Notre Dame is suddenly very much alive for a national championship. Alabama and
Georgia are too. Oregon and Kansas State may never quite recover from this
heartbreak. This is the type of Saturday night that make college football what it is. The BCS Championship Game picture was changed dramatically when Kansas State
was embarrassed 52-24 at Baylor and Oregon blew a lead in the final minutes of
regulation and lost 17-14 to Stanford in overtime. The Wildcats and Ducks were
ranked 1 and 2 in the BCS standings. Now they're out - at least, unless there's
more chaos before the season is over. And Notre Dame, which hasn't won a national title since 1988, is now in the
driver's seat. The Irish won 38-0 against Wake Forest on Saturday afternoon, and then they
watched the chaos unfold. If Notre Dame wins next week at USC, which might not
have injured starting quarterback Matt Barkley, the Irish will play in Miami for
the national championship. The SEC, which has won six straight BCS championships, was on the outside
looking in after Alabama's loss last week, but now that conference is almost
assured a spot in the BCS Championship Game. If Alabama beats Auburn to win the
SEC East Division, the winner of the Alabama-Georgia SEC Championship Game is
almost certain to get an invitation to the BCS Championship Game. Alabama and
Georgia will likely rank second and third in the new BCS standings. And if Notre Dame loses at USC next week? Things are going to get really
messy with a lot of one-loss teams claiming they belong BCS title game. Kansas State looked out of sorts from the start of Saturday's game. The team
that built a 10-0 record on not making mistakes couldn't stop making mistakes
against Baylor. There was an odd rash of offside penalties in the first half, including one
that wiped out an interception. Baylor scored right after that. When Kansas
State needed to rally in the second half, Heisman candidate Collin Klein threw
an interception on the fourth play after halftime. Klein had thrown just one
pick since Sept. 15. Kansas State hadn't shown any real weaknesses this season. Only two of the
Wildcats' wins had been decided by less than two touchdowns. They had scored at
least 50 points five times, and the defense gave up more than 21 only twice.
There was no sign that an upset loss awaited at Baylor. In 1998, Kansas State was No. 1 in the country and had to just beat Texas
A&M to play for a national title. At least that heartbreaking loss came in
the Big 12 Championship Game. This one came against a 5-5 Baylor team whose
defense allowing the most yards per game in the FBS. It wasn't even close. Baylor never trailed. The Bears led 28-7 in the second
quarter. The Wildcats cut their deficit to 11 points a couple times, but Baylor
always had an answer. Late in the third quarter, Klein threw another
interception on fourth down. On the next play, Baylor's Lache Seastrunk split
Kansas State's defense and outran them for an 80-yard touchdown, and the
Wildcats' BCS Championship Game dreams were over. While that was happening, Oregon - which had earned its No. 2 spot in the BCS
standings through many blowout wins in its 10-0 start - surprisingly found its
own championship hopes in peril against Stanford. Oregon led 14-7 when Stanford scored a controversial touchdown in the final
two minutes. Stanford tight end Zach Ertz came down with a catch in the end
zone, and officials ruled he was in bounds, even though there was a question
about whether he rolled out of bounds or had full possession. The play was
confirmed after a replay review and the game was tied. Oregon couldn't move into
field-goal range in regulation and the game went to overtime. Oregon, which led the nation coming in at 54.8 points per game, couldn't move
the ball on its first possession of overtime. Oregon kicker Alejandro
Maldonado's field-goal attempt clanged off the upright, giving Stanford a chance
for the win. Stanford kicker Jordan Williamson hit 37-yard field goal on the Cardinals first possession of overtime. The loss snapped a 13-game winning streak for the Ducks, which was longest
current streak in the nation. It was Stanford’s fifth straight win.
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