Ron Snodgrass and his Big Ten officiating crew walked into State Farm Stadium Thursday night for a College Football Playoff semifinal. They walked out as one of the most talked-about figures in the sport.
Miami escaped with a 31-27 win over Ole Miss to advance to the National Championship game, but the Fiesta Bowl’s second half spiraled into a flag-fest that left both fanbases furious and overshadowed what should have been a celebration of Carson Beck’s clutch heroics.
How Fourth-Quarter Penalties Shaped Miami vs. Ole Miss
Miami was not flagged for a single accepted penalty in the Cotton Bowl victory over Ohio State. Against the Rebels, they finished with nine flags for 67 yards, and the damage was concentrated almost entirely in the final 20 minutes.
Miami held a 17-13 lead entering the fourth quarter. That’s when the game shifted from a football contest to a referendum on officiating.
First came the targeting call on cornerback Xavier Lucas, who was ejected for a hit on Ole Miss receiver Cayden Lee with 9:03 remaining. The call stood upon review, leaving Miami without one of its starting corners.
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On the very next play, defensive lineman David Blay drew an unnecessary roughness flag. Back-to-back 15-yard penalties moved Ole Miss from its own 10-yard line to the red zone, setting up Lucas Carneiro’s 21-yard field goal that gave the Rebels their first lead at 19-17.
Then came the flag that would have fueled offseason debate if the Hurricanes lost. With 4:16 left and Ole Miss facing 3rd-and-8, the officials called pass interference on Miami’s defense.
The drive should have stalled. Instead, Trinidad Chambliss found Dae’Quan Wright for a 24-yard touchdown three plays later, and a successful two-point conversion put Ole Miss ahead 27-24.
The Hurricanes were penalized five times for 33 yards in the second half alone after being flagged four times for 34 yards before intermission.
Carson Beck’s Final Drive Ends the Controversy — Almost
Miami needed 75 yards to save its season, and the officials inserted themselves one final time. An Ole Miss facemask penalty on the Hurricanes’ final drive helped Beck and company move into scoring position. Fifteen plays and 2:55 of game clock later, Beck found a seam and scrambled 3 yards for the go-ahead touchdown with 18 seconds remaining.
The chaos wasn’t finished. On the final play, with Ole Miss needing a touchdown from the Miami 35-yard line, Chambliss heaved a Hail Mary that fell incomplete amid what the ESPN broadcast described as “some grabbing and some contact.” No flag. Game over.
Should have been pass interference on Miami wow pic.twitter.com/BFKHyW5YVf
— Tedd Buddwell 🏀🏈 (@TedBuddy8) January 9, 2026
The irony goes both ways. Ole Miss fans spent the first half screaming that the officials favored Miami, even though the Rebels had just two penalties for four yards at halftime compared to Miami’s four for 34. By the fourth quarter, Miami partisans were convinced the zebras had flipped allegiances.
What’s undeniable is that Snodgrass’s crew became the story of a game that deserved better. Beck finished with 268 passing yards and the game-winning touchdown run. Chambliss was electric as a runner and passer. Carneiro drilled a 58-yarder that became the second-longest in Fiesta Bowl history.
None of that mattered on social media, where fans from both sides accused the officials of determining the outcome.
Miami advances to play the winner of Indiana-Oregon in the national championship game Jan. 19 at Hard Rock Stadium — the Hurricanes’ home field. Ole Miss heads into an uncertain offseason with head coach Pete Golding following Lane Kiffin’s departure to LSU.
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“That’s the perfect example of a guy … he feels supported, he’s hungry, he’s driven, he’s a great human being, and all he wants to do is he wants to see his teammates have success,” Miami coach Mario Cristobal told ESPN after the game. “And that’s what we witnessed tonight. And Carson Beck, I can’t say enough great things about him. Love the guy, absolutely awesome.”
The Hurricanes are one win from their first national title since 2001. Whether Thursday’s victory gets remembered as a triumph or a travesty depends entirely on which shade of orange, blue, or red you’re wearing.
