College Football Playoff Board of Managers releases statement on possible expansion

The College Football Playoff Board of Managers have released a statement concerning the expansion of the playoffs.

The expansion of the College Football Playoff just got a bit closer to reality.

On Tuesday, Mark Kennum, the Chairman of the College Football Playoff Board of Managers, released a statement that points toward expansion coming in the near future.

“The College Football Playoff (CFP) board of managers today heard a presentation from a working group appointed to look into the possibility of expanding the College Football Playoff. It was an excellent presentation and on behalf of the board, I am grateful to the four members who spent two years discussing this important issue and arriving at its recommendation for a 12-team playoff.
“The four-team playoff has been a great success and I’m confident it will remain a success. Nevertheless, it is our responsibility to explore options to make it even better by increasing the number of schools that participate in it.
“Having heard the presentation made today by the working group, along with the management committee that joined us for today’s meeting, the board has authorized the management committee to begin a summer review phase that will engage other important voices in this matter. These include many people on our campuses, such as student-athletes, athletics directors, faculty athletics representatives, coaches, and university presidents and chancellors. Their opinions are important, and we want to hear them.
“We have relationships with the bowls and a broadcast partner with whom we will want to consult to explore the feasibility of the 12-team proposal.
“This too will happen during this summer study period. Having given the management committee the charge to look into expansion, it is our duty to take their good work and ascertain whether it is feasible based on the feedback we receive. I caution observers of our process not to rush to conclusions about what this board may decide. The working group has presented us a thorough and thoughtful proposal. There is more work to do, more listening to do and more information needed before we can make a decision.
“We look forward to hearing more and learning more in time for our next meeting in September.”
The idea of expanding the playoffs have been tossed around for the last several seasons after its introduction following the 2014 college football season.

College Football Playoff Expansion Proposal: Who Wins? What’s Next In The Process?

The 12-team College Football Playoff expansion idea took a step forward. If it goes through, who wins? Who loses, and what’s next?

The 12-team College Football Playoff expansion idea took a step forward. If it goes through, who wins? Who loses, and what’s next in the process?


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

The College Football Playoff types just held a meeting to set up another meeting to have a discussion about the 12-team expansion idea thrown out there last week. Basically …

– Nothing will be decided until September. This is all a work in progress.

– Everyone is trying to do their due diligence. They want the feedback from the schools, college presidents, athletic departments, etc. to try getting this right.

– If it goes through, this can’t and won’t be put in place for the 2021 or 2022 seasons. 2023 is the earliest that this could happen.

So what is this College Football Playoff expansion proposal the kids are all talking about? If it happens, who would win, who’d lose, and what would it be?

Here’s the gist of the expanded College Football Playoff proposal and how this is expected to work … if it actually happens.

– 12 teams. The six top-ranked conference champions are automatically in no matter where they’re ranked.

– The top four ranked conference champions get a first round bye. The other eight teams play a first round playoff game on the home sites of the higher-ranked teams.

– The quarterfinals are played in bowl game. There’s no reseed – more on that later – and the six needed bowls have yet to be determined. However, just assume that they’d be the Rose, Sugar, Peach, Cotton, Orange and Fiesta with another site for the national championship.

– The four-team College Football Playoff would then go on as we know it now. So, essentially, if any of the top four seeds got to the national championship, it would play one extra game. The other eight seeds – if one got to the championship – would play two extra games.

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They actually might have gotten this … right? I’m the first to hammer and criticize anything and everything when it comes to how the college football sausage is made, and there are certainly a few things about this that need to be – and will have to be – tweaked, but this is a solid plan that appears to have addressed almost all of the potential concerns and objections.

I know. I KNOW. We all want to find flaws. (Not-so-humble flex alert) I’ve done about 30 different radio appearances since this idea first came out, and like all good sports talk people, most of the hosts tried to create a debate. There isn’t really one to be had – this is as solid an idea as the playoff types have come up with.

Let’s start with the most fundamental question of all when it comes to an expanded College Football Playoff. Does it diminish – or worse yet, ruin – the integrity of the best regular season in American sports?

