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Steven Johnson

Everything goes Georgia’s way in rout of TCU in national championship game

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — TCU’s magical season ended with a thud.

The Horned Frogs were unable to stop Georgia’s quest for back-to-back championships as TCU fell 65-7 Monday in the national championship at SoFi Stadium. It was TCU’s worst bowl defeat.

Georgia quickly reminded TCU and the rest of the country why the Bulldogs have been viewed as the overwhelming favorites all season. The Horned Frogs were briefly in it, only down 10-7 with under five minutes remaining in the first quarter.

However, the Bulldogs reeled off the next five touchdowns to take a 45-7 lead early in the third quarter. The absence of TCU running back Kendre Miller, who missed the game with a MCL sprain, was apparent as the TCU offense struggled all night with the exception of one drive.

The Horned Frogs turned it over twice in the first half and didn’t force a Georgia punt until the second half. The Bulldogs marched up and down the field with relative ease in the second half.

It was a somber end to one of the best seasons in program history, but it should not overshadow TCU’s journey to the final game of the college football season.

Here are four takeaways from TCU’s title game loss:

Bennett outduels Duggan

In battle of Heisman Trophy finalists, Georgia’s Stetson Bennett had the edge over Max Duggan.

Duggan had the more daunting task entering the game, considering the talent gap between the teams, running back Miller’s absence and Georgia’s excellence on defense. But Bennett deserves a ton of credit for how he guided the Georgia offense.

A number of his throws were in the flats or to wide open receivers, but he also made great plays with his legs, including two rushing touchdowns. With Georgia facing a third-and-10 early in the second quarter, TCU sent Dee Winters off the edge. He wasn’t blocked but Bennett evaded Winters with a quick spin and scrambled to pick up the first down.

He would ran for a touchdown five plays later. Bennett was 13-of-17 in the first half with over 200 yards and four total touchdowns. Meanwhile, Duggan started slow as he missed two receivers on the opening possession. Duggan scored TCU’s lone touchdown of the half, but overall it was a tough opening 30 minutes for him.

He was sacked twice and intercepted twice. He overthrew Quentin Johnston on the first INT and made a pass into double coverage on the second.

To be clear, Duggan wasn’t the reason TCU lost, but we all knew it would take an all-time performance by the quarterback for TCU to pull it off. We know how badly Duggan wanted to perform well and win a championship for Fort Worth, but ultimately that desire wouldn’t be enough against Bennett and the Bulldogs.

Bowers is a bad man

TCU coach Sonny Dykes compared Georgia tight end Brock Bowers to future Hall of Famer and his former player Robert Gronkowski multiple times before the game. Bowers showed why he was worthy of such praise with a dominant first half. He helped set up Georgia’s first touchdown with two receptions totaling 33 yards on the opening drive.

Later in the second quarter, somehow TCU’s Jamoi Hodge found himself matched up on Bowers, who got wide open for a 35-yard gain that set up a score. His biggest play came when the Bulldogs were facing a third-and-15 with a 24-7 lead. A stop by TCU would’ve been a small win for the Horned Frogs, but instead Bennett had plenty of time to find Bowers as the Horned Frogs only rushed three defensive linemen.

Bennett hit Bowers for a 24-yard gain, and it felt like the game was over at this point. Bowers had five receptions for 102 yards in the first half and even had 15 yards on the ground. Bowers scored Georgia’s first touchdown of the second half with a 22-yard catch in which he jumped and secured the contested pass over a TCU defender to make it 45-7.

The Horned Frogs had no answers for Bowers and the rest of the Georgia offense.

Monken in his bag

There was hope that Georgia’s lack of familiarity with TCU’s 3-3-5 would be an advantage for the Horned Frogs. It didn’t pan out that way as Bulldogs offensive coordinator Todd Monken had a near perfect plan to attack TCU’s unique defense.

Georgia’s versatile offense of play-action and misdirection neutralized TCU’s speed. The Horned Frogs spent too much time thinking instead of attacking.

Georgia’s first three touchdowns came with ease as each scorer walked in untouched in some fashion.

The Bulldogs gained 371 yards and averaged 9.3 yards per play to take a 38-7 lead into the half. Monken deserves the bulk of the credit for how easy he made things on his playmakers. The 38 points in the first half was a CFP title game record.

A start they didn’t need

TCU’s fast start against Michigan is one of the reasons the Horned Frogs were able to advance to the national championship game. The Horned Frogs knew another fast start was needed, but TCU failed this time as Georgia jumped to a 10-0 lead.

After the Horned Frogs went three and out on their first possession, the Bulldogs responded with a well- executed five-play drive featured a little bit of everything, including a screen Bowers and Bennett walking into the end zone untouched on a 21-yard run.

On TCU’s next possession, Derius Davis was stripped by star safety Christopher Smith, and the Bulldogs capitalized with a field goal. Halfway through the first quarter, the Horned Frogs were already down double digits. TCU didn’t panic and responded on its next drive as Davis made up for the fumble with a 60-yard reception.

Davis caught the pass, and made a Georgia defender look silly with a 360 spin before he was pushed pushed out at the Georgia 11. Duggan rumbled in a few plays later to make it 10-7. The defending champions answered back by going 70 yards in just four plays as Bennett found a wide open Ladd McConkey for a 37-yard touchdown with 2:43 remaining in the first quarter.

It was the exact opposite of a start TCU needed and the gap would ultimately be too much to overcome.

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