LSU fans expected to heavily outnumber Oklahoma fans at Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl

For the second-straight year, Oklahoma is expected to be playing in a road-like environment as LSU fans are expected to outnumber OU fans.

Another College Football Playoff appearance, another game Oklahoma is expected to play in a lopsided crowd environment.

Georgia fans paid all the money to go to Pasadena, California, for the 2018 Rose Bowl* with a home game potential waiting in Atlanta for the national championship. For the 2018 Orange Bowl, Alabama fans took the short(er) trip to Miami than Oklahoma fans.

It will be the same for the Sooners in 2019, as LSU fans are expected to occupy 63 percent of the tickets for the College Football Playoff at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl in Atlanta, according to the Vivid Seats Fan Forecast.

As it was for Georgia in the 2017 season, LSU and its fans—given a win in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl—will get to make an extremely short trip to New Orleans for the 2019 national championship at the Mercedes Benz Superdome.

Oklahoma and LSU will kickoff the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl from Atlanta at Mercedes Benz Stadium on Saturday at 3 p.m. CT.

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Big Ten and College Football Playoff bowl 2019 expert picks and predictions

We’ve got all the predictions, odds, and picks for all the Big Ten and College Football Playoff bowl games.

We’ve made it this far on our journey and it’s time to get all the bowl shenanigans going. We’ve been picking every Big Ten football game collectively as a staff here at Buckeyes Wire and it all comes down to the postseason. It’s one last chance for someone to become the king of college football game picks.

There’s nine Big Ten teams participating in the bowl season, so it’s not a huge population, but we know you’re interested and we’ve got some bragging rights on the line even if you aren’t.

Off we go with the last hurrah of this 2019 Big Ten college football season. Oh, and we’re throwing in the New Years’ Six bowls too for fun.

A a reminder, if there’s an *next to the pick, that means the team will win, but not cover. Also, we get our odds from BetMGM.

INSTRUCTIONS: Make your pick against the spread. For example …
– If you think Ohio State will win -3.5 over Michigan: OSU
– If you think Ohio State will win outright: OSU
– If you think Ohio State will win, but NOT cover: OSU*
– If there’s a tie, George Washington settles it via the ‘ole quarter coin-flip.

Before we get going with all the picks, here’s the standings so far at the end of the regular season …

RESULTS SO FAR

@PhilHarrisonBW: 144-36 SU, 85-95 ATS
@yesh222: 135-45 SU, 97-83 ATS
@MarkRussell1975: 142-38 SU, 103-77 ATS
@BrentReeves: 140-40 SU, 95-85 ATS
@SirBrockNetter: 141-39 SU, 89-91 ATS
@JaxFryburger: 139-41 SU, 94-86 ATS
CONSENSUS PICK: 143-37 SU, 103-77 ATS

Next … Big Ten non-New Year’s Six Bowls

LSU may be without starting running back for Peach Bowl against Oklahoma

LSU could be without their leading rusher against Oklahoma.

LSU could be without their leading rusher against Oklahoma.

Sports Illustrated’s Ross Dellenger reported that Clyde Edwards-Helaire left practice with a hamstring injury but that the severity of the injury is still unknown.

Edwards-Helaire is the Tigers’ leading rusher, amassing 1,290 yards on 197 carries and averaging 6.5 yards per carry in the No. 1 offense in the nation. His 16 rushing touchdowns are good for No. 11 in the country. Aside from his rushing abilities, Edwards-Helaire has 399 receiving yards on 50 receptions including a touchdown.

LSU’s next leading rusher is Heisman Trophy winner Joe Burrow with 289 yards on 96 carries with three touchdowns.

If Edwards-Helaire is unable to go on Dec. 28, the Tigers will have to piece together a running back by committee model between Tyrion Davis-Prince, John Emery Jr., Chris Curry and Lanard Fournette.

Outside of Edwards-Helaire and Burrow, the LSU running backs have accounted for 628 yards on 140 carries and 10 touchdowns between five other rushers.

Oklahoma and LSU faceoff in the College Football Playoff next Saturday, Dec. 28 at 3 p.m. CT in Atlanta, GA.

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Ohio State vs. Clemson 2019 Fiesta Bowl Preview: Get to know the Tigers’ five best players

What players on Clemson could make life difficult on Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl CFP Semifinal? Here are the Tigers’ five best players.