The last thing college football wants is to become college basketball, or the NBA, or MLB, or the NHL – you don’t need to watch a lick of any of those other leagues/sports until the playoffs.

That’s not happening here with this 12-team plan. On the flip side, with more teams and fan bases involved, it would make the regular season even more interesting.

Now the conference championships become a whole lot bigger. They actually serve as early round playoff games, with the Power Five winners almost certainly getting in.

One key thing to remember … it’s really, really hard to finish in the top 12 in college football. This isn’t the NCAA Tournament that takes everyone who can dribble. Getting into the top 12 would be an achievement.

Before going any further, I’ll keep referencing the importance of finishing in the top 12, because that’s the criteria as it’s being set up. In reality, though, you probably have to finish in the top 11 if you don’t win your conference championship, and you really want to be in the top ten just to be safe. In most years, that 12th-ranked team will be bounced out of the CFP by the sixth-best conference champion.

So who wins out of all of this, besides the College Football Playoff? Pretty much everyone.

The Group of Five programs win. Now, instead of being thrown the stale New Year’s Six Bowl game cookie for the top Group of Five conference champion, that team gets into the College Football Playoff. Last year, both Cincinnati and Coastal Carolina would’ve made it under this format.

The biggest of the big boys win. A segment of Ohio State fans got grouchy – grouchy Ohio State fans, is there another kind? – over how this was originally set up, but it’s actually fantastic for the most powerful of the Power Five.

Now, Alabama, Clemson, Oklahoma and Ohio State don’t have to finish in the top four, and they’re almost always going to finish in the top 11 or 12. Even better, there’s a safety net in case one of them loses once or even twice along the way.

Let’s cement this belief system right here, right now. If you can’t win your conference championship, and if you can’t finish in the top 12, you don’t deserve a shot at winning the national title.

Fans of good non-conference games win. Go ahead and schedule that monster date against another powerhouse. The upside to winning is enormous, and the penalty for losing – now, lose twice in a season and you’re essentially sunk – isn’t all that bad as long as the game was competitive.

Notre Dame wins. There’s some grousing from the Irish types about how the program can’t get one of the first round byes in this conference champion-only format, but sort of like it is for the other giant programs, this takes the pressure off. Notre Dame doesn’t have to finish in the top four to be in the playoff. Just be ranked in the top 11.

The SEC really wins. It’s been the constant problem with life in the SEC. You can be fantastic, have an awesome season, go 10-2 with a few thrilling wins over great teams, and then have absolutely nothing to show for it.

Or, like Texas A&M last year, you can be outstanding, and your one big crime is losing on the road to Alabama. And that means …

Georgia wins. Texas A&M wins. LSU wins. Florida wins. Auburn wins. In years when Alabama is an untouchable juggernaut – or like 2019 LSU – now at least the best teams in the top conference can still make the playoff tournament a battle. And that means …

The SEC championship loser wins. I’ll still argue that Texas A&M should’ve been in over Notre Dame last year, and there were a times when Georgia or Alabama really were among the four best teams but didn’t win the conference title.

This goes for the other Power Five conferences, too. The season-long powerhouse can lose the conference title and still get in.

Again, the Power Five conference championship games win. Will Northwestern ever finish in the top four under the current four-team College Football Playoff format? Almost certainly not.

How about Iowa State – a program that’s never won an outright conference title in its history? Under this format, both of those schools would’ve gone into their respective conference championship games last year with a chance to go to the playoff.

Wisconsin wins. And Penn State. And USC, Texas, Texas A&M, Florida, and yes, Harbaugh haters, Michigan.

All of those big-name, big power programs who’ve had plenty of success over the last few years with no playoff appearances will now get a shot. Wisconsin holds the distinction of being the winningest Power Five program during the CFP era to not get in.

