2026 Peach Bowl

2026 Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl
College Football Playoff Semifinal
58th Peach Bowl
1234Total
Oregon 708722
Indiana 142171456
DateJanuary 9, 2026
Season2025
StadiumMercedes-Benz Stadium
LocationAtlanta, Georgia
MVPOffense: Fernando Mendoza (QB, Indiana)
Defense: D'Angelo Ponds (CB, Indiana)
FavoriteIndiana by 3
National anthemIndiana University Marching Hundred
RefereeDaniel Gautreaux (SEC)
Attendance75,604
United States TV coverage
NetworkESPN
AnnouncersSean McDonough (play-by-play), Greg McElroy (analyst), Molly McGrath, Katie George (sideline reporters) and Matt Austin (rules expert)
International TV coverage
NetworkESPN Deportes and ESPN Brazil
AnnouncersESPN Deportes: Eduardo Varela (play-by-play), Pablo Viruega (analyst) and Carlos Nava (sideline reporter)
ESPN Brazil: Conrado Giulietti (play-by-play), Deivis Chiodini (analyst) and Giane Pessoa (rules expert)

The 2026 Peach Bowl was a college football bowl game played on January 9, 2026, at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia, with kickoff at approximately 7:30 p.m. ET. The 58th annual Peach Bowl game was one of the College Football Playoff (CFP) semifinals and one of the 2025–26 bowl games concluding the 2025 FBS football season. Sponsored by the Chick-fil-A restaurant chain, the game was officially known as the College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.[1][2]

The Peach Bowl featured two teams from the Big Ten Conference, the Indiana Hoosiers and Oregon Ducks. The Hoosiers defeated the Ducks, 56–22.[3]

Background

The 2026 Peach Bowl was a semifinal game of the College Football Playoff (CFP). The game featured the winner of the Orange Bowl, Oregon, and the winner of the Rose Bowl, Indiana. The winner of this game advanced to the 2026 College Football Playoff National Championship game to face the winner of the Fiesta Bowl, the Miami Hurricanes.

QuarterfinalsPeach Bowl
Jan 1 – Orange Bowl
4Texas Tech0
5Oregon23
5Oregon22
Jan 1 – Rose Bowl
1Indiana56
1Indiana38
9Alabama3

Teams

This CFP semifinal was a neutral-site rematch of a regular-season game played on October 11, 2025, when Indiana, then ranked 7th, defeated Oregon, then ranked 3rd, 30–20 at Autzen Stadium in Eugene. It both snapped the longest home winning streak in the country at the time and was the Hoosiers' first road win over an opponent with a top 5 AP Poll ranking.[4][5] This was the fifth meeting between the two teams; in their four prior meetings, Oregon won twice (in 1963 and 1964) and Indiana won twice (in 2004 and 2025).[6]

Indiana Hoosiers

Indiana received a bye into the quarterfinals as the top-seeded team. The Hoosiers were the Big Ten Conference champions with a 13–0 record (9–0 in conference), their first conference title since 1967.[7] In the Rose Bowl, Indiana defeated 9th-seeded Alabama 38–3 to advance to this semifinal. It was the Hoosiers' first bowl win since the 1991 Copper Bowl against Baylor.[8] Indiana was playing its second consecutive game without defensive end Stephen Daley, who led the Big Ten in tackles for loss during the season but suffered a season-ending injury while celebrating the Hoosiers' Big Ten Championship Game victory over Ohio State.

Oregon Ducks

Oregon compiled an 11–1 regular-season record; their only loss was a 10-point defeat to Indiana in mid-October.[9] The Ducks were seeded fifth in the playoff, and hosted the 12th seed, James Madison, on December 20. Oregon advanced to the quarterfinal round by defeating James Madison, 51–34.[10] In the Orange Bowl, Oregon defeated fourth-seeded Texas Tech, 23–0, to advance to this semifinal.[11] Oregon's leading rusher Jordon Davison suffered an upper-body injury the Orange Bowl and was listed as out for the Peach Bowl, and the Ducks' second-leading rusher Noah Whittington was first appeared on the injury report the day before the game with a turf toe injury; Whittington appeared briefly in the Peach Bowl but did not record any touches.

Game summary

College Football Playoff Semifinal at the 2026 Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl
Quarter 1 2 34Total
(5) No. 5 Oregon 7 0 8722
(1) No. 1 Indiana 14 21 71456

at Mercedes-Benz StadiumAtlanta, Georgia

First half

In front of a crowd of mainly their own fans, Indiana won the coin toss and elected to defer their choice to the second half. On the first play from scrimmage, Oregon quarterback Dante Moore threw a pass intended for Malik Benson on a short out route that was intercepted by Hoosier cornerback D'Angelo Ponds and returned for a touchdown and an immediate 7–0 Indiana lead. Oregon responded with a 14-play, 75-yard touchdown drive that featured three third-down conversions, including the 19-yard touchdown pass from Moore to tight end Jamari Johnson on 3rd down and 12 that tied the game at 7. Indiana followed with its own 75-yard touchdown drive that included two third-down pickups, culminating in an eight-yard strike from quarterback Fernando Mendoza to wide receiver Omar Cooper Jr. with 40 seconds remaining in the first quarter to regain the lead at 14–7.

