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Live Updates: DeVonta Smith Has 3 Touchdowns in First Half for Alabama - The New York Times

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Jan. 11, 2021, 10:14 p.m. ET
DeVonta Smith, the Heisman Trophy winner, celebrates with Najee Harris after scoring a touchdown for Alabama.
Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

The Heisman Trophy did not go to DeVonta Smith’s head. His feet just headed toward the end zone again and again.

Smith, the first wide receiver in almost three decades to win college football’s top individual prize, used the opening half of Monday night’s College Football Playoff championship game as if he still had a case to make to voters. He didn’t, of course, but he scored three touchdowns and amassed 215 receiving yards on a dozen catches anyway.

Again, that was in one half. There’s still another to play.

Smith’s graceful, speedy runs were the signatures of yet another offensive outburst by Alabama, which built a 35-17 lead over No. 3 Ohio State at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla. But Najee Harris, a tailback, added more moments to his perpetually swelling highlight reel, and Mac Jones, the Crimson Tide quarterback, didn’t let a rare miscue of a lost fumble derail him or the offensive juggernaut that has Alabama in strong position to reign over the sport once more.

For a program accustomed to championships so often built on sturdy defenses, Alabama’s approach to Monday night’s matchup was a departure from so much of its long history — but also in keeping with its recent run of record-shattering, bracingly powerful offenses that produce big plays through the air.

By halftime, Smith had set the record for most receptions in a playoff-era championship game. And Jones had set a first-half record for passing in a playoff championship, upending the mark that Joe Burrow, a Heisman winner, set in last season’s game.

Alabama’s eruption in Monday’s opening half puts extraordinary pressure on Ohio State, which played far fewer games this season and headed to the locker room with just 190 yards in total offense. Alabama posted 389.

The star quarterback for the Buckeyes, Justin Fields, struggled, going 6 for 15 with his passes for only 90 yards. Trey Sermon, a tailback who had made defenders look foolish, left the game early with an injury and was not expected to return. The Ohio State receiver with the most productive night so far? A tight end.

More trouble might be imminent for Ohio State: Alabama will receive the kickoff to start the second half.

“The whole offense is really playing well,” Alabama Coach Nick Saban told ESPN as he headed toward the locker room. And with that, a whole bunch of heads snapped in surprise that the oft-scowling Saban would say something so glowing during a game.

Jan. 11, 2021, 9:39 p.m. ET
Ohio State place kicker Blake Haubeil kicks a 43-yard field goal during the first half of the Big Ten championship.
Darron Cummings/Associated Press

The list of problems Ryan Day, Ohio State’s coach, wishes he didn’t have during a championship game assuredly includes not having two-thirds of the kickers on his roster absent.

But here we are.

Ohio State announced before the game that Blake Haubeil, who handled half of the field goal tries for the Buckeyes this season, would be out, along with Dominic DiMaccio, who took care of most of the kickoffs. Haubeil said he had tested positive for the coronavirus.

The absences left Ohio State with Jake Seibert, a freshman who had missed his only field goal attempt of the season but had a 13-for-13 record on extra points heading into Monday night’s title showdown.

With just over five minutes to play in the second quarter, Seibert got a chance for 3 points. An easy 23-yard kick narrowed Alabama’s lead to 4, and it’s 21-17 as the intermission nears in South Florida.

Jan. 11, 2021, 9:21 p.m. ET
Ohio State linebacker Baron Browning forces a fumble by Alabama quarterback Mac Jones during the first half.
Wilfredo Lee/Associated Press

Coach after coach has insisted that Alabama won’t beat itself.

They might be rethinking that perspective after Ohio State tied the game at 14.

Alabama started a drive on its own 12-yard line, and Mac Jones promptly threw to DeVonta Smith for a 12-yard pickup. On the very next snap, Jones lost the ball for Alabama’s eighth lost fumble of the season.

After the lost possession, Ohio State started its drive on the Alabama 19. A defensive pass interference call against Alabama moved the Buckeyes 15 yards. Master Teague III ran for a 4-yard score and knotted the ballgame with 11:43 to play in the second quarter.

