James Lang-USA TODAY Sports
Here is the official release from the College Football Playoff regarding the new proposed 12-Team Playoff:

12-TEAM PLAYOFF PROPOSED BY COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYOFF WORKING GROUP

6/10/2021 2:00:00 PM

IRVING, Texas –
A sub-group of College Football Playoff's (CFP) management committee today presented a proposal to change the current four-team format to a 12-team event.

The proposal was made to the full CFP management committee and is the first step in a process that will not conclude before this fall.

"The four-team format has been very popular and is a big success," the members of the four-person working group said in a statement. "But it's important that we consider the opportunity for more teams and more student-athletes to participate in the playoff. After reviewing numerous options, we believe this proposal is the best option to increase participation, enhance the regular season and grow the national excitement of college football."

The working group was appointed by their management committee colleagues and has met over a two-year period to discuss possible new formats. The proposal calls for the bracket each year to include the six highest-ranked conference champions, plus the six highest-ranked other teams as determined by the College Football Playoff selection committee. No conference would qualify automatically and there would be no limit on the number of participants from a conference.

The four highest-ranked conference champions would be seeded one through four and each would receive a first-round bye, while teams seeded five through 12 would play each other in the first round on the home field of the higher-ranked team. (The team ranked #5 would host #12; team #6 would meet team #11; team #7 would play team #10; and team #8 would meet #9.) Under the proposal, the quarterfinals and semifinals would be played in bowl games. The championship game would continue to be at a neutral site, as under the current format.


The four members of the working group (Big 12 Conference Commissioner Bob Bowlsby, Southeastern Conference Commissioner Greg Sankey, Mountain West Conference Commissioner Craig Thompson, and Notre Dame Athletics Director Jack Swarbrick) presented their recommendation today during a virtual meeting of the full management committee that administers the CFP.

The CFP management committee members are Mike Aresco, commissioner, American Athletic Conference; Bob Bowlsby, commissioner, Big 12 Conference; Keith Gill, commissioner, Sun Belt Conference; Judy MacLeod, commissioner, Conference USA; Jim Phillips, commissioner, Atlantic Coast Conference; Greg Sankey, commissioner, Southeastern Conference; Larry Scott, commissioner, Pacific-12 Conference; John Steinbrecher, commissioner, Mid-American Conference; Jack Swarbrick, athletics director, Notre Dame; Craig Thompson, commissioner, Mountain West Conference; Kevin Warren, commissioner, Big Ten Conference.

The next step in the process is for the 11-member management committee to review the recommendation at its upcoming meeting in Chicago June 17-18.

If the management committee endorses the 12-team proposal or reaches consensus on an alternative model or decides to retain the current format, it will forward a recommendation to the CFP board of managers, which will meet June 22 in Dallas.

Members of the CFP board of managers include Eric Barron – Big Ten Conference (President, Penn State); Rodney Bennett – Conference USA (President, Southern Mississippi); Jim Clements – Atlantic Coast Conference (President, Clemson); Gordon Gee – Big 12 Conference (President, West Virginia); Jack Hawkins – Sun Belt Conference (President, Troy); Rev. John Jenkins – President, Notre Dame (Independent); Mark Keenum (chair) – Southeastern Conference (President, Mississippi State); Kirk Schulz – Pacific-12 Conference (President, Washington State); Satish Tripathi – Mid-American Conference (President, Buffalo); R. Gerald Turner – American Athletic Conference (President, SMU); Keith Whitfield – Mountain West Conference (President, UNLV).

During the board's June 22 meeting, it will review the recommendation from the management committee and decide whether to authorize feasibility assessments and potentially discussions with other entities that would allow for implementation of any altered format.

If the board authorizes this summer study period, the board would meet again in September to review the results of the summer assessments and also the input from presidents, athletics directors, coaches, student-athletes and others.

Any decision on changing the format would be made by the board.

"This is a very exciting moment for college football," the working group members said in the statement. "We think we can capture what student-athletes and fans love about the game and extend it to more people in more places, while enhancing what's great about the regular season."

Bill Hancock, Executive Director of the CFP, said, "Now that the working group has presented its proposal, the management committee will solicit input from university presidents, coaches, athletics directors, student-athletes and others. That input will help inform what the management committee recommends to the ultimate decision-makers — the presidents and chancellors who serve on the board of managers. I do want to remind you that the final decision will be made by the board of managers, and that decision will not come before this fall."

The date of implementation of a potential new format was not a part of the working group's proposal and would be a matter considered if any recommendation is approved by the board of managers. Hancock said the format will not change this year or next year. The current agreements for the four-team CFP extend through the 2025-26 season.

