The college football landscape will have many changes when they kick off the 2024 season. Not only will the Oklahoma Sooners, UCLA Bruins, USC Trojans, and Texas Longhorns change conferences, but we will also have expanded playoffs.
The new rules will give all five power conferences an automatic bid with the highest-seeded Group of Five school earning the sixth automatic bid. The next six spots will be given to the highest-ranked teams. The top four seeds will be based on the four highest-ranked conference champions getting bye weeks.
The College Football Playoff committee distributed the matchups for the 2022 field if they were using the expanded field.
No. 1 Georgia would have played the Tennessee-Kansas State winner in the Sugar Bowl. No. 4 Utah would have played the TCU-Tulane winner in the Fiesta Bowl. No. 3 Clemson would have played the Ohio State–Penn State winner in the Peach Bowl. And finally, No. 2 Michigan would have played the Alabama–USC winner in the Rose Bowl.
What it would have looked like with 2022 ranking in the 2024 sites pic.twitter.com/f7o42rzK8u
— Heather Dinich (@CFBHeather) April 27, 2023
That field would have been fun to watch. Bill Hancock also confirmed the first-round CFP games that begin in 2024 will have one game on Friday and three on Saturday. Semifinal games will be held during the week to avoid going head-to-head with the NFL playoffs.
The 12-team playoffs can’t get here fast enough.