It didn’t last. Alabama went 75 yards on five plays, including a 26-yard touchdown pass to Najee Harris, to seize the lead once more. Jones was perfect on the drive.

It’s 21-14, Alabama, with nine minutes to go before halftime. So maybe the coaches were right, after all.

Jan. 11, 2021, 9:05 p.m. ET
Waddle in the first quarter.
Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

The early verdict for both teams in Miami Gardens is that Ohio State is down a running back while Alabama is up a long-lost wide receiver.

Alabama’s Jaylen Waddle fractured an ankle while playing against Tennessee in October, requiring surgery. His first play back was a 15-yard catch, putting Alabama in a good position to be the first with points on the board — Najee Harris finished a 1-yarder for his 25th rushing touchdown of the season. Waddle did appear to have some discomfort after his catch.

But Ohio State running back Trey Sermon was sent out after the first possession, grasping his left shoulder and heading to the locker room, then the hospital. Master Teague III, another running back for Ohio State, stepped up in Sermon’s absence, rushing to match Alabama’s lead.

But Alabama’s DeVonta Smith opened the second quarter with a 5-yard touchdown catch at the start of the quarter to put Alabama up, 14-7.

Jan. 11, 2021, 9:00 p.m. ET

We knew there’d be a lot of scoring. Alabama just made it look easy (again).

And as you’d expect, Mac Jones threw the ball a lot to DeVonta Smith, the winner of this season’s Heisman Trophy.

A 32-yard pass. Then a 12-yard pass. Then someone else — John Metchie III — got to pick up nine yards on a pass before Smith caught another pass for three yards. Alabama pivoted to its ever-mighty running game from there, giving Najee Harris the ball for two quick gains that added up to seven yards and brought the Tide within 20 yards of the end zone.

Another pass to Metchie brought Alabama close to a first down, but Harris ran for 3 yards to sustain the drive. A 4-yard scamper by Harris brought Alabama to the brink of a lead headed into the second quarter, but on the next play, Justin Hilliard, an Ohio State linebacker, tore through the chaos to push Harris back two yards.

And when it came time to score? A 5-yard pass to a largely undefended Smith for a touchdown, completing a drive that went just more than five minutes.

Alabama rolled up 153 yards on its first two drives, including 127 through the air.

And now Alabama leads, 14-7, early in the second quarter.

Jan. 11, 2021, 8:52 p.m. ET
Justin Fields hands off to Trey Sermon during the first quarter.
Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

Barely minutes into the game, Trey Sermon, clutching his left shoulder, was shuttled into the Ohio State locker room. It was only the first possession but the running back likely will not see any more action on Monday night, as he was then transported to a hospital for further examination.

A deep loss for the Buckeyes, Sermon blossomed in the last few games of the season. In the last two games alone, he rushed for 524 yards. In the first five games of this season, he rushed for a total of 344 yards.

“He’s one of those guys where you give him the seam, he can take it: I think he’s got breakaway speed and then he still has the ability to catch some out of the backfield,” Pete Golding, Alabama’s defensive coordinator, said of Sermon last week.

Luckily, Ohio State had running back Master Teague III, who suffered an injury in the first half of the Buckeyes’ Big Ten championship win and was unable to play in the Sugar Bowl. Teague was the first player from Ohio State to put points up on the board against Alabama. In the first five games of the season, Teague had 449 yards on 89 carries and six touchdowns.

And he has already proven himself by and large — after the defense forced a turnover, Teague wasted no time for the Buckeyes in landing his second touchdown of the night.

Jan. 11, 2021, 8:43 p.m. ET
Jeremy Ruckert of Ohio State catches a ball for a first down during the first quarter.
Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

Half — half! — of Ohio State’s six passing touchdowns in the Sugar Bowl against Clemson involved tight ends.

Consider the case of Jeremy Ruckert, a 6-foot-5 junior from Lindenhurst, N.Y. When the Buckeyes arrived in New Orleans for the Sugar Bowl, he had caught five touchdown passes this season and not one in the preceding three games.

But early in the second quarter that night, when Ohio State took the lead it would hold forevermore, Justin Fields targeted Ruckert with a 17-yard pass for a touchdown. He did it again, this time for 12 yards, just before halftime and finished the night with 55 yards on just three catches.