The College Football Playoff wins. Last year might have been the final straw. On the plus side, the CFP has been a powerhouse mini-tournament of amazing teams. On the down side, the last three national championships suuuuuuuuuucked, and too many of the semifinals have been brutal blowouts. Of course …

There’s going to be a whole lot of ugly with this. This isn’t the NCAA Tournament where Central Whatever State can come out and hit a bajillion three pointers over a weekend and get into the Sweet 16. There will be a bunch of 55-3 blastings, and this doesn’t necessarily solve the problem of needing a more competitive final four, but …

It’s all about getting a chance. Did anyone really think Cincinnati could’ve won the national title last year? How about some of those great UCF teams? How about any of the teams outside of Alabama, Clemson and Ohio State ranked in the final top 12. Nah, but that’s not the point. All any team wants is its chance to show what it can do. If it gets rolled, it gets rolled – players want to compete.

And that’s the real winner here. It’s one of the fatal flaws of college football that – as you read this – at least 75 teams are already effectively eliminated from winning the 2021 national championship. Now, in fall camp, every single team in college football can at least think there’s a dream of a chance to get into the playoff.

With that said, who loses?

Not to be cheeky, but … the losers. There’s only one winner of the College Football Playoff. Everyone else suffers a loss. Don’t discount how much coaches and athletic directors love ending the season with a bowl win.

The Pac-12 and Big 12 … maybe. More often than not, the top SEC and Big Ten teams are likely going to be in. It wouldn’t be crazy to have half the playoff made up of those two conferences. What’s the revenue dispersion going to be? How mad would a Power Five conference be if it got shut out, like the Pac-12 would’ve been last year?

Potentially, the players. However, this all might tie together with the new Name, Image & Likeness world – because the term NIL makes everyone sleepy – in that the top players could market themselves come playoff time. Bigger stage, brighter lights, more opportunities. But that’s just for the superstars.

For the rank and file players, they’re about to make a whole lot of money for other people.

Potentially, the No. 1 seed. Without a reseed after the first round, the No. 4 could effectively get the reward the 1 should’ve had.

If this was 2014, and if Boise State upset Baylor in the first round, that would’ve meant the No. 4 seed would’ve played the CFP 20th-ranked team and the No. 1 seed would’ve played the 8/9 winner. That effectively nullifies the advantage to being the 1.

The bowl season, depending on how this gets set up. The minor bowls will always be the minor bowls – the mediocre teams will still get to go have their fun – but the mid-range bowls totally lose their importance.

2020 might have exposed how unnecessary the end-of-season exhibitions are, but the expanded CFP really does crush the spirits of those teams outside of the top 12.

Again, remember, this is just a proposal. However, it would’ve have come this far already if the College Football Playoff types didn’t pretty much know that this would fly.

Now, just watch. The next two four-team College Football Playoffs will be epic and fans will be against change, but this is a must.

The College Football Playoff is probably going to expand, and it’ll be okay.

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UGA Football Live with J.C. Shelton: CFP Expansion and Recruiting Update

J.C. talks about what the college football playoff expansion would be like and breaks down Georgia football recruiting news. Listen here…

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What would a 12-team college football playoff be like?…

Your friends at UGA Football Live and UGA Wire present your one-stop-shop podcast for all things Georgia football: “UGA Football Live with J.C. Shelton.”

This offseason we will release episodes each week with interviews, news, rumors and more.

In this episode, I talk about what the proposed 12-team playoff expansion would be like and dive into some recent Georgia football recruiting news, including the impact of losing two five-star commits in one day.

Listen here on Spotify:

Listen here, on Apple Podcasts

Also on the show – A look at the impact of NIL (name, image and likeness) bills being signed by states across the country, which will allow college athletes to profit off of their own likeness beginning July 1.

 


Make sure to subscribe, rate and review! And check out our other episodes featuring former Georgia greats like Tavarres King (Ep. 3)  Keith Marshall (Ep. 4) Arthur Lynch (Ep. 6) Malcolm Mitchell (Ep. 7) Drew Butler (Ep. 9) Aaron Murray (Ep. 17) Brandon Boykin and Chris Burnette (Ep. 18)  Rennie Curran (Ep. 24) and Mark Richt (Ep. 27)

Will there be a revenue advantage to hosting a CFP game?

