logo
Big Ten idea of 24 or 28-team College Football Playoff is absolutely crazy

Big Ten idea of 24 or 28-team College Football Playoff is absolutely crazy

USA Today3 hours ago
The College Football Playoff has already expanded to 12 teams, completely changing the nature of the sport's postseason. Is that the right number for the long term? According to the leadership of USC's conference, perhaps not.
Per a recent report from ESPN, the Big Ten has reportedly floated the idea of expanding the playoff to 24, or even 28 teams. This would more than double the size of the current field, and give us a playoff six or seven times the size of what it was just two years ago.
'Under the proposal, conference championship games would be scrapped, and there would be a sizable chunk of automatic bids awarded to each of the Power Four conferences,' Craig Meyer of USA TODAY Sports wrote about the proposal. 'In a 28-team model, according to ESPN, the Big Ten and SEC would each receive seven bids to the playoff, while the ACC and Big 12 would each get five. That would leave two spots for the non-power conferences, plus two at-large selections. The field would be seeded by the College Football Playoff committee, which would also be tasked with picking the at-large inclusions.'
While it is highly unlikely that the proposal will come to pass anytime soon, the fact that it is even being talked about highlights where we are with college football in 2025. For better or worse, the playoff is priority No. 1 now, with rivalries, traditions, and conference races taking a back seat as a result.
As for how this would affect USC? The Trojans have yet to qualify for the College Football Playoff at either four or 12 teams. If they are unable to make a 28-team playoff with seven guaranteed bids for the Big Ten, then they have some serious issues on their hands.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

College Football Playoff to tweak the way it evaluates teams during the 2025 season
College Football Playoff to tweak the way it evaluates teams during the 2025 season

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

College Football Playoff to tweak the way it evaluates teams during the 2025 season

The College Football Playoff says it's making some changes to the way it evaluates teams during the 2025 college football season. The playoff announced Wednesday that it was making 'enhancements to the tools that the selection committee uses to assess schedule strength and how teams perform against their schedule. The changes come after 9-3 Alabama was the first team left out of the playoff and ended the season ranked ahead of 10-2 Miami. 'The current schedule strength metric has been adjusted to apply greater weight to games against strong opponents,' the playoff's release said. 'An additional metric, record strength, has been added to the selection committee's analysis to go beyond a team's schedule strength to assess how a team performed against that schedule. This metric rewards teams defeating high-quality opponents while minimizing the penalty for losing to such a team. Conversely, these changes will provide minimal reward for defeating a lower-quality opponent while imposing a greater penalty for losing to such a team.' Based on the paragraph above, we're not sure if the playoff committee would have changed the way it ranked anyone in the top 15 a year ago. Though the Crimson Tide beat Georgia, Missouri and LSU, two of its losses were to teams that finished the regular season at 6-6. Alabama's third loss came by 21 points to Oklahoma in the penultimate week of the season. Miami, meanwhile, lost on the road to a 7-5 Georgia Tech team and a 9-3 Syracuse team. The Hurricanes didn't have any wins over teams who were ranked at the time of those games, though Louisville and Duke finished the season at 9-4. The CFP also said that it wouldn't make a rule prohibiting teams' rankings from changing ahead of the final set of rankings if those teams are not playing on conference championship weekend. 'The selection committee reaffirmed that movement in the final week should be evidence-based and did not recommend creating a formal policy prohibiting such movement,' the playoff said. The first set of playoff rankings will be released on Tuesday, Nov. 4 and there will be five sets of rankings before the final rankings that set the playoff field will be released on Sunday, Dec. 7. The top four teams in the 12-team playoff will again get byes this season, though the top four teams will be the top four teams in the rankings, and not the four highest-ranked conference champions.

