Washington coach Chris Petersen says he has always expected his team to compete at a high level and that they're still not done achieving their goals. (0:47)

A surge of money from influential bettors came in on underdog Washington this week, driving the point spread down ahead of Saturday's semifinal with Alabama in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.

The Crimson Tide had been favored by as much as 17 points over the Huskies in recent weeks. But as of Friday morning, the line had shrunk to Alabama as a 13.5-point favorite, with multiple sportsbooks reporting sharp action on Washington.

Since Tuesday, Las Vegas sportsbook operator CG Technology had taken six times as much money on Washington as it had on Alabama.

CG Technology also has seen significant action on the Huskies to win straight-up. As of Thursday afternoon, there were 126 money-line bets on Washington compared to only nine on Alabama, according to vice president Jason Simbal. The Crimson Tide were -540 money-line favorites to win straight-up, with the Huskies paying back more than 4-1 to pull the upset.

Alabama is 71-3 straight-up when favored by more than 13 points under coach Nick Saban.

MGM's sportsbooks had taken twice as many bets and twice as much money on Washington plus the points, including sharp bets on the Huskies at +15.5, +15 and +14.5.

"Anything over 14, the sharps took it," MGM vice president of race and sports Jay Rood said Thursday.

It's still early, though, and the bulk of the betting action will be placed over the next two days, leading up to Saturday's kickoff in Atlanta (3 p.m. ET, ESPN).

"I have a feeling that some of the larger wagers that we're going to see [Friday] and Saturday are going to definitely be on Alabama," Rood added.

Offshore sportsbook PinnacleSports, known to cater to sophisticated, big-money players, opened the Crimson Tide as 16.5-point favorites on Dec. 5. The line dipped to Alabama -14.5 on Dec. 14 and remained there until this week's flurry of money showed on the Huskies across the market.

"We opened [Alabama] -13.5," Chris Andrews, sportsbook director at South Point casino, said in a Thursday phone interview. "They bet us all the way up to 16.5. But, slowly but surely, they've been taking Washington all the way down. Last night, one guy came in and bet us $10,000 [on Washington] plus the 14, and here we are back at -13.5."

The action was much more even at William Hill's Nevada sportsbooks, where the average-size bet on Washington was $113 compared to $112 on Alabama.

The point spread in the other College Football Playoff semifinal, the Playstation Fiesta Bowl between Ohio State and Clemson (7 p.m. ET, ESPN), was on the move ahead of Saturday night's kickoff, as respected money flowed in on the underdog Tigers.

The Buckeyes, who opened as much as 3.5-point favorites, were favored by one 1.5 points as of Saturday afternoon.

"The wise guys came in heavy on Clemson and drove us to -1.5 on Ohio State," Bob Scucci, sportsbook director for Boyd Gaming in Las Vegas, told ESPN on Saturday in an email.