Big 12 commissioner, Bob Bowlsby addresses revenue in CFP expansion.

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Narratives and conversation has circulated on the College Football Playoff expansion. Most notably games being hosted on campuses and what that would entail. Would there be a revenue spike at those respective universities hosting a game? There will be a lot of breakdowns and informational chats over the coming months to expand upon questions but at the present time, Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby adressed one in particular on revenue advantages and to his confirmation, the lack thereof.

In answering Ari Temkin, Dave Archer and Gabe Ikard on SiriusXM Big 12 Radio, he addressed the notion.

“The games that are going to be played on campus, the revenue is not going to stay with the campus. It will go into the College Football Playoff coffers and so, there won’t be any local revenue from that other than perhaps parking and concessions and things like that. This is all part of the playoff structure and similarly, so will the TV be part of the playoff structure. The local revenue has been overblown in the media and I don’t believe that will be the case.”

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The restructure has been focused on building the “value” of conference championships and elevating the experience for fans and the access aspect.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes and opinions.

College Football Playoff Expansion Proposal To 12? What Would Have Happened?

A proposal to expand the College Football Playoff to 12 teams is on the table. What would’ve happened if this was the format from the start?

A proposal to expand the College Football Playoff to 12 teams is on the table. What would’ve happened if this was the format from the start?


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

A proposal has been created by the College Football Playoff management committee to possible expand to 12 teams. It’ll be discussed next week with several tweaks, arguments, and counter-proposals sure to follow.

The plan would be to take the top six ranked conference champions to go along with the top six other teams according to the final college football rankings.

The top four teams – conference champions only – would get a bye, and the first round would be played on the home field of the higher seeded team. The quarterfinals would be held in bowl games – to be designated later – all leading to the four team format that’s in place now.

So what would a 12-team College Football Playoff have been in the old format?

From 2014 on, here’s how it would’ve played out.

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2015 | 2016 | 20172018 | 2019 | 2020

2014: With College Football Playoff Expansion 12-Team Plan

Final 2014 College Football Playoff Rankings Top 12
1. Alabama (SEC Champion)
2. Oregon (Pac-12 Champion)
3. Florida State (ACC Champion)
4. Ohio State (Big Ten Champion)
5. Baylor (Big Champion – through tie-breaker)
6. TCU
7. Mississippi State
8. Michigan State
9. Ole Miss
10. Arizona
11. Kansas State
12. Georgia Tech

Top 3 Left Out
12. Georgia Tech
13. Georgia
14. UCLA

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2014 College Football Playoff First Round Would’ve Been …
First Round Bye: 1. Alabama, 2. Oregon, 3. Florida State, 4. Ohio State

20. Boise State (Mountain West Champion) at 5. Baylor
11. Kansas State at 6. TCU
10. Arizona at 7. Mississippi State
9. Ole Miss at 8. Michigan State

2015 | 2016 | 20172018 | 2019 | 2020

NEXT: 2015 With College Football Playoff Expansion 12-Team Plan

Report: College Football Playoff working group to suggest expansion to 12 teams

Per The Athletic, the College Football Playoff working group is set to suggest an expansion to 12 teams from the original four.

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Getting into the College Football Playoff is about to get a lot easier.

Per The Athletic, the working group involved with the CFP is expected to suggest an expansion 12 teams from the four that the playoff currently exists of each season.

From the article:

The CFP’s four-person group — which consists of SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby, Mountain West commissioner Craig Thompson and Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick — is expected to recommend a 12-team playoff, according to sources.

The 12-team format would include the six highest-ranked conference champions and six at-large spots.

Per Dennis Dodd of CBS Sports, the suggestion will be introduced next week at the CFP Management Committee meeting and could be approved as soon as June 22.

This story will be updated as more information is released.

Why the College Football Playoff expanding to 12 teams is good for the sport

Without ever thinking about it, 12 playoff teams seem to be the right number. Here is why the reported 12 team playoff will be good for CFB.

