Tag Archives: CFP

Michael Penix Jr. went out on his own terms — and that’s what matters in frustrating CFP ending – The Athletic

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Mike Mayock Just Uttered the Most Accurate Joe Burrow Description Ever. EVER | The Rich Eisen Show – The Rich Eisen Show

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Georgia thumps TCU, wins second straight CFP championship

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INGLEWOOD, Calif. — A rainy day around Los Angeles seemed an opportune time to step indoors for an art exhibit, and 72,628 wound up doing just that Monday — whether they wound up delighted or dejected. They saw the bruising art of American football calibrated to one of its grandest levels across the 153 years since a batch of brutes got it going on some scraggly field in New Jersey.

They saw Georgia, the American dynasty of the moment, take a meritorious group of Horned Frogs from TCU, wallop them by 65-7 inside SoFi Stadium, and turn them into something that looked an awful lot like prey. They saw Georgia claim the first repeat national championship of the College Football Playoff era (and the first overall in 10 years), become the fourth team ever to go 15-0, and reach 29-1 over two seasons between which the NFL spent late April raiding their roster for 15 players, including five defenders in the first round of the draft.

They saw collaborative greatness even if they did not see competitive drama.

“I hope [Georgia fans] understand the message I’m about to say,” said Kirby Smart, the seventh-year Georgia coach, former Georgia player and utmost Georgia man. “They can’t take it for granted. You can’t take opportunities like this for granted. And they showed up in full force. And they’d better never get tired of it because we need them.”

Two thousand miles from Athens, Ga., they saw things of which they might never tire. They saw a rugged bunch of Bulldogs sprinkle the field with both the elegant plays and inelegant stops necessary to elevate their college football to among the finest forms yet seen. Nine days after a 42-41 escape from Ohio State in a Peach Bowl national semifinal, they saw a lovely urgency that prompted TCU Coach Sonny Dykes to spot “a lot of pride in their performance in the way they played.”

They saw something — really something — that called to mind others that decorated their repeat titles with romps, such as Nebraska in the 1996 Fiesta Bowl (62-24) or Alabama in the 2013 Bowl Championship Series title game (42-14), and they saw a reinforcement of the towering reality that the best American football comes from the Southeast, the region of eight straight national championships from four different universities.

As it happened: Blow by blow of the Bulldogs’ rout

From the get-go Monday night, Georgia players ran in the open prairies of their own creation and reflective of their own array of threats, from 25-year-old quarterback Stetson Bennett IV streaming in through gaping space for a 21-yard touchdown run that opened the scoring, to Ladd McConkey catching a 37-yard touchdown pass from Bennett on which McConkey ran so unbothered he looked kind of lonely, to tight end Brock Bowers making precise catches of precise throws to amass seven catches for 152 yards and a masterful third-quarter touchdown.

If you needed Georgia to demonstrate it could whoosh down the field in a hurry, it could do that, with drives such as four plays for 70 yards, five for 57 or four for 55. If you needed it to show it could plod along effectively, it could do that, with 11 plays for 92 yards or 11 plays for 66 yards. If you wished for schemes that left people gapingly open, they had those, and if you wished for precision passes like Bennett’s 22-yard touchdown pass to a well-guarded Adonai Mitchell that made it 38-7 at halftime, they had those.

“[They] kind of just executed on our misalignments and kept scoring on those,” TCU linebacker Dee Winters said. “We kept beating ourselves up, just overthinking, trying to run to fast to the ball and things of that nature.”

In defense of that defense, people often undergo personality disruptions in the presence of greatness. Georgia hogged 589 yards with beautiful balance of 254 (ground) and 335 (air), and Bennett floated in the quarterback-rating clouds all game long before landing on a delirious 226.9, which Smart called “amazing” and “probably his best game of his career,” and Bennett passed 18 for 25 for 304 yards and four touchdowns, rushed for 39 and two more scores, and earned his second consecutive offensive MVP in national title games.

