Ohio State and Notre Dame arrived in Atlanta on their charter flights on Friday as the teams moved closer to Monday night’s College Football Playoff national championship game.
For the first time since 2012, Notre Dame football will play for the national championship. Who will they face for the CFP title?
One of the wackiest seasons in college football history will end with two schools whose traditions are as old as the game itself — Ohio State and Notre Dame — playing for a national championship.
Ohio State is fully capable of making Notre Dame pay for its mistakes, but it doesn’t force nearly as many turnovers and commits more on offense as well. The Buckeyes are tied for 54th in the FBS in takeaways (19) and rank 44th in turnover margin (plus-four), which bodes well for the Irish.
All eyes in the college football world will be fixed on Arlington (TX) as the Longhorns and Buckeyes vie for a place against Notre Dame in the final.
A statement was put out by a spokesman for the Cotton Bowl addressing concerns over inclement weather that could affect Friday’s game between Texas and Ohio State.
7 seed Notre Dame is moving on after taking down No. 6 Penn State in the Orange Bowl, and Irish star running ... from AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Ohio State is listed as a 6-point favorite ...
Colorado's Shedeur Sanders and Miami's Cam Ward have separated themselves from the rest of the 2025 draft class for quarterbacks in a follow-up poll of scouts and executives.
It's nearly impossible to predict what will decide Monday night's College Football Playoff Championship between Notre Dame and Ohio State, but one individual matchup could carry plenty of weight.
The Penn State Nittany Lions and the Notre Dame Fighting Irish will be in Miami ... championship game Jan. 20 in Atlanta.Cotton BowlLocation: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas, Jan. 10, 8:30 p.m. (ESPN)BetMGM College Football Odds: Ohio State by 6 1/2.How ...
Notre Dame athletic director Pete Bevacqua said the school prefers to remain independent even though the Irish are ineligible for byes under the current CFP model.
The Notre Dame Fighting Irish athletic director, Pete Bevacqua, said that the school would prefer to remain independent in football, even if that means no byes in the College Football Playoff.