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For the second time in less than a decade, college football could have a new method of crowning its national champion. In 2014, the sport ditched the Bowl Championship Series, in which two teams played in a national title game, in favor of a four-team playoff. Now, eight more teams could be on the way.

According to Pete Thamel of Yahoo, the College Football Playoff is likely to expand to 12 teams in the near future. A process will play out over the summer with an announcement expected in the fall.

Nobody seems to have the same opinion as to why expanding is a good or a bad idea. Some want to stick with four, others want eight while bringing back the BCS has even been suggested.

Without even thinking about it, 12 seems to be the right number. Not too many to feel like just anyone can get in, but not too few where nobody can get in. With the system reportedly being put into place, a 12-team playoff will be good for college football.

Here’s why:

Report: College Football Playoff likely to expand to 12 teams

According to Yahoo, the CFP is expected to grow to 12 teams. Six, eight, and 16 have all been discussed but, 12 is reportedly the number.

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College football changed forever when Oklahoma State lost in Ames to Iowa State in 2011. The Cowboys fell on the wrong side of one of the greatest upsets in college football history and finished their season 11-1.

Nick Saban’s Alabama squad jumped Oklahoma State in the polls when it mattered, ultimately facing off against LSU in the national championship. The only issue is that the Crimson Tide had already lost head to head against the Tigers in Tuscaloosa.

We know how the story goes. Alabama wins, people are infuriated with the computer system, and the first rumblings of a playoff begin. It took three years but the BCS was ditched in favor of a four-team playoff in 2014.

Even when introduced, the first question was ‘when will it be expanded?’

The answer: 2021.

According to Pete Thamel of Yahoo, not only is the playoff going to grow, it could have 12 teams. Six, eight, and 16 have all been discussed but university officials, athletic directors, conference commissioners, and media executives feel as if 12 is the right number.

The next three weeks offer a critical period in charting what the future of the College Football Playoff will look like. A pair of CFP meetings are expected to decide a specific recommendation, with a final decision, details and television contract determined later in the fall.

“The reason that you go to 12 is because you can develop the road of least resistance toward a good result,” said a high-ranking college official with knowledge of the process.

A couple of elements would be added to make 12 teams work. The first would be automatic bids. According to Thamel’s report, giving playoff spots to teams who win their conference championship “juices up their league title games as play-in games.” The Group of 5 would have an auto bid as well.

Second would be the previously mentioned venues for the first round. Instead of bowl games, campuses would host at least the first round. From there, neutral sites from the New Year’s Six would host, just as they do today.

To give an example of what a 12 team playoff would look like, we will use the 2019 season. Last year went through too many rough patches thanks to COVID-19 to show a good example.

BYES: No. 1 LSU, No. 2 Clemson, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Oklahoma

All would be automatic qualifiers as well due to winning their conference. The Pac-12 would have its league champion Oregon and Memphis would represent the Group of 5, despite being No. 17 in the final poll.

Here is the first round:

  • No. 5 Georgia vs No. 12 Memphis in Athens, GA (Winner plays Oklahoma)
  • No. 6 Oregon vs No. 11 Utah in Eugene, OR (Winner plays Ohio State)
  • No. 7 Baylor vs No. 10 Penn State in Waco, TX (Winner plays Clemson)
  • No. 8 Wisconsin vs No. 9 Florida (Winner plays LSU)

A “four-member working group” will lay out this idea to SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby, Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick and Mountain West commissioner Craig Thompson on July 17 and July 18 in Chicago.

From there, “a group of 11 presidents and chancellors from the 10 FBS conferences and Notre Dame, will examine what’s put forward and likely determine the potential shape — although not the final details — of the playoff’s future.”

A final decision is expected later in the fall.

Has The College Football Playoff Gone Stale?: Daily Cavalcade

With few new teams in the mix and a whole lot of bad games, has the College Football Playoff gone stale?

With few new teams in the mix and a whole lot of bad games, has the College Football Playoff gone stale?


