Skip to main content
SI

College Football Playoff 12-Team Format Faces Change After Realignment, per Report

The CFP is set to expand beginning in the 2024 season.
College Football Playoff 12-Team Format Faces Change After Realignment, per Report
College Football Playoff 12-Team Format Faces Change After Realignment, per Report

With the landscape of college football set to look very different in 2024, the College Football Playoff will reportedly respond accordingly.

The conference commissioners who make up the CFP management committee are recommending that the CFP’s format be tweaked to include five conference champions and seven at-large bids rather than the six conference champions and six at-large bids originally suggested, according to a Friday evening report from Ross Dellenger of Yahoo! Sports.

The College Football Playoff is set to expand to 12 teams next year from the four teams it has included since 2014.

The original model was formulated before the Pac-12's de facto collapse this offseason. USCUCLAOregon and Washington will leave that league in ’24 for the Big Ten, while ArizonaArizona StateColorado and Utah will join the Big 12 and California and Stanford will migrate to the ACC.

A second stipulation reportedly added by commissioners is a rule mandating a conference have eight teams for its champion to be eligible for an automatic CFP berth—a rule germane to Oregon State and Washington State if they carry on the Pac-12 as a two-team league.

Add us as a preferred source on Google

Loading recommendations... Please wait while we load personalized content recommendations


Published | Modified
Patrick Andres
PATRICK ANDRES

Patrick Andres is a staff writer on the Breaking and Trending News team at Sports Illustrated. He joined SI in December 2022, having worked for The Blade, Athlon Sports, Fear the Sword and Diamond Digest. Andres has covered everything from zero-attendance Big Ten basketball to a seven-overtime college football game. He is a graduate of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism with a double major in history .