Indiana forced an Oregon three-and-out on the subsequent drive; Indiana punted the ball back to Oregon after the Ducks recorded a 20-yard sack of Mendoza on third down and forced a fumble that Mendoza recovered himself. However, on the first play of Oregon's next drive from its own 13-yard line, the Ducks called a run-pass option play; Moore initially faked a handoff to backup running back Dierre Hill Jr. before attempting a quick pass to the sideline, but Moore's arm contacted Hill as he was winding up to throw, resulting in a fumble that Indiana defensive lineman Mario Landino recovered on the Oregon 3-yard line. Three plays later, Hoosier running back Kaelon Black scored on a one-yard touchdown run to make the score 21–7 Indiana. After Indiana recorded back-to-back sacks on the following drive and forced Oregon to punt again, the Hoosiers drove 61 yards in four plays, scoring on a 36-yard touchdown pass from Mendoza to receiver Charlie Becker for a 28–7 lead with 3:13 remaining in the first half. On the third play of the Ducks' next drive, Indiana's Daniel Ndukwe, starting for the injured Stephen Daley, recorded a strip sack of Moore that was recovered by Landino for his second fumble recovery of the day. Starting on Oregon's 21-yard line, Indiana scored a touchdown on the drive's sixth play, a two-yard pass from Mendoza to receiver Elijah Surratt, to go up 35–7 with just over a minute remaining in the half. Oregon drove the ball from its own 25-yard line 37 yards to the Indiana 38-yard line in the half's final minute, but kicker Atticus Sappington came up short on what would have been a career-long 58-yard field goal attempt as the half expired, keeping the score 35–7 at the break.

Second half

Indiana took the opening kickoff of the second half and drove the ball 75 yards in 11 plays; on a third down in Oregon territory, Mendoza scrambled for the first down and fumbled for the second time; once again Indiana's offense recovered their fumble, this time from center Pat Coogan who was trailing the play. Indiana scored its sixth touchdown of the game on a 13-yard touchdown pass from Mendoza to receiver E.J. Williams Jr. to increase the lead to 42–7. Oregon broke Indiana's string of 35 unanswered points with a two-play, 75-yard drive that featured a 71-yard run from Hill; then after a penalty, a two-yard touchdown run from running back Jay Harris. A successful two-point conversion made the score 42–15. Oregon forced Indiana's second punt of the game, but had its subsequent drive stall when Harris was tackled for a loss on fourth down in Indiana territory with under four minutes to play in the third quarter. Both teams punted on their next drives, but Oregon's punt deep in its own territory was blocked by Ndukwe and returned to the Oregon 7-yard line. Indiana scored on third-and-goal from three yards out on a pass from Mendoza to Surratt to make the score 49–15. Indiana stopped Oregon for a second time on downs in Hoosier territory, then responded with five consecutive runs, the final one being a 23-yard touchdown run from Black for a 56–15 Hoosier lead. Oregon mounted one final 75-yard touchdown drive, ending with Moore's one-yard touchdown pass to tight end Roger Saleapaga with 22 seconds left to make the final margin 56–22.

For the second consecutive postseason game, Hoosier quarterback Fernando Mendoza threw for more touchdowns (5) than incompletions (3). Beforehand, the only quarterback to have done so in a CFP game had been Tua Tagovailoa for Alabama against Oklahoma in the 2018 Orange Bowl semifinal (4 touchdowns to 3 incompletions).

Statistics

See also

References

  1. ^ "2025-26 College Football Playoff schedule, dates, TV channel, sites". NCAA.com. Retrieved July 5, 2025.
  2. ^ "College Football Bowl Schedule". FBSchedules.com. Retrieved July 5, 2025.
  3. ^ Talty, John; Jeyarajah, Shehan (January 9, 2026). "Indiana dominates Oregon in Peach Bowl, earns date with Miami in CFP National Championship Game". CBS Sports. Retrieved January 9, 2026.
  4. ^ "Indiana 30-20 Oregon". ESPN.com. October 11, 2025. Retrieved January 1, 2026.
  5. ^ Horner, Scott (January 1, 2025). "5 things to know about Oregon, Indiana football's Peach Bowl opponent". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved January 1, 2026.
  6. ^ "Indiana vs. Oregon football series history games list". winsipedia.com. January 9, 2026.
  7. ^ "No. 2 Indiana beats No. 1 Ohio St. 13-10, winning first Big Ten title since 1967". NBC News. December 6, 2025. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
  8. ^ Beacham, Greg (January 1, 2026). "Top-seeded Indiana routs Alabama 38-3 for its first Rose Bowl victory, roaring into CFP semifinals". WCVB-TV. AP. Retrieved January 1, 2026.
  9. ^ "Oregon Ducks". ESPN.com. Retrieved December 31, 2025.
  10. ^ Slinde, Erin (December 20, 2025). "Oregon downs James Madison in first round of College Football Playoff". KCBY-TV. Retrieved December 31, 2025.
  11. ^ Patterson, Chip; Nagel, Cody (January 1, 2026). "Oregon blanks Texas Tech in Orange Bowl as Ducks defense rises to occasion, leads charge into CFP semifinals". CBS Sports. Retrieved January 1, 2026.
  12. ^ Machlin, Tzvi (January 9, 2026). "Refs Embarrassed Themselves In Peach Bowl Coin Toss". The Spun. Retrieved January 9, 2026.