We’re less than two weeks away from the College Football Semifinal matchup in the Fiesta Bowl between Ohio State and Clemson. As a Buckeye fan, we know you’ve been up at night thinking about this matchup and what to be aware of. So, we’ll be bringing you things leading up to the game, and first up is a cliff notes version of the best five players on this Tigers’ squad.

It’s not Clemson is the great unknown opponent. You don’t win a couple of national titles over the last three years and go under the radar, but still, with the schedule and lack of coverage of the ACC Champion’s year, you may not be completely up to speed on who has been the biggest playmakers for Dabo Swinney’s club.

Here’s the Clemson Tigers five best players of 2019 so far, and ones that the Ohio State coaching staff will no doubt have to have an answer for.

Next … No. 5

The X Factor player for Ohio State Against Clemson is …

If Ohio State hopes to dethrone Clemson and get into the national championship game, it’ll need this player to come up big.

While it seems that everyone is picking Clemson to win the titanic struggle in the desert, maybe there is one specific player that can make all the difference in the world for Ohio State.

In the Big Ten Championship game, KJ Hill was crucial to the success of Ohio State with his ability to catch the underneath routes to balance the deep threat ability of Chris Olave. Everyone has raved about Olave since he emerged last year against That Team Up North, but KJ Hill is as reliable as it gets and is often overshadowed and underappreciated.

In the Wisconsin game, Hill had a game-high seven receptions for 83 yards and two touchdowns. His performance in the second half is what allowed Ohio State to open up the deep passing game to Olave.

The tandem of Olave and Hill is crucial to the success of Ohio State, but without the underneath routes, the safeties can stay high and limit the deep threat. Hill is second on the team in touchdowns, but he often gets the tough and dirty underneath yardage that isn’t nearly as glorious.

In order to reach the pinnacle of where this Ohio State team hopes to end up in 2019, it’ll need to rely on the experience of Hill to keep the defense guessing in the passing game. The fact that Hill is Ohio State’s all-time leader in receptions says he’s up to the task.

College Football Playoff Rankings Reaction: 5 Things We Learned. Utah vs. Big 12 Fight

Five reactions and what we learned from the fourth rankings from the College Football Playoff committee.  

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Five reactions and what we learned from the fourth rankings from the College Football Playoff committee.  


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

Big 12 vs. Utah
The known unknown is …
Penn State love
What it all really means

5. Rapid-Fire First Reaction To Latest College Football Playoff Rankings

What’s with the refusal to like what Virginia Tech is doing? Yeah, it got wiped out by Duke 45-10 at the end of September, but that was before making a quarterback change – the committee is supposed to notice things like that – and before the team went on a run.

The Hokies have won six of their last seven game, with the one loss coming on the final drive against Notre Dame on the road. They whacked Wake Forest, and over the last two weeks beat Georgia Tech and Pitt by a combined score of 63-0. This team should be a whole lot higher than 24.

Virginia Tech being ranked makes things easier. Now we know that the Virginia-VT winner – and Coastal Division champ – will be the easy pick to go to the Orange Bowl if it loses to Clemson.

Ohio State moving up to No. 1 doesn’t matter all that much, unless it’s the committee’s way of providing a time to get used to the idea of LSU not being in the top spot. Why does this matter?

The College Football Playoff committee REALLY and truly just wants to get it right, and there isn’t some hidden agenda other than simply wanting to create the best four-team tournament possible. With that said, by moving up the Buckeyes now, it’s setting it up to avoid a possible LSU/Alabama rematch in the semifinal.

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Wisconsin at 12, Michigan at 13. Thank you, College Football Playoff committee, for being the only rankings to acknowledge the Badger blowout win over the Wolverines.

Nah, Oregon’s drop to 14 isn’t going to matter as much as you might think. Utah is going to have to dominate the Pac-12 Championship no matter what and get in as a 12-1 Power Five champ. After this weekend, Oregon will move up to around 11.

18 Memphis and 19 Cincinnati play each other, and they could play the week after in the American Athletic Conference championship. No. 20 Boise State has a better shot than you think of being the Group of Five champion going to the Cotton Bowl.

Big 12 vs. Utah
The known unknown is …
Penn State love
What it all really means

NEXT: Big 12 vs. Utah

College Football Playoff Rankings Top 25: Week 4, November 26. Ohio State New No. 1

The results from the fourth week of the College Football Playoff rankings top 25, released November 26th.

