CFP: Ohio State vs. Georgia, live stream, TV channel, time, how to watch

The No. 1 Georgia Bulldogs will meet the No. 4 Ohio State Buckeyes in the Peach Bowl on Saturday night.

The No. 1 Georgia Bulldogs are on a mission to repeat as national champions in this year’s College Football Playoff. Standing in their way is the No. 4 Ohio State Buckeyes, who will face off against Georgia in a semifinal at the Peach Bowl on Saturday. Both teams have a rich history in college football and have reached the pinnacle of success as brands, but only one will advance to the College Football Playoff National Championship on New Year’s Eve.

This should be a great game between these two teams, here is everything you need to know to watch or stream the game today.

Peach Bowl: #4 Ohio State vs. #1 Georgia

  • When: Saturday, December 31
  • Time: 8:00 p.m. ET
  • TV Channel: ESPN
  • Live Stream: fuboTV (watch for free)

 NCAA Football Odds and Betting Lines

NCAA odds courtesy of Tipico Sportsbook. Odds were updated at 6:00 p.m. ET on Saturday.

Ohio State vs. Georgia (-5.5)

O/U: 62

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Georgia vs Ohio State College Football Playoff Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl Prediction Game Preview

Georgia vs Ohio State game preview, prediction, and breakdown for the College Football Playoff Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl on December 31, 2022

Georgia vs Ohio State prediction, game preview, odds, how to watch. College Football Playoff Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl, December 31, 2022


Georgia vs Ohio State College Football Playoff Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl Prediction Game Preview

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Georgia vs Ohio State How To Watch

Date: December 31, 2022
Game Time: 8:00 ET
Venue: Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, GA
How To Watch: ESPN
Record: Georgia (13-0), Ohio State (11-1)
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Georgia vs Ohio State College Football Playoff Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl 5 Things To Know

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Georgia hasn’t exactly made greatness boring, but it’s not like this is a star-studded superpower with a slew of household names. It’s a rock-solid team that’s good at blocking and tackling and going about its business as it rolls towards what might just be a second straight national title. There’s one key difference from the 2021 version, though.

This one might run the table.

2022 Georgia had a perfect storm of positives to get here. Years of amazing recruiting built up the talent level, and it all matured enough to create a true Next Man Up system with future NFL stars replacing the NFL stars who left off of last year’s national champion team.

Combine that with a relatively down year by Alabama – and not having to face the Tide – a 44-year-old starting quarterback who knows what he’s doing (Stetson Bennett is actually 25), and all those new starters looking to prove the greatness of this team compared to last year, and this might be an even stronger run.

However …

CFN Experts CFP, NY6, Dec 28-Jan 2

You let them in the door. The Buckeyes were out. All it would’ve taken was USC’s Caleb Williams not hurting his hamstring, or Clemson and/or Tennessee not gacking the moment against South Carolina, or Alabama’s Jahmyr Gibbs making the late grab against Tennessee, or any one of a number of things that could’ve happened to put someone else in the No. 4 spot in the College Football Playoff.

But they’re in. They’re in the tournament at the 4, just like 2019 Alabama, and just like 2014 Ohio State – both of those teams won two games and the national title.

The team rolled through the season despite a slew of injuries, and all was set up to be the No. 2 seed. All it had to do was beat Michigan, take down Purdue in the Big Ten Championship, and it would’ve played TCU not Georgia in the CFP first round.

You have to win two no matter what, so Ohio State might as well get the Georgia game out of the way now.

There are 3.5 teams going with the same NFL talent level – Georgia, Alabama, the USC offense, and Ohio State. Even with a few key guys out – RB TreyVeon Henderson is out with a foot injury, WR Jaxson Smith-Njigba is nursing his injured hamstring as he gets ready for the NFL – the guys are still there to hang position for position with the defending national champs.

Ohio State has lived in the biggest bowls for the last 30 years. In the eight-year playoff era, it’s 7-3 in bowl games with the three losses all in the CFP. It won an epic Rose Bowl over Utah last year, lost the College Football Playoff National Championship to Alabama in 2020, and it’s in the Peach for first time ever.

Georgia has been a bowl god under Kirby Smart. The program has gone 9-3 over the last 12 bowls going back to the Mark Richt era. It won its last four – including two last season – with the last two losses the national title agains Alabama to end the 2017 season and in a tough Sugar loss to Texas in 2018. This is the program’s seventh Peach appearance, and …

This is just the second time these two have met. Georgia beat Ohio State 21-14 in the 1992 Citrus Bowl, but that’s been it for these two powerhouses.

Between playoff games and close battles that defined the narrative for the participating teams, almost all of the last several Peach Bowls have mattered.

Last year’s Michigan State win over Pitt was entertaining at the end, the Georgia win over Cincinnati in the 2020 season was good, the 2019 version – LSU blowing out Oklahoma – was interesting theater, and UCF made a whole program around the win over Auburn at the end of the 2017 season.

The first two Peach Bowls as part of the College Football Playoff were lousy. This one shouldn’t be.

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Ohio State OL talks Georgia defensive line, Jalen Carter ahead of Peach Bowl

Buckeyes OT Paris Johnson Jr. talks Georgia DL, Jalen Carter…

No. 1 Georgia will take on No. 4 Ohio State in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl on Saturday night in the College Football Playoff semifinal in Atlanta.

The Buckeyes talented offensive line is fully aware of UGA’s dominant defensive front, featuring stars like Jalen Carter and Nazir Stackhouse, according to Ohio State offensive tackle Paris Johnson Jr.

“They have a strong defensive line, and I believe that’s probably one of the strongest units on the defense, of course. And I think it’s like a match-up game upfront,” Johnson said. “They have [Nazir] Stackhouse and Carter. They have 13, 33 and 90 [Mykel Williams, Robert Beal and Tramel Walthour] and on the outside that rotate a lot along with 32 [Chaz Chambliss]. And I think that’s a solid group, and they rotate a lot, and I would say their twos are almost as good as their ones.”

Johnson, a former five-star recruit and 2022 unanimous All-American, has started 23 straight games for the Buckeyes but may face his biggest test yet in the Bulldog front.

“I think it’s a respectable match up. There’s definitely not anybody on their line that you overlook in terms of doing your preparations for.”

The Buckeyes have allowed eight sacks this season (4th in FBS) and average 199 yards per game on the ground (26th in FBS).

While the Dawgs under coach Kirby Smart don’t typically jump off the page in sack numbers (77th in the FBS), Georgia boasts the No. 1 run defense (77 yards per game).

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