USC football countdown to kickoff—Matt Leinart in focus
USC football countdown to kickoff—Matt Leinart in focus

USA Today

time13 minutes ago

  • USA Today

USC football countdown to kickoff—Matt Leinart in focus

The countdown to USC's 2025 football season is officially on! The Trojans kick off their new campaign 11 days from today. You need something to help you while away the days and hours in the spring and summer. This is one way to do so. In this new series, countdown to kickoff, we will be counting down the days by highlighting a notable Trojan who wore each number. Today, we look at USC Heisman Trophy quarterback Matt Leinart. Position: Quarterback Years played at USC: 2001-2005 Career highlights: After redshirting in 2001 and serving as a backup behind Heisman winner Carson Palmer in 2002, Leinart won USC's starting quarterback job as a redshirt sophomore in 2003. His first start came in the road at Auburn, and he threw a touchdown on his first career pass attempt as he led the Trojans to a dominant 23-0 victory. Over the next three years, Leinart led USC to an incredible 37-2 record. The Trojans won the 2003 and 2004 national championships, giving Leinart as many national titles in his college career as losses. In 2005, they came up one game short of winning a third consecutive title, falling to Texas in an instant classic Rose Bowl. Leinart was named a first-team All-American and a Heisman finalist in both 2004 and 2005. In 2004, he won the Heisman Trophy, becoming the second USC quarterback to take home the honor in three years. He finished his time in Cardinal and Gold as USC's all-time leader in touchdown passes and No. 2 in passing yards—although he was later passed by Matt Barkley in both categories. After USC: The Arizona Cardinals selected Leinart with the 10th overall pick in the 2006 NFL Draft. Although he spent seven years in the league, Leinart's NFL career is widely viewed as a disappointment, as he never lived up to the hype that surrounded him coming out of USC. He finished his time in the league with a 57.1 completion percentage and 15 touchdown passes to 21 interceptions while spending time with Arizona, the Houston Texans, and the Arizona Cardinals. Since retiring from football, Leinart has been a regular presence around the Trojans program, serving as a mentor to numerous other USC quarterbacks. He also works as an analyst on Fox Sports's Big Noon Kickoff college football pregame show.

Michigan edge Derrick Moore lands on ESPN's Top 100 players list
Michigan edge Derrick Moore lands on ESPN's Top 100 players list

USA Today

time13 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Michigan edge Derrick Moore lands on ESPN's Top 100 players list

With just 10 days until its season-opener, No. 14 Michigan is set to wrap up fall camp and pivot towards game prep for Aug. 30's matchup against New Mexico. In preparation for that first full Saturday of the 2025 college football season, ESPN has released a list of the Top 100 players in the country heading into this fall. In years past, Michigan players have littered this list, but with most of the core of U-M's 2023 national championship run having moved on to the NFL, the Wolverines are represented by just one individual on this year's ESPN list: senior edge rusher Derrick Moore. Moore comes in as the No. 81 player nationally according to ESPN, as the senior looks to lead a somewhat new-look defensive line for Michigan in 2025. "After two straight seasons of consistent production for the Wolverines' defense, Moore heads into his senior season ready to once again be one of the key cogs in Wink Martindale's unit," ESPN's Paolo Uggetti wrote of Moore. "At Big Ten media days, Moore made news by joking that Ohio State's title was not a "real win" because the Buckeyes didn't beat Michigan." Expectations are high for the Michigan's defense under second-year coordinator Wink Martindale heading into this season. The Wolverines' defensive line is a major factor in that optimism, with Moore returning alongside fellow senior T.J. Guy to form one of the most dangerous edge rushing duos in the country. Defensive line is perhaps Michigan's deepest position group as well. Edge rushers Cameron Brandt and Dominic Nichols have made noise during fall camp and will rotate with Moore and Guy on the exterior. Meanwhile, on the inside, senior defensive tackle Rayshawn Benny brings All-Big Ten potential, while Clemson transfer Tre Williams also brings a lot of experience to the group. Michigan is expected to rotate up to six defensive tackles throughout the season, with Alabama transfer Damon Payne and home-grown talents Trey Pierce, Enow Etta and Ike Iwunnah are vying for snaps. Michigan will unleash its defensive line depth in earnest on Aug. 30, when the Wolverines welcome New Mexico to the The Big House.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store