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The results from the fourth week of the College Football Playoff rankings, released November 26th.


Last week’s College Football Playoff rankings in parentheses.

College Football Playoff Rankings Top 25

25. Appalachian State Mountaineers 10-1 (24)

Up Next: at Troy

24. Virginia Tech Hokies 8-3 (NR)

Up Next: at Virginia

23. Iowa State Cyclones 6-4 (22)

Up Next: at Kansas State

22. USC Trojans 8-4 (23)

Up Next: Bowl Game

21. Oklahoma State Cowboys 8-3 (21)

Up Next: Oklahoma

20. Boise State Broncos 10-1 (20)

Up Next: at Colorado State

19. Cincinnati Bearcats 10-1 (19)

Up Next: at Memphis

18. Memphis Tigers 10-1 (18)

Up Next: Cincinnati

17. Iowa Hawkeyes 8-3 (17)

Up Next: at Nebraska

16. Notre Dame Fighting Irish 9-2 (16)

Up Next: at Stanford

15. Auburn Tigers 8-3 (15)

Up Next: Alabama

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14. Oregon Ducks 9-2 (6)

Up Next: Oregon State

13. Michigan Wolverines 9-2 (13)

Up Next: Ohio State

12. Wisconsin Badgers 9-2 (12)

Up Next: at Minnesota

11. Florida Gators 9-2 (11)

Up Next: Florida State

10. Penn State Nittany Lions 9-2 (8)

Up Next: Rutgers

9. Baylor Bears 10-1 (14)

Up Next: at Kansas

8. Minnesota Golden Gophers 10-1 (10)

Up Next: Wisconsin

7. Oklahoma Sooners 10-1 (9)

Up Next: at Oklahoma State

6. Utah Utes 10-1 (7)

Up Next: Colorado

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5. Alabama Crimson Tide 10-1 (5)

Up Next: at Auburn

4. Georgia Bulldogs 10-1 (4)

Up Next: at Georgia Tech

3. Clemson Tigers 11-0 (3)

Up Next: at South Carolina

2. LSU Tigers 11-0 (1)

Up Next: Texas A&M

1. Ohio State Buckeyes 11-0 (2)

Up Next: at Michigan

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College Football Playoff Rankings Reaction: 5 Things We Learned, Top 25 Best Wins Of 2019

Five reactions and what we learned from the third rankings from the College Football Playoff committee. Also, the 25 best wins this season.

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Five reactions and what we learned from the third rankings from the College Football Playoff committee. Also, the 25 best wins so far this season.


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

If Alabama wins out …
The known unknown is …
What’s a big win? Top 25 wins
What it all really means

5. Rapid-Fire First Reaction To Latest College Football Playoff Rankings

Nothing much actually changed, and that in and of itself is important. The College Football Playoff committee basically punted on a slew of big decisions and calls for now, but that matters.

Oklahoma didn’t get a big bump. Minnesota rocketed up to 8 last week after handing Penn State its only loss so far this year. Oklahoma came up with a special comeback and performance to get by Baylor, and it only moved up one spot. That means …

There appears to be a hard ceiling on how high the Sooners can get. Beating CFP No. 21 Oklahoma State would be nice, and getting by No. 14 Baylor would be solid again if that happens in the Big 12 Championship, but there’s not much room to move up the rankings, because …

Even at 12-1 with a Big 12 Championship – this applies to Baylor, too – there’s way too much traffic. It would take a slew of upsets along the way – like Auburn beating Alabama, a two-loss Pac-12 champion, and some other twists and turns – to get in.

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There’s an outside shot that Notre Dame can get within shouting distance of the New Year’s Six. At 16, the Irish have to count on No. 15 Auburn to lose to Alabama; hope for No. 14 Baylor to drop another game; expect No. 13 Michigan to lose to Ohio State; expect No. 10 Minnesota or No. 12 Wisconsin to lose when the they play each other – and the winner to lose the Big Ten Championship; get a loss against Ohio State out of No. 8 Penn State; and take advantage of Utah and/or Oregon losing again. The Irish  might be able to move up well into the top eight and have an honest shot at one of the big bowls.

Clemson is the only ACC team in the top 25. There are three American Athletic Conference teams ranked – it’s a rough run for the ACC. Virginia Tech should be in the top 25 somewhere, and it likely will be in the near future, but that’s it for now. There’s no one on Clemson’s schedule currently in the College Football Playoff rankings.

