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Too big to call it a bowl
bw BCS 2 5 col
Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel, left, and Florida coach Urban Meyer pose with the BCS National Championship trophy during a news conference at the Camelback Inn in Scottsdale, Ariz., Sunday. Florida will play Ohio State tonight in the BCS Championship game. - photo by Associated Press
    SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — A new era of college football begins tonight with No. 1 Ohio State and No. 2 Florida playing a game that’s grown too big to be called a bowl.
    A week after New Year’s Day, after all the bowls have been played, the Buckeyes and Gators meet in the first BCS national championship game.
    ‘‘It’s the Super Bowl of college football and I think college football needed that,’’ Gators coach Urban Meyer said Sunday.
    What the bigger — if not better — Bowl Championship Series got for its new showcase event is a 1 vs. 2 matchup that had many skeptical at first about it’s legitimacy.
    Heisman Trophy winner Troy Smith and the Buckeyes (12-0) were a no-brainer. The Big Ten champions have been No. 1 since the preseason, and already have a pair of victories against teams ranked No. 2.
    ‘‘You know the only time we thought for sure that we were going to be in the national championship is when that game (against Michigan) ended Nov. 18 because we knew going in you have to win them all,’’ said Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, seeking his second national title in his sixth season with the Buckeyes.
    But Florida? The Gators (12-1) lived on the edge, navigating a brutal Southeastern Conference schedule by orchestrating several great escapes. Blocked kicks, late rallies and a healthy dose of trickery — Florida used it all. It’s enough to make some say good fortune has been the Gators’ best friend.
    They see it another way.
    ‘‘We don’t really believe in destiny,’’ defensive tackle Ray McDonald. ‘‘We believe when your number’s called you make that play.’’
    Still, Florida needed help to get here.
    Southern California’s loss to UCLA on the last day of the regular season opened the door for Florida, and a sea change among poll voters allowed the Gators to jump over Michigan in the final BCS standings — and into a matchup with the Buckeyes.
    Then USC helped out Florida again, pounding the Wolverines in the Rose Bowl last week and removing any questions about whether the winner of Monday’s night game at shiny new University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale should be national champion.
    Ohio State’s won four national titles, the last in 2002 when Maurice Clarett and the Buckeyes shocked a powerful Miami team in a double-overtime classic in Arizona. A fifth title would match USC and Miami for the fourth-most in major college football.
    But this one would be unique for Ohio State. Only Florida State in 1999 and USC in 2004 have gone from preseason to post-bowls as No. 1 in The Associated Press Top 25.
    Athletic director Gene Smith challenged the Buckeyes before the season to set themselves apart by going wire-to-wire as No. 1.
    ‘‘I’ve always felt that in great programs you need to find ways to differentiate yourself from history,’’ he said. ‘‘What is your mark as a senior class? I just felt that that’s just something they should focus on, trying to leave their legacy.
    ‘‘I got lucky with that.’’
    With Troy Smith on their side, the Buckeyes didn’t need much luck.
    Smith was brilliant in his senior season, throwing for 2,507 yards and 30 touchdowns as the Buckeyes outscored the opposition by 26 per game. He turned the Heisman voting into another rout, winning in a record-breaking landslide.