Ohio State’s reliance on its tight ends has been inconsistent this year. But when the Buckeyes turn to players like Ruckert, they’ve generally had positive results.

“They’ve been effective when used, but not used that often, and I think that’s probably a dimension that really stuck out to me,” Tom Allen, Indiana’s coach, said. “Honestly, you don’t think about taking any of those guys away. You’re worried about all the perimeter guys and you’re worried about stopping the run game. Tight ends, to me, that’s where you can really, truly take advantage of a defense because now you put those safeties and linebackers in conflict.”

Alabama had noticed the tight end play on film, of course. The lone outstanding question heading into Monday’s game was how much Ohio State Coach Ryan Day would use them with a title on the line.

“A lot of tight ends, they may be really physical but not that effective in the pass or only effective in the pass but not effective in the run, but I think he can do both of those,” Christian Harris, an Alabama linebacker, said of Ruckert. “He can kill you any moment of the game, whether it’s the run play, put you on your back or the pass. He’s a great route runner. He’s also got some size on him, so it’s really hard to get around him when he’s trying to make catches.”

Ruckert made his presence known early on Monday with a stellar one-handed catch for a 36-yard gain that set the Buckeyes up for an 8-yard touchdown run by Master Teague III.

Tie game in Miami Gardens with a bit under five minutes to play in the first quarter.

Jan. 11, 2021, 8:36 p.m. ET
Najee Harris of the Alabama Crimson Tide rushes for a 1-yard touchdown during the first quarter.
Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

By the way he gushed last week, you would have thought that Steve Spurrier was Najee Harris’s coach.

“I like their scheme probably better than everyone’s because of the ability to run the ball with Najee Harris,” said Spurrier, the 1966 Heisman Trophy winner who built Florida into an offensive monstrosity with his Fun ‘n’ Gun tactics.

Entering Monday’s game, Harris had 346 receiving yards and had run for 1,387. And Spurrier declared Harris was “maybe the best running back in the country” and the most underrated player on a stunningly talented Alabama offense.

Harris just made the first score of the night, a 1-yard touchdown run on fourth-and-goal to put Alabama in front, 7-0, with just more than eight minutes to play in the first quarter.

Mark Ingram, one of Harris’s predecessors as Alabama’s starting tailback, fairly argued that for all of the attention Alabama’s passing game has picked up this season, the Tide’s attack on the ground cannot be overlooked.

“That offensive line that they’ve got and Najee and Brian Robinson, those guys have been holding down the ground game all season,” Ingram, the 2009 Heisman Trophy winner, said in an interview. “So you have to respect that, and that allows our receivers, our explosive playmakers on the perimeter to get open, get outside, get one-on-one opportunities, get opportunities to run across the field and make plays because you have to respect Najee, you have to respect our run game.”

Jan. 11, 2021, 8:19 p.m. ET
Ohio State defensive tackle Tommy Togiai (72) blocks a pass by Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence during the second half of the Sugar Bowl.
Gerald Herbert/Associated Press

Indiana gave Ohio State its biggest scare of this season, losing to the Buckeyes by just a touchdown. About seven weeks later, Tom Allen, Indiana’s coach, is still thinking about Ohio State’s defensive line.

“They’re probably not as dynamic as they were a year ago, but they’re very, very good and there’s so many of them and there’s not really one guy who just jumps out at you,” Allen said in an interview. “It’s a group of guys that plays really hard, they’re really well-coached, they do have talent and they are good enough to stop the run game and disrupt the pass game.”

Indeed, Ohio State entered Monday night having given up just 624 rushing yards, holding opponents to about 3 yards a carry. And for as vaunted of a passing offense as Alabama has boasted this season, it is still a team that tilts toward the run, having rushed for 2,414 yards this season, about 5 yards a carry.

“Not a super complicated scheme and they don’t have to be that way because they have great players, but it’s mostly four-down fronts,” Mac Jones, Alabama’s quarterback, said last week. “I’ve been impressed watching them on film — very vertical team in terms of the D-line getting back there at the quarterback, and then obviously all 11 players rallying to the ball.”

