College Football Playoff final: Indiana University, University of Miami to face off in title matchup that once seemed impossible

Two months ago, the prospect seemed unlikely.

Rewind two years, and it appeared utterly out of reach.

Yet, defying expectations, Miami and Indiana are poised to clash in the College Football Playoff final on January 19. This unprecedented matchup emerges as part of the second national championship under the expanded playoff format.

The Hoosiers, boasting a flawless 15-0 record and holding the top seed in the 12-team playoff, dominated Oregon with a commanding 56-22 victory on Friday night to secure their spot in the final. Meanwhile, the Hurricanes, with a 13-2 record and entering as the 10th seed and final at-large team, narrowly defeated Mississippi 31-27 the previous evening.

Indiana enters the matchup as a 7.5-point favorite, according to BetMGM Sportsbook.

The championship showdown will take place at Hard Rock Stadium in South Florida, a venue selected long ago but also the home field for the Hurricanes. Adding a layer of intrigue, Indiana’s quarterback Fernando Mendoza hails from Miami, having grown up just a stone’s throw away from the University of Miami campus in Coral Gables.

“It means a little bit more to me,” Mendoza said of the title game doubling as a homecoming.

He’ll be going against the program known as “The U.” Miami won five titles between 1983 and 2001 and earned the reputation as college football’s brashest renegade.

A quarter century later, they are one side in a tale of two resurgences.

Indiana wide receiver Elijah Sarratt celebrates with quarterback Fernando Mendoza in the Peach Bowl / Miami quarterback Carson Beck holds a trophy after winning the Fiesta Bowl.
Indiana wide receiver Elijah Sarratt celebrates with quarterback Fernando Mendoza in the Peach Bowl / Miami quarterback Carson Beck holds a trophy after winning the Fiesta Bowl.(AP Photos/Mike Stewart, Ross D. Franklin)

Miami’s was sparked by coach Mario Cristobal, a local boy and former ‘Cane himself who came back home four years ago to lead his alma mater to a place it hasn’t been in decades.

Among his biggest wins was luring quarterback Carson Beck to spend his final year of eligibility with the ‘Canes.

Beck, steadily rounding back to form after an elbow injury that ended his season at Georgia last year, is getting better every week. He has thrown for 15 TDs and two interceptions over a seven-game winning streak dating to Nov. 8.

“He’s hungry, he’s driven, he’s a great human being, and all he wants to do is to see his teammates have success,” Cristobal said after Beck threw for 268 yards and ran for the winning touchdown against Ole Miss.

It was the latest step in a long climb from No. 18 in the season’s first CFP rankings on Nov. 4 – barely within shouting distance of the bubble – after their second loss of the season.

The Hurricanes haven’t lost since.

Hoosiers rise from nowhere to the edge of a title

Indiana’s climb to the top is an even longer haul. This is the program that had a nation-leading 713 losses over 130-plus years heading into the 2024 season. Since then, only two.

The turnaround is thanks to coach Curt Cignetti, who arrived from James Madison and declared: “It’s pretty simple. I win. Google me,” while explaining his confident tone at a signing day news conference in December 2023 when he landed the core of the class that has taken Indiana from obscurity to the edge of a title.

But Indiana’s biggest catch came about a year ago from the transfer portal – the oxygen that drives the current game.

Mendoza, who went to the same high school as Cristobal in Miami, chose Indiana as the place to finish his career. So far, he has won the Heisman Trophy and is all but assured to be a top-five pick in the NFL draft.

“Can’t say enough about him,” Cignetti said.

One more win and he’ll bring a national title and an undefeated season to Indiana, an even 50 years after the Hoosiers’ 1975-76 basketball team, led by coach Bob Knight, did the same.

Lots of people could see that one coming. Hard to say the same about this.

CFP selection committee almost kept this game from happening

It might seem like ancient history, but Miami almost didn’t make the playoffs.

In its first ranking of the season, back in November, the CFP selection committee ranked the Hurricanes eight spots behind a Notre Dame team they beat to start the season.

The history of Miami’s slow crawl up the standings, then its leapfrogging past the Irish for the last spot, has been well-documented. If Miami’s trip to the final proved anything, it’s how off-base the committee was when it started the ‘Canes at 18, even if they were coming off a loss at SMU, its second of the season.

Though these programs haven’t met since the 1960s, there is familiarity.

One of the best games of 2024 was Miami’s comeback from 25 points down to beat Cal. The quarterback for the Bears: Mendoza, who threw for 285 yards but got edged out by Cam Ward in a 39-38 loss.

With Ward headed for the NFL, the Hurricanes were a consideration for Mendoza as he sought a new spot to finish out his college career. But he picked Indiana, Beck moved to Miami, and now, they meet.

Miami cashes in big

The College Football Playoff will distribute $20 million to the Big Ten and Atlantic Coast Conferences for placing their teams in the finals – that’s $4 million for making it, $4 million for getting to the quarters, then $6 million each for the semis and finals.

While the Big Ten divvies up that money evenly between its 18 members, Miami keeps it all for itself – part of a “success initiatives program” the ACC started last season that allows schools to keep all the postseason money they make in football and basketball.

Copyright © 2026 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

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