If Alabama wins out …
The known unknown is …
What’s a big win? Top 25 wins
What it all really means

NEXT: If Alabama wins out …

College Football Playoff Rankings: Third Week, November 19

The results from the third round of the College Football Playoff rankings, released November 19th.

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The results from the third round of the College Football Playoff rankings, released November 19th.


Last week’s College Football Playoff rankings in parentheses.

25. SMU Mustangs 9-1 (NR)

24. Appalachian State Mountaineers 9-1 (25)

23. USC Trojans 7-4 (23)

22. Iowa State Cyclones 6-4 (22)

21. Oklahoma State Cowboys 7-3 (22)

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20. Boise State Broncos 9-1 (21)

19. Cincinnati Bearcats 9-1 (17)

18. Memphis Tigers 9-1 (18)

17. Iowa Hawkeyes 7-3 (21)

16. Notre Dame Fighting Irish 8-2 (16)

15. Auburn Tigers 7-3 (12)

14. Baylor Bears 9-1 (13)

13. Michigan Wolverines 8-2 (15)

12. Wisconsin Badgers 8-2 (14)

11. Florida Gators 8-2 (11)

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10. Minnesota Golden Gophers 9-1 (8)

9. Oklahoma Sooners 9-1 (10)

8. Penn State Nittany Lions 9-1 (9)

7. Utah Utes 9-1 (7)

6. Oregon Ducks 9-1 (6)

5. Alabama Crimson Tide 9-1 (5)

4. Georgia Bulldogs 9-1 (4)

3. Clemson Tigers 11-0 (3)

2. Ohio State Buckeyes 10-0 (2)

1. LSU Tigers 10-0 (1)

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Cavalcade of Whimsy: Tua Tagovailoa, LSU’s Glitch, Coaching Contract Extensions

The fallout from the Tua Tagovailoa injury, LSU’s possible issue, and more contract extensions, in the latest Cavalcade of Whimsy.

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The fallout from the Tua Tagovailoa injury, LSU’s possible issue, and more contract extensions, in the latest Cavalcade of Whimsy.


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak
Check out all the past Cavalcades
Get College Football Tickets

Sorry if this column sucks, it’s not my fault …

This column doesn’t worry about players getting hurt, and then in the commercial break, it’s in an ad pitching a supplemental insurance product … because you need to worry about what happens if you get hurt.

“On a long enough time line, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.”

The Tua Tagovailoa injury made me so mad. 

Thank goodness it sounds like he’ll recover quickly and all should be fine, but it made me mad that this wonderful kid had to suffer the pain of that injury. 

It made me mad that it took away his dream and goal of quarterbacking Alabama to a national championship this season. 

It made me mad because something like this is going to happen again, and the same media types who went all “thoughts and prayers” are going to stick to the same old tired football clichés and beliefs without putting any effort into thinking differently.

It made me mad because I’m a fan who loves to watch one of the greatest pure passers college football has ever seen. 

It made me mad at how many supposedly smart people just can’t grasp that some football games matter, and sometimes there’s no need whatsoever to take even the slightest of unnecessary chances.

And it’s making me really, really mad that so many refuse to consider the idea that college football coaches have to be better at risk management.

I’m not blaming Nick Saban. 

I’m blaming all of us for not being a whole lot smarter.

We live in an era of net gen stats being thrown at us about everything.

There are specialized trainers for nutrition, best practices for working out, and assistant coaches who can break down the most minute details of the game.

There are charts for when to go for it on fourth down, when to go for two, when to make the players go to sleep, and everything else to gain even the slightest of competitive advantages.

Why can’t there be some wonky smart person who creates an insurance actuary table-like thing – you know, this load management craze the NBA kids are all into – to properly analyze the risk factors of when to play and not play a can’t-lose part of a team’s puzzle?

No-no-no, please don’t leave … I know, I’ve lost you with the word insurance – and I’m with you.

It’s a game. The players want to play it, it’s all fun, and it’s all about the joy of the sport … sort of. That all feeds into the NCAA’s brain-washing narrative of why players shouldn’t get paid, but that’s for another day.

For now, let’s just keep it simple. 

If Tagovailoa is on the sidelines when Alabama is up 35-7 and has the game well in hand, he doesn’t dislocate his hip. So how do we prevent something like this from happening again, or more realistically, how do we minimize the risk while still keeping the game fun and amazing?