College Football Daily Cavalcade: Has the College Football Playoff gone stale?

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

Sorry if this take sucks, it’s not my fault …

I’m still getting past the idea of an 11-seed that finished fourth in its conference could be one overtime away from playing for the college basketball national title.

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No, stale is absolutely every one of the 2,493 songs in my iPhone library and the 10,000+ saved elsewhere, but …

(Superflex/brag way to start a rant … GO)

So I was on the Paul Finebaum show the other day and he asked an interesting question.

Has the College Football Playoff become stale?

Short answer – sort of, but not in the way many might think.

Of course it would be better if we had a slew of new teams playing, but that’s not really the problem.

America doesn’t seem to have an issue with Alabama – that’s an SEC-hate thing – as we’ve all come to accept it like Amazon. It’s an unstoppable monster that’s crushes the little guy like a grape, but what are you going to do?

By the time you’ve finished reading this, Clemson will have won another ACC Championship and will be in another CFP as the 2/3 seed, but at least it has fun NFL quarterbacks.

No one likes rooting for Ohio State – Ohio State fans aren’t even happy rooting for Ohio State – and Oklahoma can’t get over the hump, but again, the teams aren’t why the College Football Playoff is a tad stale, even though we have yet to have one without at least two of those four – Tide, Tigers, Buckeyes and Sooners – in it.

Everyone wants something new, but even then it doesn’t seem to work.

LSU got in, brought amazing energy to the mix, and then obliterated everything in its path. That sucked.

Notre Dame got in twice and got steamrolled. That sucked.

Washington didn’t have a prayer against an Alabama team that went through the motions and won in the 2017 CFP Chick-fil-A Peach – no joke, I’m still working off the weight from that week loaded with bins of free Chick-fil-A and Krispy Kremes for the media – and Michigan State didn’t even get off the bus in its CFP appearance in the 2016 CFP Cotton. Both of those games sucked.

Give Florida State and Oregon a pass because the CFP was a fun novelty in the first year, leaving Georgia as the outlier newbie with the two classics it played in the 2018 playoff.

I’ve said over and over again that the playoff needs to expand to eight – five Power 5 champs, top Group of Five champ, two wild-cards – with the first round played on the higher-seed home field the week after the conference championships. However, that would bring more energy and excitement to the regular season and not necessarily the CFP. An expanded playoff would likely have more blowouts in the first round, but that’s fine – teams at least want the opportunity.

No, the real problem with the College Football Playoff is simple.

The games have been AWFUL.

As a postseason format, I’ll continue to pound the table that the College Football Playoff really is the best in all of sports, issues at all.

Is it the most exciting way to do a post-season? No. Is it the fairest? Absolutely not. Should it come down to a panel of judges who kinda sorta watches college football and turtles at the idea of showing even the teeniest tiniest bit of transparency in the decision making process? Uhhhhh, no.

But the CFP isn’t a gimmick like the college basketball thing we just went through, and it preserves the integrity of the regular season unlike – for example – EVERY pro sport. There’s no such thing as a cheap College Football Playoff national champion.

No, the CFP as a system hasn’t gone stale. Again, the playoff games have to stop being bad.

We were spoiled.

The Alabama 45-40 win over Clemson in the second CFP national championship was outstanding, and the third – the Deshaun Watson drive for a 35-31 win over the Tide – was as good as college football has ever been. However, those two classics made up for the miserable semifinal games in both years.

The Georgia 54-48 double-overtime win over Oklahoma at the end of the 2017 season was epic, and Tua to DeVonta to win a national title was arguably the biggest single play in college football history. Since then, though, the College Football Playoff has been a giant gift box of socks.

Eight of the last nine CFP games were ugly blowouts – give some forgiveness to last year’s Sugar Bowl; the Ohio State 49-28 win over Clemson was at least entertaining – with three national championship games that were a total waste of time. The 29-23 Clemson semifinal win over Ohio State in the Fiesta two seasons ago was the only redeeming battle of the bunch.

