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Oregon didn't come close to its nation-leading 49-point average, and the fast-paced offense that turned most opponents into mush in the second half couldn't wear down Auburn.
"Our defense was focused for one month," Chizik said of the 37-day layoff between the SEC and national title games. "They went out and practiced every day to win a national championship. Every day."
As did the Ducks, who finished 12-1, three points shy of their first national title but not making apologies for the effort they gave in the desert.
"I said in my first game as head coach that one game doesn't define you as a person or a football player," coach Chip Kelly said. "And the same thing still holds true. These guys are champions."
Only one team gets to take home the trophy, though, and that team was led by Newton, who helped Auburn to its ninth comeback win of this improbable season. He has now won a national title three straight years -- in 2008 as a backup to Tim Tebow at Florida, last year in junior college at Blinn, and now with the Tigers.
If he goes pro, this will mark the end of a tumultuous stay at Auburn, shadowed by an NCAA investigation into his failed recruitment by Mississippi State. The governing body cleared him to play before the SEC championship but said his father, Cecil, solicited money from the Bulldogs.
"Anything is possible," Newton said. "I guarantee, five or six months ago, that no one would bet their last dollar that Auburn would win the national championship. And now we're standing here."
The game began with a moment of silence to remember something much more somber. The six victims of the weekend assassination attempt on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson were honored by having their names read, and a choir sang "God Bless America" while the crowd stood at attention.
A few hours later, it was standing for an entirely different reason -- to watch one of the more memorable finishes in college football history.
The SEC improved to 7-0 in BCS title games. Four different teams from the conference have won it in this latest five-year run.
LSU. Florida twice. Alabama.
And now, Auburn, the school that has loads of tradition -- the Tiger Walk, toilet-papering Toomer's Corner and a case full of Heisman and other big-time individual trophies. What's been lacking all these years are championships. Bad luck in the polls doomed the Tigers' one-loss team in 1983, probation kept them from capitalizing on a perfect record in 1993, and the vagaries of the BCS left them on the outside in 2004, maybe the most painful of all the snubs.
No more pain on this night. Auburn capped what, at times, seemed like a never-ending bowl season -- 35 games spread over 24 days -- with five minutes that will go down as five of the most exciting the game has ever seen.
These Tigers won one for all the Bos and Beasleys and Terrys and Tracys who came close but couldn't close the deal down on the Plains. And they fashioned a nice symmetry with that team up the road -- the Crimson Tide -- that took home the Heisman and the same championship trophy one short year ago.
"I've got two words: 'Class act,' all the way around," Chizik said.
Two other words came to mind, though, after this great night for Auburn: "War Eagle."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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