The College Football Playoff expanded to 12 teams starting with the 2024-25 season. After the first expanded playoff, the debate continues.
The format:
- 12 teams: top 4 seeds get first-round byes
- Automatic qualifiers: conference champions from the top conferences
- At-large bids fill the remaining spots
- First round games hosted at the higher seed's campus
- Source: CFP official format document
Arguments for 12 teams:
- More teams means more meaningful regular season games. Week 12 matchups between 8-2 teams now matter for playoff positioning.
- Conference championship game losses are no longer death sentences.
- Group of 5 / smaller conference teams have a realistic path. TCU's 2022 run should not have been a one-off miracle.
- First-round campus games are electric atmospheres that bowl games cannot match.
Arguments against:
- The regular season loses some urgency. If an 8-4 team can make the playoff, does beating your rival in November matter as much?
- Blowouts in the first round. Talent gaps between 1-seed and 12-seed are enormous.
- Player health. Adding 1-3 extra games to an already grueling season increases injury risk for unpaid athletes.
- It benefits blue bloods more. Alabama at 8-4 gets in because of brand; a Group of 5 at 11-1 gets left out.
What the first expanded playoff showed:
- First-round campus games were phenomenal. Huge crowds, incredible atmospheres.
- Some first-round games were competitive. Others were blowouts.
- The quarterfinal and semifinal rounds produced great football.
Sources:
- CFP — official format and selection criteria
- ESPN — playoff analysis
- Sports Reference — historical comparison data