Najee Harris, Alabama’s star running back, offered a similar diagnosis before Monday’s game: “They’re really good in dissecting things out, really good at coming down and playing the run and dropping back into coverage when they have to. Really good lateral movement, stuff like that.”

But if Alabama is hoping simply to wear down the Buckeyes, Allen has more bad news: He doesn’t see depth as a particular problem for Ohio State’s line.

“They keep rotating them in, and so they keep guys fresh,” he said. “There’s not much of a drop-off between whoever comes in, and so it’s just like next guy, next guy, next guy.”

Allen's assessment will be tested throughout the night. Two crucial members of the line, the defensive end Tyreke Smith and Tommy Togiai, a defensive tackle, are unavailable for the game, Ohio State said.

Jan. 11, 2021, 8:15 p.m. ET
Patrick Surtain II making a play during the Southeastern Conference championship against the Florida Gators.
Adam Hagy/USA Today Sports, via Reuters

Patrick Surtain II has the Buckeyes on edge, especially while they are looking to protect Justin Fields’ remaining body parts and relying on his arm.

“Well, you know, his thing is — of course he can do many different things with their coverages and adjustments — but in reality, he’s such a great cover guy that basically you put an ‘X’ on that guy because he’s covered up a lot,” said Kevin Wilson, Ohio State’s offensive coordinator.

“He can play a guy one-on-one, so that allows the defense to then bracket other receivers or that allows the defense then to cheat with linebackers and safeties to outnumber you and out-gap you in the run game,” he added.

The Alabama cornerback, who was named the defensive M.V.P. of the Rose Bowl, had 34 total tackles, 20 solo, 2.5 tackles for loss, one interception, eight pass deflections and one touchdown in 12 games this season. He is up for a slew of awards and is expected to go early in the N.F.L. draft.

Surtain grew up in South Florida, graduating from American Heritage High School and was a five-star recruit to Alabama. His father, who was an N.F.L. cornerback for Miami and Kansas City, was his high school football coach.

Surtain was “a guy we recruited hard,” Wilson said. “I know Coach Coombs was disappointed when we didn’t get half and those guys were dealing trying to get him in here.”

Playing at Hard Rock Stadium for Surtain is a homecoming, and he is hoping to make a certain Surtain Senior in South Florida proud.

“I’m just looking forward to impress him,” he said of his father, adding that his family would be in the stands. “I know they’re going to be happy to see me. I’m going to be happy to see them. It’s going to be a great moment.”

Jan. 11, 2021, 8:03 p.m. ET
Head coach Ryan Day of the Ohio State Buckeyes
Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Ryan Day is one of the new guys on the Big Ten head coaching block.

Four seasons after he arrived at Ohio State as a co-offensive coordinator, and in his second season as the man atop the school’s celebrated football program, he’s got the Buckeyes playing for a national title.

It is not unprecedented for a second-year Ohio State coach to reach such heights — Jim Tressel, for instance, led his 2002 team to a national title just as quickly — but it does mean that coaches are still figuring out Day’s style and quirks.

Tom Allen, the coach at Indiana, which played Ohio State closer than anyone this season, had unreserved praise for his rival.

“He’s very thoughtful, and I think that carries over into his play-calling,” Allen said in an interview last week. “You didn’t see the lulls in his teams. I’ve seen Ohio State teams in the past that were super, super talented, but they played well when they needed to, and they sometimes lulled. He expects them to play their best.”

Pay attention early on, Allen said because Day will signal “where he thinks he’s got you schematically within the first six to eight plays of the game.”

“They’ll adjust from there as you adjust to that,” he said. “I would be disappointed if they didn’t get off to a fast start.”

Alabama’s coach, Nick Saban, was similarly impressed.

“He’s a very good offensive sort of play caller,” Saban said recently. “He’s got a great scheme on offense, certainly does a great job of coaching his players to execute that scheme. They’re very well-coached in every phase, and their team plays with great intangibles, discipline, toughness, play hard. Seem to have great togetherness on their team. So I think those are all great indicators of what a great job Ryan Day does as a head coach.”

Speaking of Ohio State coaches, it’s often lost to history that Saban spent two seasons on the staff in Columbus, where he coached defensive backs in 1980 and 1981.

