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Here’s how expanded College Football Playoff works

Here's how expanded College Football Playoff works


The 2024 college football season will be fully under way Saturday with an impressive schedule that includes No.1 Georgia vs. No. 14 Clemson, No. 8 Penn State vs. West Virginia, No. 7 Notre Dame vs. No. 20 Texas A&M and No. 19 Miami vs. Florida.

Much of the chatter this season will be focused on the newly expanded, 12-team College Football Playoff.

Here are three frequently asked questions about the new format.

How will the expanded playoff format work?

Champions from the Power Four conferences — the Big 12, SEC, ACC and Big Ten — will get an automatic bid and first-round bye. The highest-ranked Group of Five champion — CBS Sports ranked them recently — will be seeded by a vote of the CFP committee, most likely 12th.

After that, the remaining seeds will be based on the final committee rankings, with seeds five, six, seven and eight hosting a first-round playoff game. So, the No. 5 seed would play the No. 12 seed, No. 6 would play No. 11, No. 7 would play No. 10 and No. 8 would play No. 9. 

The winners will advance to the quarterfinals to face seeds one through four in a New Year’s Six bowl. There is no re-seeding at any point in the playoff, so the No. 1 seed will always play the winner of the No. 8 vs No. 9 first round game rather than the lowest remaining seed.

ESPN recently posted what a 12-team bracket would have looked like at the end of the past two seasons.





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