“And,” Smart said, “when you have a quarterback that can do the protections and check things and know what the defense is doing, yet still beat you with his feet, you have a high-level quarterback.”

Stetson Bennett always had star potential. Just ask Georgia’s scout team.

That’s a high-level quarterback from Georgia who walked on at Georgia in 2017, transferred from Georgia to a Mississippi junior college in 2018, then transferred back to Georgia in 2019 even as his own coaches joined in making him overlooked. Then all these years later, he’s a two-title quarterback who spent his final college quarter on the sideline with calm nerve endings after Smart called timeout to give Bennett a curtain call of which Bennett said, “The huddle, I told all the guys, ‘What are we doing? Why don’t we have a play?’” Then he grasped the reason and felt emotional “in the huddle, just as simple as it is, just one last huddle with the guys, you know?”

Yet all the while, something just as artistic happened elsewhere in the game stats, even if it was the kind of art that causes bruises. A TCU team (13-2) that only once gained fewer than 377 yards in a game all its giddy season suddenly gained 188. A darling of an unlikely finalist that rushed for 263 yards in a dreamy Fiesta Bowl semifinal win over Michigan suddenly rushed for 36. Where 32 pretty first downs went to Georgia, nine gnarly ones went to TCU. TCU’s best player, wide receiver Quentin Johnston, caught one pass for three yards. A portentous early sack saw TCU star quarterback Max Duggan with a harsh committee of defenders around him: Jalen Carter, Nazir Stackhouse and Smael Mondon.

“I mean, they were good up front,” Duggan said. “They had some good blitzes, some good pressures that got through. I held onto the ball a little bit too long, wasn’t getting through reads, was kind of causing trouble for the offensive line myself. It was kind of on me. But . . .”

But: “They had some good schemes.”

Brewer: TCU was a deserving finalist and college football is better with variety

“As a kid, you know, you always dream of moments like this,” said Georgia defensive back Javon Bullard, who intercepted two passes.

It all sent that former defender and defensive coach Smart on a near-soliloquy about his defensive scout team, and it all looked like TCU had come across something bigger and faster and mightier than it had seen. It’s something that reigns — and rains red-and-black — over the football country now, standing 81-15 in the seven-season tenure of Smart, the former Georgia defensive back who once coordinated the defense of another dynasty, Alabama. His latest Georgia team would find “a consistency of performance [that] is hard to find,” Smart said, and he would express admiration for that. And those watching Georgia, especially those in Georgia red and black, would know they had seen a level rare in all the years of the art.

“It seems like for the past three of four months,” Bennett said, “we’ve been looking to see if somebody could beat us, and we just ran out of games.”

And then he finished: “Nobody could.”

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Georgia Bulldogs cruise to second straight CFP championship

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — There was no epic comeback and no miraculous finish because there was no chance — not when the No. 1 Georgia Bulldogs asserted their sheer dominance from the onset and sucked the storybook ending right out from under No. 3 TCU with a 65-7 win in the College Football Playoff National Championship game at SoFi Stadium on Monday night.

In a game that featured two Heisman Trophy finalist quarterbacks, Georgia’s Stetson Bennett piled onto his legacy, leading the Bulldogs to back-to-back national titles for the first time since Alabama accomplished the feat in 2011-12.

And they made it look so easy.

With 13:25 left in the game and Georgia sitting comfortably with a 52-7 lead, Bennett unhooked his chin strap, pulled off his helmet with a smile and went to the sideline, where he was greeted with hugs and high-fives from coaches and teammates for capping his career with the sport’s biggest prize. Bennett accounted for six total touchdowns in the victory, four rushing and two passing.

Georgia beat this scrappy but talented TCU team every which way, using its powerful tight ends for big plays in the passing game, finding holes for long bursts in the running game, and pushing through the Horned Frogs’ offensive line to pressure TCU quarterback Max Duggan into costly mistakes. He threw two interceptions in the first half, including one with 36 seconds remaining that led to another Bennett touchdown pass two plays later, and a resounding 38-7 halftime lead for Georgia. It was the largest halftime lead in a national championship game since the 2002 BCS, when Miami led Nebraska 34-0.

