ARLINGTON, Texas — When Miami left Texas after an overtime loss to SMU at the start of November, the Hurricanes were at their lowest point of the season. There was a very dim forecast for getting into the College Football Playoff.
By New Year's Day, after a Texas two-step in the playoff, the 10th-ranked Hurricanes (12-2, CFP No. 10 seed) were a win away from a chance to play for a national championship in their home stadium.
''It means everything to this team,'' quarterback Carson Beck said. ''This team has constantly battled through adversity, constantly fought. ... We've banded together as one. We've shown unity. We've shown connection. We've shown that we're a family.''
They also have proven to be well-deserving of that at-large CFP berth they got without an Atlantic Coast Conference title. Miami made its playoff debut with a first-round win at No. 7 Texas A&M, then was back in the Lone Star State 11 days later to beat defending national champion Ohio State 24-14 with a penalty in the Cotton Bowl quarterfinal on New Year's Eve.
The Hurricanes play a CFP semifinal at the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 8 against Georgia or Ole Miss, the SEC teams in the Sugar Bowl quarterfinal Thursday night. Beck was part of back-to-back national titles with the Bulldogs in 2021 and '22 before he was a starter. The national championship game is Jan. 19 at Hard Rock Stadium.
Miami has won six games in a row since that 26-20 setback at SMU on Nov. 1, which was its second loss in three games after a 5-0 start propelled it to a No. 2 AP ranking that was its highest since 2017.
''It was a low point. And we quickly, we got together because we have really good people, and we work really, really, really hard. And we weren't achieving the results that we set out to have, and that's difficult. That's a punch in the gut,'' Hurricanes coach Mario Cristobal said. ''Y'all saw the 5% chance we had to make the CFP. (Players) saw it."
A convoluted tiebreaker left Miami out of the ACC championship game while five-loss Duke became the league champion and then was left out of the 12-team playoff field when higher-ranked Group of Five champions Tulane and James Madison got automatic berths.