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Florida will play Ohio State for national title

Gators pass Michigan for No. 2 in polls to earn right to play No. 1 Buckeyes

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Florida coach Urban Meyer will guide his team against Ohio State for the BCS title.
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updated 8:40 p.m. ET Dec. 13, 2006

Florida beat Michigan on Sunday in the only game that mattered.

The Gators, who lobbied hard for this victory, were picked to play No. 1 Ohio State for college football’s national championship, ending any chance for the Wolverines to get the rematch they so desired and thought they deserved.

But Florida got in by a whisker — just a hundredth of a point in the Bowl Championship Series standings.

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The Gators had a BCS average of .944, and the Wolverines were just behind at .934. The teams were tied in the computer ratings, but Florida had a 38-point lead in the Harris poll and a 26-point advantage in the coaches’ poll.

All these factors were sure to set off renewed calls to scrap the BCS and go to a playoff. Count Florida coach Urban Meyer as supporter of that plan.

“We’re beyond the fact of do we need a playoff,” he said. “It’s now, can we get one.”

Of course, Southern California could have made things simpler by beating UCLA on Saturday. Instead, the second-ranked Trojans were upset 13-9, dropping in the standings and clearing the way for Florida (12-1) or Michigan (11-1).

The Gators leapfrogged idle Michigan by winning the Southeastern Conference championship game, 38-28, over Arkansas.

“It’s well deserved, and I’m proud of it,” Meyer said of the Gators’ selection.

The championship game is Jan. 8 in Glendale, Ariz.

Michigan’s consolation prize is a Rose Bowl bid to play USC (10-2), a classic Big Ten vs. Pac-10 matchup of teams left to wonder what could have been.

“I don’t think they (Florida) would have moved ahead of us if USC would have won the game,” said Michigan coach Lloyd Carr.

In other bowls:

  • Big 12 champion Oklahoma will meet unbeaten Boise State in the Fiesta on Jan. 1.
  • Big East champion Louisville will play ACC champion Wake Forest in the Orange on Jan. 2.
  • LSU will take Florida’s spot in the Sugar and play Notre Dame on Jan. 3.

When the Wolverines ended their regular season with a 42-39 loss to the Buckeyes two weeks ago, they talked about getting another swing at their Big Ten rivals.

While Michigan was left to wait and hope, the other contenders still had games to play.

As Florida padded its resume, second-year coach Meyer became very vocal about getting a chance to play Ohio State, especially when it appeared the Gators would be left out.

He called for a playoff and suggested the BCS should be imploded if the SEC champ again was left out of the championship game — the way undefeated Auburn was in 2004.

In the end, he said he didn’t think voicing his opinions about the BCS helped push his team into the title game.

“It’s an imperfect system,” Meyer said Sunday. “If you want a true national championship, the only way to do it is on the field.

Carr agreed: “I hope one day we have a system where all the issues are decided on the field.”

But Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, however, isn’t so sure about a playoff system.

“With a 12 game season, it would be next to impossible to have a 16-team playoff,” he said Sunday. “We’ll continually improve the system. As you look at it over the past few years, it has gotten better and better.”

  JOEY JOHNSTON ON THE BCS TITLE GAME

Florida doesn't stand much chance against Ohio State

It’s always something with the BCS. The system was created to make sure No. 1 and No. 2 played in the final game of the season, but rarely has there been a title game everybody agreed upon. If it’s not too many unbeaten teams, which was the case in ’04 when USC beat Oklahoma for the title, it’s not enough, which has usually been the case. Last year, when USC and Texas were the only undefeateds, was an abberation.

“What we’ve got is an extremely exciting regular season that the BCS actually enhanced by making so many games important not only in the region that they were played but nationally,” said Mike Slive, BCS coordinator and SEC commissioner. “The next part is here we are with many deserving teams.

“We need to continue over the next few years to look at the postseason to make sure it works the way we want it to work.”

Slive repeatedly has said he’s willing to discuss changes, including the so-called plus-one model which would have the championship matchup set after the big four bowl games are played.

This year, the BCS worked out for the Gators, who can focus on winning their second national championship. The first came in 1996, when Steve Spurrier’s Gators beat Florida State in the Sugar Bowl — a rematch, coincidentally, of a November regular-season game won by the Seminoles.

Michigan had hoped for a similar scenario, but Carr chose not to publicly pitch for his team.

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It’s unclear whether that would have helped or whether Meyer swayed some poll voters. Maybe when faced with the possibility of a Michigan-Ohio State rematch, the voters, like Meyer, cringed.

At least one coach, who voted for Michigan, said the possibility of a rematch didn’t influence his vote.

“I don’t think coaches are, quite frankly, the best people to vote on that poll,” said Rutgers coach Greg Schiano, who had Michigan No. 2 and Florida No. 3. “But I take it very seriously. I know it’s important, because we’re dealing with people’s lives.”

Tressel decided not to get involved at all. He has a vote in the coaches poll but abstained.

“We felt it was somewhat of a conflict of interest,” Tressel said.

Meyer could empathize with Tressel.

“I made a decision a year ago when I was asked to vote, not to vote for this very reason,” he said.


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