Note: The following appears in the Wofford gameday football program.
Editor’s Note – This is the 150th season of college football. The author of this article, Tim Bourret, is one of 150 college football historians on a committee formed by ESPN that is selecting the top teams, games, players and programs during the first 150 years. In conjunction with that, Bourret is writing articles this year on the great moments in Clemson football history. Below is the sixth installment of the series.
Clemson defeated Ohio State 31-0 in the Fiesta Bowl, one of the two semifinal games of the College Football Playoff, at the end of the 2016 season. The shutout was the first suffered by the Buckeye program since 1993 and the first for Head Coach Urban Meyer, the third-winningest coach (in terms of winning percentage) at the time in college football history in his 194 games as a head coach.
On the same day, Alabama defeated Washington in the other semifinal in Atlanta by a score of 24-7, setting up the first rematch of a national championship deciding game in college football history.
The roles were reversed this time. Alabama entered the 2016 title game with a 14-0 record and a chance to become the first 15-0 team in FBS history. Alabama also had the No. 1 ranking. Clemson was the 14-0 team the previous year.
The Crimson Tide had won 26 games in a row, the longest winning streak by an SEC team since 1980, and had won 16 games in row over top-25 teams, tied for the longest streak since the poll began in 1936.
Both teams were ranked in the top 10 in total defense and scoring defense entering the game, and it appeared it would be a defense-dominated game in the first half. Alabama led 14-7 at halftime, the first time all year Clemson did not hold a halftime lead.
Alabama could have taken a dominant 21-7 lead early in the third quarter when the ball was stripped from Wayne Gallman and recovered by Alabama linebacker Ryan Anderson.
The Crimson tide had scored 12 defensive touchdowns, which were momentum backbreakers throughout the season. But Hunter Renfrow hustled on the play and tackled Anderson. The Tiger defense held the Crimson Tide to a field goal. In retrospect, it was the single-most important tackle of the season by a Tiger.
Alabama had a 24-14 lead entering the fourth quarter. As a head coach, Nick Saban had won 97 games in a row with a double-digit lead entering the fourth quarter.