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Led by Ingram on offense and a stifling defense anchored by Cody and linebacker Rolando McClain, the Tide shut down Tim Tebow in a 32-13 crushing of Florida in the Southeastern Conference title game.
Texas, meanwhile, beat Nebraska 13-12 in the Big 12 championship game, after officials put a second back on the clock following a pass McCoy threw out of bounds. It allowed Hunter Lawrence to kick the winning field goal, even though McCoy's sloppy game management at the end nearly cost Texas a chance to win it all.
Even though both teams won, those games essentially sealed the Heisman race. McCoy threw for 184 yards, three interceptions and got sacked nine times. Ingram ran for 113 yards and three touchdowns to become Alabama's first Heisman winner.
Which sets up a very similar scenario as the last time Texas played at the Rose Bowl.
Back then, it was the Longhorns against Southern California in the weeks after Texas quarterback Vince Young lost the Heisman to USC's Reggie Bush.
"They weren't showing us no kind of respect at all, so we just kind of used that all as motivation until game-time came," said Young, who is expected on the sideline Thursday night.
Young had one of the best performances in college football history in a 41-38 win over USC -- passing for 267 yards, running for 200 more and transforming himself into something more than just another great player to Texas fans, who have seen their share.
That's the kind of thing that can happen to a player who leads his team a national title in Texas or Alabama, two states where football and life always intersect.
"You're under the microscope," said Longhorns left tackle Adam Ulatoski, who played at high school powerhouse Southlake Carroll near Fort Worth. "But it's a little different when it's a town watching you and the state of Texas watching you. It's a little bit of pressure, but it's a whole lot of fun."
In Alabama, too.
"They tend to maybe idolize people who play football here, even though we're just regular people," said Alabama kicker Leigh Tiffin, a native of Muscle Shoals whose dad, Van, kicked for the Tide in the '80s. "Something like this is probably the most exciting thing that happens in Alabama the entire year."
[Associated Press;
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