Let’s go. First of all …

Nick Saban is the head man in charge. The idea of this being on Tagovailoa in any way, or that anyone can lobby Saban to do something he doesn’t want to do, or that any aspect of the Alabama football program isn’t 100% decided by the head coach, is laughable. Saban is the absolute and total ruler of the Alabama football world. He’s also a brilliant guy, which means …

Really? You “don’t prepare for injuries?” Well … why not? You prepare for everything else. You prepare for every crazy possibility down to the smallest detail, and yet you don’t factor in the risk/reward of playing Tua Tago-freaking-vailoa an extra few snaps, even though the outcome of the game was already decided?

Again, I’m not blaming Saban. Almost all coaches think like this, and the ones who don’t – see Chicago Bears head coach Matt Nagy sitting his top players all preseason, even though Mitchell Trubisky obviously needed the work – don’t seem to have it totally right, either. 

And yeah, in a purely competitive football way, there was a case for Tagovailoa still being out there.

Alabama needs to keep winning, and it needs to be amazing doing it. The only way it makes the College Football Playoff is by obliterating everyone left on the schedule after that LSU loss. So yes, there is something to be said for leaving 13 on the field for one more drive, because 42-7 at the half on the road in the SEC is exactly the statement that gets the playoff committee all hot.

So why didn’t Saban just say that? “We needed and wanted more points. We’re in the playoff chase, and we have to keep on playing and making a statement.” He says that, and everyone gets it. Even better, in a PR sort of way, then the blame and focus gets shifted to the College Football Playoff system.

However …

Really? I know he’s the greatest head coach of all-time, but he actually needed the NFL franchise-caliber quarterback of one of the most devastating quick-strike attacks in the history of college football to get more practice running a two-minute offense?

Sorry. I lost focus. Back to the issue of how to keep this situation from happening again, and that starts with one of the main talking points we have to debunk.

This wasn’t a fluke. Just because it happened in the final moments of the first half doesn’t take away that it was still a risk leaving Tagovailoa out there, because it’s a risk any time a player is playing. 

It doesn’t matter if it’s the first play, the last play, or anywhere in any situation in between. There’s a reason for the cliché that your career could be over on any given play, because …

IT’S … (bleep)ING … FOOTBALL. It’s part of the reason why we all love this wonderful sport. These amazing athletes are out there doing unbelievable things all while having to bury in the back of their minds the horrible possibility that something life-altering could happen at any moment. Of course injuries can happen in any sport at any time – but not like this one. 

It isn’t a given that a guy will get carted off the field when you go to a baseball game. There isn’t the looming likelihood of a player breaking a bone in the average NBA game, and there’s no guaranteed certainty of at least one concussion by anyone playing golf or tennis. 

And there certainly isn’t the cloud of worry in most sports that a player could be paralyzed if a play goes an inch the wrong way – which is why a Minnesota’s PJ Fleck took a key unsportsmanlike penalty for running onto the field, terrified when WR Tyler Johnson was “motionless” after getting walloped by a huge hit in the loss to Iowa.

And because of that …

We have to stop thinking about football injuries as “bad luck.” Instead, we have to rebrand them as a lost gamble. If you play football, you’re almost certainly going to suffer an injury of some sort at some point, so – duh – the less you play, the fewer the chances of getting hurt.

So how do you get the most out of your key players as possible while taking the least amount of risk? Again, this is where football needs special analysts to figure this out – you’re up 35-7 at the end of the half against Team X, and your probability of losing this game is 0.3% without QB1 in.

You find these analysts, head coaches, so they can worry about injuries, and then you don’t have to.

But I can hear your angry tweet being typed as we speak …

IT’S A GAME. Of course players want to play. Of course we don’t want to watch while always thinking about whether or not a player is going to get hurt. So after all of that …

Coach Saban, I do get it. You really can’t coach and worry about injuries – at least in the macro sense. Football players getting hurt is part of doing business, and you have to keep coaching through it all no matter what.

Of course you can’t coach scared.

It’s why depth matters. It’s why the “Next Man Up” idea is so important, and it’s why every backup has to always be prepared like he’s about to go in.

But …

That wasn’t some player.

That was Tua Tagovailoa.

“Well, if this is it old boy, I hope you don’t mind if I go out speaking the King’s.”

If you’re off to the NFL after all of this – as you should be …

Thanks, Tua. That was a blast.

NEXT: The No. 1 team’s glitch …