Jan. 11, 2021, 7:39 p.m. ET
N.C.A.A. President Mark Emmert testifies during a Senate Commerce subcommittee hearing on college athlete compensation last year.
Susan Walsh/Associated Press

Less than two hours before the College Football Playoff’s championship game, the N.C.A.A. said one of its most influential committees had postponed plans for a Monday vote on proposals that would let student-athletes profit off their fame.

The decision was expected after Mark Emmert, the N.C.A.A. president, urged the body, the Division I Council, to delay consideration of the plan in light of concerns that the Justice Department detailed in a letter on Friday.

In a statement on Monday evening, the N.C.A.A. said “judicial, political and enforcement issues" had influenced the council’s decision to wait.

“The council remains fully committed to modernizing Division I rules in ways that benefit all student-athletes,” said M. Grace Calhoun, the council’s leader and the athletic director at the University of Pennsylvania. “Unfortunately, external factors require this pause, and the council will use this time to enhance the proposals.”

The existing proposals would open up potentially lucrative opportunities that have not previously been available to student-athletes, like earning money from social media posts. They would have certain limits and would, for example, forbid students from promoting sports betting. They would also allow colleges and universities to block agreements between players and companies if they conflict with “existing institutional sponsorship arrangements” and require students to disclose their name, image and likeness “activities to an independent third-party administrator” — provisions that prompted concerns among supporters of new rights for student-athletes.

In a letter to Emmert on Friday, the assistant attorney general who oversees the Justice Department’s antitrust division said the government wanted to ensure that any N.C.A.A. rules “will allow college athletes to benefit from robust competition for their talents.”

The last-minute missive clearly frustrated Emmert, who described it as a “massive monkey wrench” for a debate that has unfolded inside the N.C.A.A, but also in statehouses and on Capitol Hill.

Jan. 11, 2021, 7:15 p.m. ET
Fields was looked at by medical staff after a particularly hard hit during the Rose Bowl.
Sean Gardner/Getty Images

As a high school senior in Georgia, Justin Fields knew immediately that something was wrong when he was tackled in front of his bench during a playoff game. As he looked down at his throwing hand, he saw his right index finger bent at a grotesque angle. Fields rose to his feet and held his hand up to his coach.

Fields did not play another down in high school. The star quarterback had surgery, did his best to mentor his replacement for the next two weeks as the team advanced, and even broached the idea of returning to play running back. But his coach said no.

Echos of three years ago resonate as Fields, the Ohio State quarterback, enters Monday night’s national championship game against top-ranked Alabama in uncertain physical condition. He took a crunching blow — a helmet to the back of the ribs — in a semifinal win over Clemson on Jan. 1.

After he lay on the turf for several minutes, Fields was helped to the sideline and received an injection or two, he told reporters after the game. The shots allowed him to continue playing, which he did superbly, even as he moved gingerly and often winced when he threw.

Ohio State has refused to disclose any details about the injury or what treatment Fields might need to play against Alabama, leaving open ethical questions about whether Ohio State is putting its hopes for winning a championship ahead of the health interests of its players.

Jan. 11, 2021, 6:15 p.m. ET
Steve Sarkisian, left, won’t be the offensive coordinator at Alabama after this season. He took a job as the head coach at Texas.
Mickey Welsh/USA Today Sports, via Reuters

On New Year’s Day, Alabama beat Notre Dame in the Rose Bowl. By the next night, Nick Saban knew he needed a new offensive coordinator: Steve Sarkisian had accepted an offer to become the next coach at Texas.

Working for one team and landing a job with another is a tricky, familiar circumstance for big-time programs during the postseason. Alabama had a Sarkisian-style situation not too long ago, actually. Near the end of the 2016 season, Lane Kiffin, then Alabama’s offensive coordinator, accepted the top job at Florida Atlantic.

Ultimately, Alabama used an interim offensive coordinator for that title game. But in an interview last week, Kiffin, now the head coach at Mississippi, said he thought Sarkisian had been able to better balance the role he’s leaving with his new job in Austin.

