme continued in the SEC championship game when the
Bulldogs were presented the opportunity to avenge the lone blot on this year’s
slate, a 40-17 embarrassment at Auburn. So Georgia won the one that counted,
28-7, earning its placement in this toddler of a playoff system. So we arrive
at this point of the season, and only two teams in the nation have beaten
everybody on their schedule: Central Florida and Georgia.
As if the buildup to a semifinal game on the hallowed Rose
Bowl grounds is not enough drama, a soap opera played out through the week
regarding the Sooners’ talented quarterback, Baker Mayfield. He shows promise
for those clever Heisman commercials.
Mayfield was afflicted with a mysterious illness. Confession:
his history fostered thoughts that perhaps the young man was at first dealing
with the effects of a hangover. But there was ample evidence to the contrary
that he was dealing with an upper-respiratory ailment. Hoarseness is a
challenge in these days of audible calls.
Mayfield showed no signs of illness Monday. He navigated his
team to a “name-your-score” 31-17 halftime lead. He even managed to catch a touchdown pass.
That was very nearly the last demonstration of his
considerable skill. What looked easy in the first half became difficult in the
second half.
Meanwhile, across the field, his opposite, Jake Fromm
performed admirably. Yes, he reminded us with a “what-were-you-thinking”
backwards pass under pressure that he is a freshman. But honestly, he is not an
ordinary freshman. The world is his stage, and if he has found the limits of
his comfort zone, they have yet to be seen.
So in the Granddaddy of Them All, with a championship season
on the line, Fromm directed a 59-yard scoring drive in seven plays, leaving just 55
seconds for Mayfield to answer.
Curiously, or not, little was asked of either quarterback in the
overtimes. Coaches Kirby Smart and Lincoln Riley—sharing three years of head
coaching experience between them—opted for a very conservative approach.
The handwriting was on the wall for the Sooners when Lorenzo
Carter—who under different circumstances might have been counting his NFL money
by now—swiped an Oklahoma field goal try. As it developed, Georgia would have
won the game even without the block, but it certainly put a different spin on
things when the Bulldog offense took the field.
And so, on the last play, Michel ran from the Wild Dawg
formation, a plain announcement of an infantry advance. The aforementioned
Fromm blocked like an expert, and Michel strolled unbruised into Bulldog history,
into college football history.
There remains yet one more contest, and if you are looking
for redemption, just remember that the last time Georgia and Alabama played
under a roof in Atlanta, five years ago, a tipped pass in the last five seconds
robbed the Bulldogs of a chance to play for a national title.
Well, if you can look on the other side of the bus, you would
note that they tore that building down. And Georgia is undefeated in the new
place. Against an Alabama school.
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