-Other elements of the working group's proposal included the following:

*While the playoff calendar is still to be worked out, broadly this is the recommendation:

*First-round games would take place on campus sometime during the two-week period after conference championship games;

*Quarterfinals would be played on January 1—or January 2 when New Year's Day falls on a Sunday—and on an adjacent day;

*Semifinals and championship game dates are to be determined; semifinals likely will not be played as a doubleheader.

-The playoff bracket would follow the rankings, with no modifications made to avoid rematches of teams that may have played during the regular-season or are from the same conference;

-The bracket would remain in effect throughout the playoff (i.e., no re-seeding);

-The working group's charge did not include deciding which bowls might be a part of the CFP in the future; however the group did recommend that if traditional bowls host games, teams would be assigned to their traditional bowls for quarterfinal games with priority going to the higher-seeded team;

-All 11 games would be under the CFP umbrella, with the administrative specifications and the process for selecting the six bowls that would rotate as hosts of the quarterfinals and semifinals still to be determined.

#CFBPLAYOFF

About the College Football Playoff
The College Football Playoff matches the No. 1 ranked team vs. No. 4, and No. 2 vs. No. 3 in semifinal games that rotate annually among six bowl games – the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic, PlayStation Fiesta Bowl, Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl, Capital One Orange Bowl, Allstate Sugar Bowl and Rose Bowl Game. This season's Playoff Semifinals will take place Friday, December 31, 2021, at the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic and the Capital One Orange Bowl. The College Football Playoff National Championship will be Monday, January 10, 2022, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana.

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21 Comments
user avatar
Waaaay too many.
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GoldenGuy34 months
Why not 128 teams? Kansas doesn’t play well unless there’s elimination at stake.
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Swamp Angel34 months
ABSOLUTELY NOT! Within the four teams that make it to the playoffs now, are the top two teams in the country, and they will find each other to play for the championship. There is no need to convolute it and pollute the field with more and more teams. I'd prefer going back to the previous BCS version than expanding the playoffs.
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monsterballads34 months
hopefully this is implemented sooner than later
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Bamafan2434 months
I am happy with 4 teams. The BCS should be what picks the 4 best teams. The problem was there was always a debate back then about who should get left out and with 4, the best teams dont. It was only a matter of time before this happened and I am sure they will find a way for it to make more money.
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CajunBullet34 months
Just follow the trail and you'll find the money!
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NASA_ISS_Tiger34 months
Saban's gonna be mad!!!
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I LIKE IT!!! Forget y’all haters, let’s play sum foosbaw!!!!!
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Veritas34 months
“The proposal calls for the bracket each year to include the six highest-ranked conference champions, plus the six highest-ranked other teams...No conference would qualify automatically and there would be no limit on the number of participants from a conference.” I don’t understand this. Am I missing something? Also, LSU will be the first 3 loss champion.
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Tigers5834 months
There are more than 6 conferences in NCAA Football. Only the 6 highest ranked Conference Champions would be auto included. For the other conference champions .. to get in they would have to be in the next 6 highest rankings, otherwise the remaining spots would be filled by ranking, which could be a second SEC team. second BIG12 team .. and so on.
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Veritas34 months
@Tigers58 Wow, thanks for calling that out. Totally went over my head. Must be a long day.
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33inNC34 months
What a crock of shite. Does this mean that the 2 lowest ranked conference champs can be seeded 5-12? They should make conference champs worth something more, like ranking them 5 and 6. Also, get ready to watch 6 conference champs, 4 SEC teams and 2 other teams. What is wrong with 8?
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Ripley34 months
Bye bye sense of urgency. Bye Bye CFB. Onward to an NFL feel where each game doesn’t really matter that much. No biggie if you lose a few.
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BigJman34 months
As much as I dislike Saban, he came out in an interview early on and called this. Didn’t think it’d happen this quick.
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SG_Geaux34 months
CFB as we know it is done sadly.
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CanebreakCajun34 months
College football has the greatest regular season in sports. This will destory it. Good job greedy frick pigs.
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JackieTreehorn34 months
Going to have to chop down the regular season bigly.
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TigerFanFromBama34 months
They have to do something. Bowl attendance outside of the playoffs is steady declining and projected 1st-3rd rounders will continue to opt out of meaningless bowl games.
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cheeser34 months
you have hit the nail on the head. The players these days seem to think of themselves first and the team second. The Opt out is going to ruin the sport, not the number of games played. FBS has played a 16 team for at least 54 years i KNOW FOR A FACT. And guess what it works fine & nobody bitches , except maybe #17.
user avatar
GumboDave34 months
TLDR
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Sluuuu34 months
We should never miss...
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