Georgia, having the experience of winning it all just a year ago, looked comfortable and calm, while the Frogs, who finished 5-7 a year ago and were picked to finish seventh in the Big 12, appeared wide-eyed and out of sorts under first-year coach Sonny Dykes.

“You have to give Georgia a ton of credit, they did a tremendous job of getting their team ready to play,” Dykes said. “Those guys came out and played exceptionally well, they’ve got a very good football team, really talented.”

Georgia closed as a 13.5-point favorite, the largest favorite in a national title game since 1998, but TCU, which defied the odds on a weekly basis, had won five games when trailing after halftime this season while capturing the nation’s attention with its funky Hypnotoad and underdog status along the way.

Not this time.

This wasn’t about a fairytale ending. No, this was about what’s beginning at Georgia under Kirby Smart.

“A lot of grit. A lot of toughness. The word we use around our place is connection,” Smart said on the championship podium. “Every one of our guys knows we stay connected, we’re hard to beat.”

Since 1990, the only other schools to win back-to-back national titles are Nebraska (1994-95) and USC (2003-04). The comparisons between where Georgia is heading and what Alabama has done began last season, when the Bulldogs defeated the Tide to win their first national title in 41 years. Now that Georgia has won consecutive championships, there’s an undeniable tilt in the balance of power between the two programs. The debate will heighten on whether Georgia already has usurped the Crimson Tide, who have won six national titles in 12 seasons under Nick Saban, as the most elite program in the SEC.

Smart, who spent nine seasons as Saban’s defensive coordinator at Alabama before he was hired at Georgia, took Saban’s championship blueprint with him to Athens. He has now won five SEC East titles, two SEC championships and two national titles. He has lured in seven top-three signing classes and they were on full display Monday night.

For much of the first half, Bennett was throwing to open receivers without a defender in arm’s reach. He threw only four incompletions and accounted for two passing touchdowns and two rushing touchdowns in the half.

Georgia outgained TCU by 233 yards in the first half, the largest margin in any half of a national championship game since at least the 2004 season. The Bulldogs were shattering national championship records left and right. It was an utter meltdown for the Frogs, who were trying to win the program’s first national title since 1938.

“Really aggressive playing, not holding back anything, we wanted our kids to play without fear,” Smart said. “And all year I told them, I said ‘We ain’t getting hunted guys. … We’re doing the hunting. And hunting season’s almost over. We only got one more chance to hunt, and we hunted tonight.'”

When TCU knocked off No. 2 Michigan in the CFP semifinal at the Vrbo Fiesta Bowl, it continued to convert critics into believers. It only took one half for Georgia to make it clear, though, that the gap between the SEC’s most elite program and TCU was as large as the score indicated.

Midway through the third quarter, Georgia had run as many plays (45) as it had points, which explains why the team’s fans in SoFi Stadium seemed as comfortable as the lead they were staring at. Just about everything collapsed for TCU, including its defense in the first half, which allowed its most points in a first half since giving up 38 to Oklahoma in 2017.

Entering the second quarter, Georgia’s players were waving their arms on the field and their white towels on the sideline, gesturing to the fans to get into the game. They did it again at the start of the second half. Georgia’s 17 points were the most scored in the first quarter by a team in a BCS or CFP national championship game. Even with the resounding start, though, there was still a sense that TCU would put up a fight like it always does, and the first quarter was far too early to write off the Frogs. That happened in the second quarter.

TCU carved its identity this season through its relentless ability to find ways to win, but it was an insurmountable task against a program that has forged its identity as the best team in the country.

Again.

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Michigan Alum Rich Eisen Reacts to the Latest “Harbaugh-to-the-NFL” Reports | The Rich Eisen Show – The Rich Eisen Show

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No. 3 TCU knocks off No. 2 Michigan in 2022 Fiesta Bowl and all-time classic CFP semifinal

12:44 am, January 1, 2023

This game has already reached memorable levels and the final minutes are shaping up for an all-time finish. J.J. McCarthy found Roman Wilson in the endzone for his second touchdown through the air with Wilson reaching over 100 receiving yards.

