Miami to Host CFP Title Game After Dramatic Fiesta Bowl Win

Miami to Host CFP Title Game After Dramatic Fiesta Bowl Win

> At a Glance

> – No. 10 Miami edged No. 6 Ole Miss 31-27 to secure its first-ever College Football Playoff title berth

> – Quarterback Carson Beck’s last-minute scramble sealed the victory in the Fiesta Bowl

> – The Hurricanes will play for the championship at home on Jan. 19 at Hard Rock Stadium

> – Why it matters: Miami hasn’t hosted a game since Nov. 15, yet gets home-field advantage in the biggest stage

Miami’s football program will cap its longest home-game drought by playing for a national title in its own backyard. The Hurricanes’ 31-27 Fiesta Bowl triumph sends them to the Jan. 19 championship at Hard Rock Stadium, where they haven’t stepped foot since mid-November.

The Game-Winning Drive

Quarterback Carson Beck kept the season alive with a touchdown scramble inside the final 20 seconds. The play capped a back-and-forth contest against Ole Miss and punched Miami’s ticket to its first CFP final.

Opponent Still TBD

Miami awaits the winner of Friday’s Peach Bowl showdown between:

  • No. 1 Indiana (unbeaten)
  • No. 5 Oregon

Championship Droughts on the Line

None of the three remaining programs have lifted a CFP-era trophy:

  • Indiana has never advanced past the first round
  • Oregon lost the inaugural 2014-15 title game
  • Miami owns five national titles, none since the 2001-02 BCS championship

How to Watch

Detail Info
Date Monday, Jan. 19
Time 7:30 p.m. ET
TV ESPN
Stream ESPN.com / ESPN app
Site Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, Fla.
championship

Hard Rock Stadium last hosted a CFP final in the 2020-21 season.

Key Takeaways

  • Miami earns home-field advantage despite a two-month absence from its own stadium
  • The Hurricanes are making their College Football Playoff debut
  • Indiana and Oregon both chase their first national titles in program history
  • The championship game kicks off at 7:30 p.m. ET on ESPN

Miami’s remarkable postseason run will conclude where its regular season effectively ended-under the bright lights of Hard Rock Stadium with everything on the line.

Author

  • Natalie A. Brooks covers housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Fort Worth, reporting from planning meetings to living rooms across the city. A former urban planning student, she’s known for deeply reported stories on displacement, zoning, and how growth reshapes Fort Worth communities.

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *