Big Ten Reportedly Floating Idea for 24 or 28 Team College Football Playoff
The expansion would eliminate conference title games and grant up to seven automatic bids to the Big Ten and SEC, increasing postseason access for power conferences.
- The Big Ten conference is reportedly proposing a 24- or 28-team expansion of the College Football Playoff, aiming to modify the postseason format in 2025 or later.
- This proposal follows the 2024 expansion from four to 12 teams and ongoing discussions over the past year about further enlarging the field amid disagreements on auto bids and at-large selections.
- The plan proposes removing conference championship games and allocating seven automatic playoff spots each to the Big Ten and SEC, five each to the ACC and Big 12, along with two guaranteed places for teams outside the Power Five conferences and two additional at-large selections.
- In the 28-team format, the playoff field would be organized by the CFP committee, which would determine seeding and choose the at-large teams, with as many as 20 games held on campus before progressing to the bowl games.
- If adopted, this large expansion could reduce the regular season's importance and increase postseason access, reflecting continuing debates about the playoff's future scope and format.
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21 Articles
21 Articles
Big Ten proposing massive College Football Playoff change
The College Football Playoff could be in for a massive expansion. This week, the Big Ten floated the idea of increasing the playoff to 24 or 28 teams, according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel, although the possibility is still reportedly a ways off.
·New York, United States
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Total News Sources21
Leaning Left5Leaning Right4Center7Last UpdatedBias Distribution44% Center
Bias Distribution
- 44% of the sources are Center
44% Center
L 31%
C 44%
R 25%
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