12:41 am, January 1, 2023

Ohio State fans are filing into their seats at Mercedez-Benz Stadium. Even though the Ohio State-Georgia game is still in its pregame state, the Buckeye faithful are cheering, supporting TCU’s lead over rival Michigan in the other College Football Playoff semifinal.

12:14 am, January 1, 2023

Another huge play results in a touchdown, this time a short pass from Max Duggan to Quentin Johnson is followed by one missed tackle on the sideline and a sprint to the endzone. The scoring flurry continues, that’s now seven of the last nine drives to end with six points.

12:10 am, January 1, 2023

Roman Wilson ran it into the endzone from 18 yards out (punctuated by a helicopter ride) and Ronnie Wilson added the two-point conversion to cut the Wolverines’ deficit to just three points with nearly the entire final quarter to be played. All this came on the back of a TCU fumble on the final play of the third.

11:56 pm, December 31, 2022

How about 44 combined points in this third quarter?! The Michigan defense got overaggressive with its blitzes and Emari Demarcado made them pay, speeding past the rush and breaking a 69-yard run to the one-yard line. Max Duggan punched it in again for his second rushing touchdown of the night. Four plays later the Wolverines were in the end zone yet again after another deep throw completed by J.J. McCarthy.

 

11:50 pm, December 31, 2022

Three plays, six points for the Michigan offense, all thanks to the legs of J.J. McCarthy. A 39-yard scramble on second down was followed by a 20-yard scamper into the endzone as points have been plentiful in the third period. The Wolverines tried another QB run for the two-point conversion but came up just short.

11:45 pm, December 31, 2022

The game has once again got away from Michigan with a second interception returned for a touchdown in the game. J.J. McCarthy was picked off by Dee Winters, who added to an already great night (six tackles, two for loss) and turned it into a spectacular one. The Frogs lead by three scores yet again.

11:38 pm, December 31, 2022

The Horned Frogs have now scored more against Michigan than any team has managed this season, and this score came in just six plays and two minutes. This time, Max Duggan took a back seat to backup running back Emari Demarcado, who has filled in nicely for the hurt Kendre Miller. Demarcado ran the ball five straight plays for a total of 29 yards to get in the endzone and restore TCU’s two-score lead.

11:30 pm, December 31, 2022

J.J. McCarthy links up with Roman Wilson deep yet again (on a flea flicker!) and Michigan has made this a one-score game midway into the third quarter. The Wolverines got the ball back with favorable field position thanks to a Mike Sainristil interception of Max Duggan near midfield. We’ve got a game, folks. 

11:17 pm, December 31, 2022

Blake Moody chips home a 21-yard field goal for his third score on the night as the Wolverines once again reach the redzone and fail to reach paydirt. The Wolverines put together a good drive with plays of 20 and 43 yards, but the Horned Frogs once again formed a wall on the goal line and forced Michigan to leave points on the board. 

10:45 pm, December 31, 2022

Michigan’s Jake Moody nails a 59-yard field goal to close out the first half and pull the Wolverines within 21-6. Moody missed his first attempt, but TCU called timeout to try to ice him. 

Horned Frogs quarterback Max Duggan threw for 89 yards, a touchdown and a pick, adding 30 yards and a score on the ground. Safety Bud Clark returned an interception 41 yards to the house to open the scoring.

Michigan’s J.J. McCarthy had 148 passing yards and a pick, while running back Donovan Edwards has 90 rushing yards. The Wolverines had three turnovers between McCarthy’s pick-six, a fumble and one on downs. 

10:22 pm, December 31, 2022

The Max Duggan show continues in the Fiesta Bowl. On this last drive, he got it done with both his arm and his feet, scrambling for plus yardage and finding open receivers all over the field. On 2nd down from the six-yard line, Duggan escaped pressure by rolling to his right and fired a bullet on the run to Taye Barber, who found the endzone to give the Frogs a commanding lead nearing halftime.

