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Ohio State No. 3 in final playoff ranking, will face Clemson in Sugar Bowl

The Buckeyes and Tigers will meet for the second straight year in the playoff.
Credit: AP Photo/Darron Cummings
Ohio State running back Trey Sermon (8) scores past Northwestern defensive back JR Pace (5) during the second half of the Big Ten championship NCAA college football game, Saturday, Dec. 19, 2020, in Indianapolis.

Ohio State is back in the playoff.

After sitting in the No. 4 spot all season, the Buckeyes jumped up one spot in the College Football Playoff rankings after defeating Northwestern in the Big Ten Championship game.

Ohio State will be matched up with Clemson, who won the ACC Championship over Notre Dame, in the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1.

Clemson is in for a sixth straight season, only missing out on the first playoff. Ohio State is making its third appearance. 

The Tigers have won two playoff titles and the Buckeyes won the first after the 2014 season.

Clemson-Ohio State is a rematch of last season's dramatic semifinal in Glendale, Arizona, won 29-23 by the Tigers. The two teams also met at the Fiesta Bowl in the 2016 playoff and Clemson beat the Buckeyes 31-0.

The other playoff game features No. 1 Alabama and No. 4 Notre Dame.

The Fighting Irish are back in the playoff for the second time in three seasons, becoming the first team to lose a conference title game and make the selection committee’s final four. 

The ACC is the second conference to have two teams in the playoff, joining the SEC in 2017, thanks to the famously independent Fighting Irish joining the league in football for a year because of the pandemic.

The Southeastern Conference champion Crimson Tide is back in the playoff for the sixth time after missing out last year.

The last time the Fighting Irish and Crimson Tide played was the 2012 BCS championship game and the Tide won 42-14.

The Fighting Irish and Crimson Tide will meet at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, after a late pandemic-related relocation from the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.

The change was made after coaches and school officials from playoff contenders complained about California's COVID-19 restrictions that bans spectators from sporting events and would have made it impossible for players' families attend the game.

The Rose Bowl twice asked for a special exemption from the state and was denied.

The national champion of this college football season played through a pandemic is scheduled to be determined Jan. 11 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

The season has been filled with disruptions as teams navigated COVID-19 outbreaks, contact tracing that sent players into extended quarantine and daily uncertainty about whether games will be played.

Ohio State had three regular-season games canceled and the Big Ten had to change minimum games played rule earlier this month just so the unbeaten Buckeyes could play in the conference title game Saturday against Northwestern.

Still, 87 percent of the games scheduled were played.

College Football Playoff executive director Bill Hancock has said a team selected to a semifinal would not be replaced if it could not play on the scheduled date. The game would be postponed if necessary and a every effort would be made to make it up.

The final drama of this season will not only be in the crowning of a champion but simply getting to the games.

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