“When we got a head job before, there wasn’t Covid so there was active recruiting going on, so you’re literally recruiting and going back and forth between the schools and stuff,” Kiffin said. “And there’s hardly any recruiting because of the early signing period,” which ended on Dec. 18. (For more on how the early signing period is no longer all that early, we explored that subject in February.)

For his part, Sarkisian insisted before the game that he had not been distracted by his impending move.

“Quite honestly, my week for me would be a normal game week as if I hadn’t taken the Texas job,” he said. “My focus is on the game. I’m prepping for the ballgame. Any of the spare time that I do have, that’s getting my attention for the job at Texas, whether that’s staffing or recruiting, things of that nature.”

And Saban, who famously complained about assistants being distracted a couple of years ago, said on Sunday he had no objections to how events had proceeded this time.

“I think our coaching staff has done a really good job working with our players,” Saban said. “Sark is the one guy that has shown great maturity, I think, in how he’s handled his situation, moving on to be a head coach, which is what he’s worked for, and we’re happy for him relative to the opportunity that he’s created for himself by the great job that he’s done for us here. But I have no complaints at all with the way our coaches have sort of handled the situation.”

Jan. 11, 2021, 5:15 p.m. ET

The bar-lined Strip in Tuscaloosa, Ala., is usually filled with Crimson-clad football fans during championship games, who storm the street if the Crimson Tide win. The mayor of Tuscaloosa, the home city of the University of Alabama, was hoping that fans would stay home on Monday night as the city struggles with virus cases and limited capacity in hospitals.

“We’re probably in our most precarious position since the pandemic began in early March,” Mayor Walt Maddox said in a Zoom interview last week.

“When your hospital has four available I.C.U. rooms left, that’s as serious as it gets,” he added.

Health officials encouraged avid football followers to adopt Coach Nick Saban’s philosophy: “Do your job.”

“Our job is to social distance, wear a mask, follow the occupancy orders,” the mayor said of those who would choose to watch the game in the company of people outside their immediate household. “And, if we are successful Monday night, that we don’t flood the streets and create a block party environment.”

But it appears that fans did not get the message, as bars along the Strip had crowded lines at 3 p.m. Eastern on Monday.

The number of new coronavirus cases in Alabama this week increased 29 percent compared to two weeks ago, according to a New York Times database. About 20 percent of people who were tested in the past several weeks were found to have the virus, said Dr. Karen Landers, a health officer for the state. “That’s very very high statewide; we have a lot of community transmission of Covid-19,” she said in a phone interview last week.

Tuscaloosa, in accordance with Alabama’s guidelines, has mandated masks and set limits on bar and restaurant occupancies to curb the spread of the virus; there is a “safer at home” order but no curfew in the state.

While there is a police presence monitoring the Strip, only 69 percent of Tuscaloosa’s police officers were available as of Thursday because of exposure to or contraction of the virus, Maddox said.

The university also released guidance for how to watch the game safely on Monday, writing in a post on Twitter that “any unlawful behavior and/or violations of our health and safety protocols will result in disciplinary action.”

In Columbus, Ohio, home of the Buckeyes, about 0.6 percent of the population has tested positive for the virus each week for the past eight weeks, Dr. Mysheika Roberts, the city’s health commissioner, said in a phone interview last week. The city has been checking for occupancy and mask compliance in restaurants and bars, and planned to patrol more on Monday night.

“We have seen some issues with restaurants and bars on game day or game night, and we have issued warnings when necessary and we have even gone to court for a few cases,” she said of overcrowding and people refusing to wear masks over the past several weeks.

There is a stay-at-home order and a 10 p.m. curfew in Ohio. Dr. Roberts said Columbus’ health department was bracing for a surge in cases following December’s holiday season; the average number of new cases in Ohio rose 16 percent last week from two weeks ago, according to a New York Times database.

“Then if you put the game on top of that this coming Monday, we’re concerned about a surge that we might have after that,” Dr. Roberts said.

The mayor of Columbus is watching from home with just his immediate family. “And I encourage Buckeye Nation to do the same,” Mayor Andrew Ginther wrote in an email to the Times. “I know that is a lot to ask, but illness and possibly death have to count more than a national championship.”

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