9:59 pm, December 31, 2022

On the very next play after Rod Moore intercepted Max Duggan, Michigan took the top off the TCU defense with a 50-yard pass from J.J. McCarthy to Ronnie Wilson, setting up what looked to be a one-yard Michigan touchdown. But in a goal-line scrum, the ball was coughed up and recovered by the Horned Frogs! That’s the second redzone turnover for this Michigan offense.

9:44 pm, December 31, 2022

On first and goal from the one-yard line, who else was going to have his number called? The Heisman runner-up faked a handoff and ran left, lowering his shoulder into a defender as he crossed the plane to cap a 12-play, 76-yard drive that ate over five minutes of game time. The Horned Frogs are rolling in Glendale, Arizona.

For Michigan, it’s already the largest deficit the Wolverines have faced all season.



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Georgia rallies to beat Ohio State and reach CFP championship game

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ATLANTA — Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett, the former walk-on in his sixth season of college football, somehow managed to add to an already impressive legend Saturday night. After leading the Bulldogs to a national title a year ago, he rallied them with 18 fourth-quarter points, capping the comeback with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Adonai Mitchell with 54 seconds remaining.

The drama was not done in CFP semifinal, for Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud led the Buckeyes down the field for a game-winning field goal attempt. The drive stalled at the Georgia 32, where Noah Ruggles’s 50-yard kick was wide left, sealing the Bulldogs’ 42-41 Peach Bowl win.

The top-seeded Bulldogs will now face No. 3 seed Texas Christian in the CFP title game on Jan. 9 at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif.

If the Bulldogs win there, it would serve as the ultimate career ending for Bennett, the former scout team quarterback who transferred away, then returned as a scholarship player who spent years climbing the depth chart.

Stroud, a Heisman Trophy award finalist like Bennett, was remarkable. But Bennett had the final say, throwing for 398 yards and three touchdowns, none more important than the one he spun to Mitchell in the corner of the end zone.

Stroud completed 23 of 34 passes for 348 yards and four scores. It was not enough.

With a kiss from a (Horned) Frog, the CFP gets its first stunner

The Bulldogs had never needed to respond to a deficit as large as the one they faced Saturday night. Georgia twice fell into a 14-point hole, the second late in the third quarter at 38-24.

Marvin Harrison Jr., a sophomore but already one of the best receivers in the country, grabbed two of Stroud’s touchdown passes in the first half as the Buckeyes surged ahead, and teammate Emeka Egbuka combined with Harrison to make Ohio State’s passing attack an unstoppable force. These receivers, combined with Stroud’s savvy, are the engines of the Buckeyes’ offense, and they thrived against the best defense they had faced all season.

Georgia trimmed Ohio State’s comfortable lead to 38-35 with Arian Smith’s 76-yard touchdown grab and a successful pass to Ladd McConkey on a two-point conversion. With 8:41 left in the game, Stroud and the offense took the field, the standout quarterback led the Buckeyes toward the end zone, but they couldn’t finish. Ruggles hit a 48-yard field goal to give the Buckeyes a precarious six-point lead. And Bennett pounced on the opportunity.

Ohio State snuck into the playoff. The last time the Buckeyes took the field, they looked vulnerable, with Michigan pummeling them in the fourth quarter. That lopsided defeat in late November forced Ohio State’s players to stay home during conference championship weekend, then rely on Southern California’s blowout loss in the Pac-12 title game to earn a playoff berth.

Highlights and analysis from Georgia-Ohio State

Despite the flaws exposed by Ohio State’s archrival, particularly its defense allowing explosive plays, the Buckeyes have one of the few rosters in the country that can match up with Georgia’s talent. Both programs reside on an exclusive tier in which five-star prospects flock to campus each year and their brands pique the interest of recruits nationwide. Those players gave Ohio State a chance — and the ability to hold a lead through much of the game — but Georgia prevailed.

