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No. 3 TCU earns spot in Fiesta Bowl against No. 2 Michigan

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TCU tight end Jared Wiley (19) and wide receiver Savion Williams (18) celebrate a two-point conversion by Wiley in the second half of the Big 12 Conference championship NCAA college football game, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2022, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – TCU’s bid to beat Kansas State in the Big 12 championship came up inches short. The close loss in overtime and the Horned Frogs’ overall resume allowed them to reach the College Football Playoff for the first time.

No. 3 TCU capped its rapid rise under first-year coach Sonny Dykes, earning the chance to play second-ranked Michigan in the Fiesta Bowl on New Year's Eve with a spot in the CFP title game on the line.

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“We had a little bit of a sleepless night, but appreciate the committee’s confidence in our players and our program,” Dykes said Sunday. “I think it’s all you can ask for at the beginning of the season.”

The Horned Frogs (12-1) could have locked up a CFP spot by beating Kansas State in the Big 12 championship game Saturday night. They came agonizingly close, losing 31-28 when Kansas State’s Ty Zentner kicked a 31-yard field goal in overtime. TCU’s Kendre Miller was stopped at the goal line on fourth-and-inches the previous series.

That led to an anxious night in Fort Worth.

The Horned Frogs got some help with Utah’s win over then-No. 4 Southern California in the Pac-12 title game, but had to wait to see if their resume was good enough to earn a CFP spot over Ohio State and Alabama.

It was, thanks to five wins over ranked opponents and a gritty performance against Kansas State, a team TCU had beaten earlier this season.

TCU was No. 3 in Sunday’s AP Top 25 and the final CFP rankings, just ahead Ohio State, which will play top-ranked and reigning national champion Georgia in the Peach Bowl.

The Horned Frogs are the second team to make the CFP after being unranked in the preseason, joining Michigan last year.

Not bad for a team that went 5-7 and saw the departure of coach Gary Patterson last season.

“There’s been a lot of lows here in the past four years, but to be able to get the opportunity to get a shot to go to the playoff and two games away from being in the national championship, it’s surreal,” TCU quarterback Max Duggan said.

The next step won't be easy.

Michigan (13-0, No. 2 CFP) backed up its CFP appearance last season with a dominating 2022.

The physical, gritty Wolverines likely would have been in the CFP even with a loss in the Big Ten championship game after rolling over rival Ohio State in the regular-season finale.

Michigan left no doubt, beating Purdue 43-22 to win consecutive conference titles for the first time since 2003-04. College football’s winningest program now has its first 13-win season, finishing No. 2 in the AP Top 25 and CFP standings.

It's been quite a run for Michigan since a pandemic-altered 2020 season.

Calls for coach Jim Harbaugh's job rang out after that 2-4 season, but the Wolverines are 25-2 since and are two wins from their first national championship since 1997.

“It's a team that really works and competes,” Harbaugh said. “They understand if you want to make things happen, you've got to work for them, you've got to compete for them. This team sure is about the work. They enjoy the work and embrace it.”

GRITTY DUGGAN

Duggan left everything on the field in the Big 12 championship, including some of his blood.

It was no surprise to his coaches and teammates.

Duggan started the season as TCU's backup, but transformed into a potential Heisman Trophy finalist through a combination of grit and athleticism. The fourth-year quarterback threw for 3,321 yards and 30 touchdowns with four interceptions, adding 404 yards and six more TDs rushing.

Duggan had to have patches on his bloody elbow replaced several times against Kansas State and was so exhausted he had to lean on his offensive linemen to leave the field late in the game.

“Yesterday's game, that quarterback was unbelievable in terms of being a competitor,” Harbaugh said.

EDWARDS' TURN

Michigan seemed to suffer a huge blow when running back and Heisman Trophy candidate Blake Corum went down with a season-ending knee injury.

Donovan Edwards made sure the Wolverines didn't miss a beat.

The running back from West Bloomfield, Michigan, ran for 216 yards and two touchdowns against Ohio State when Corum was limited to two carries. Edwards then ran for 185 yards and a touchdown against Purdue in the Big Ten championship.

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AP Sports Writer Stephen Hawkins in Fort Worth, Texas contributed to this story.

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