That means we’ve had 21 College Football Playoff games and – throwing in the Ohio State win over Alabama in the first year – only six have been any good.

So how do we fix it? We can’t.

We’re getting the four best teams every year – or really close to it – and we’re getting powerhouse vs powerhouse games. You can’t ask for better matchups.

We just need a little more luck.

You want ugly? From blowouts to horribly played snoozers that just so happened to have close final scores, try the Super Bowl from the beginning in 1967 until 1989, with a few Pittsburgh wins over Dallas counting as the bright spots in a vast wasteland of bloated sports darkness.

The College Football Playoff hasn’t had enough time to be stale.

Give us a good national championship or two, and throw us a bone with competitive semifinals, and all of a sudden we’ll love the thing.

And if there happens to be a CFP without Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State and Oklahoma … cool.

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March Madness In December? The College Football Playoff MUST Expand: Daily Cavalcade

Another great NCAA Tournament start showed why college football needs to make one simple tweak to expand the College Football Playoff.

Another great NCAA Tournament of men’s basketball shows why college football needs to make one simple tweak to expand the College Football Playoff.


College Football Daily Cavalcade: College Football Playoff Expansion – It’s Time

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

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Sorry if this take sucks, it’s not my fault …

One freaking UC Santa Barbara missed layup – that’s all that stood between me and NCAA Tournament contest immortality. I’m not over it yet.

But ONLY if the CFP comes up with a better theme song than “One Shining Moment”

Enough dinking around, College Football Playoff.

You want the tournament to be as big as The Tournament? It might not be possible to make the CFP into another NCAA March Madness colossus, but December could be a whole lot bigger and more lucrative.

Just expand to eight teams already.

I know, I know, we’ve done this to death, but it’s time …

All five Power Five champions, the top-ranked Group of Five champion, two catch-all wild-cards. Play the first round a week after the conference championships on the home fields of the higher seeds, and then play the rest of the CFP like normal.

This has been brought up a gajillion times with a bazillion ideas ever since the College Football Playoff first got rolling during the 2014 season, but now is when the change might just make more sense.

Things are a little different after the lid has been blown off of so many college football things that America had previously accepted as a given.

You know, like moving the Rose Bowl from the most iconic setting in sports to Texas, so Mom and Dad could watch Notre Dame get obliterated by Alabama in person.

You want to make the change? You want to recoup a ton of lost revenue from 2020? College Football Playoff, just add that one extra day, and you make the playoff bigger without screwing up the importance of the rest of season.

Unlike the way the college basketball regular season has been rendered a giant nothing burger with no sauce thanks to the sport’s post-season, that’s not a problem for college football.

However, obviously, football isn’t basketball. You’re almost never going to get the Oral Roberts over Ohio State or Abilene Christian over Texas moments in the CFP, that make March Madness so special, but that’s not really the point. It’s about having the opportunity.

It’s about not telling most college football programs that they’re effectively eliminated from national championship consideration right after the first spring practice.

Could 7-seed Cincinnati have beaten No. 2 Clemson in Death Valley last season? It would’ve been interesting, and the Bearcats sure would’ve liked to have had a chance.

The conference championships would serve as a sort of CFP Quarterfinal, with a whole lot more to play for than a snazzy t-shirt.

How much bigger would the end of the Alabama-Florida SEC Championship have been if a playoff spot was on the line for the Gators? How much more fun would the Big 12 Championship have been for both Iowa State and Oklahoma, and how huge would the USC vs. Oregon Pac-12 Championship have been if that was for the No. 8 seed?

Thanksgiving/rivalry weekend leading into Championship Saturday, and then the first round of the College Football Playoff, and then the bowls, and then bigger bowls, and then New Year’s Day for a wild run of fun college football games.

IT’S … ALL … RIGHT … THERE.

Oh, it’ll happen … eventually.

We live in a time when we can create a pandemic-stopping vaccine in mere months, and we can finally order quesadillas from Chipotle on the app. Miracles simply require the will and the want-to.

College football fans will want to watch an eight-team College Football Playoff.

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