After ending the program’s title drought last year, the Bulldogs returned with force this season. Their game against Missouri, a four-point road win that required a stout defensive effort in the fourth quarter, was the only scare. The SEC title game against LSU prompted concerns about Georgia’s pass defense, but the Bulldogs still won by 20. They’ve stormed through what was supposed to be a difficult opener against Oregon, then their conference slate and the SEC title game earlier this month. But what matters most is the next game, because this season will ultimately be remembered as one that ended with a national title or a year the Bulldogs fell short.

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Michigan vs. Purdue score, takeaways: Wolverines clinch top-two CFP spot, win second straight Big Ten title

No. 2 Michigan clinched its second consecutive Big Ten championship and a top-two spot in the College Football Playoff with a 43-22 victory over Purdue in the Big Ten Championship Game. The Boilermakers and their dynamic offense ran nearly twice as ma ny plays as the Wolverines, but Michigan made critical stops to come away with their second conference title under coach Jim Harbaugh. 

Quarterback J.J. McCarthy couldn’t quite match his productivity from the team’s regular-season finale over Ohio State, but he threw three touchdowns in just 17 pass attempts as the Wolverines outscored Purdue 29-9 in the second half to continue their impressive run of closing efforts. Running back Donovan Edwards added 185 yards and a touchdown in the win. 

Purdue quarterback Aidan O’Connell played a strong game, but two backbreaking interceptions cost the Boilermakers during a key second-half run. The first came in the third quarter when O’Connell killed a drive in the red zone with an interception to Michigan’s Will Johnson. Three drives later, with Purdue down just nine points, O’Connell threw another pick within his own 20-yard line to set up an easy touchdown toss from McCarthy to receiver Ronnie Bell to push Michigan’s lead out to three scores. 

Michigan is one of the last two undefeated programs standing along with Georgia. The Bulldogs and Wolverines should easily slot in at No. 1 and 2, respectively, after becoming the only top-five teams to win conference championships. Now, all eyes switch to the Gaylord Texan Hotel in Grapevine as the College Football playoff committee decides Michigan’s eventual destination. 

Wasted opportunities

This Big Ten Championship Game was no coronation like Iowa’s 42-3 baptism against the Wolverines in 2021. Instead, Purdue played almost the perfect football game to beat Michigan but whiffed on some big chances in key spots. 

Purdue put together six drives of at least eight plays, an impressive achievement against Michigan’s physical defense. However, only one of the Boilermaker’s drives ended in a touchdown: the second drive of the game. Purdue settled for five field goals, including three of 35 yards or fewer. Michigan responded by scoring on all four trips to the red zone. The gap effectively decided the game. 

Donovan Edwards continues to emerge

Michigan running back Donovan Edwards missed part of the season with injuries and played second-fiddle to Blake Corum. But in two games with Corum out of the lineup, Edwards has proved definitively that he can be a workhorse running back for one of the best teams in the nation. 

Over the last two games against Ohio State and Purdue, Edwards has run for 401 yards and three touchdowns on just 47 carries while breaking off runs of 85 and 60 yards to swing games and lay knockout blows. Edwards has emerged as a legitimate weapon for Michigan’s offense and ensured the Wolverines that losing Corum isn’t a devastating blow. 

McCarthy stays solid

Michigan quarterback J.J. McCarthy put together an incredible performance against Ohio State. While his numbers weren’t quite as lofty in the Big Ten title win, McCarthy’s performance was critical in keeping Purdue on its toes during a competitive first half. 

McCarthy completed 11 of his 17 passes for 161 yards and three touchdowns in the win. He found Ronnie Bell five times for 67 yards and once again extended plays with his feet. Michigan has run the ball at a high level for two years, but McCarthy’s playmaking ability is the wild-card factor that the Wolverines have been waiting for as they await a potential national championship showdown against Georgia. 

Charlie Jones should be recognized as elite

Purdue wide receiver Charlie Jones was a little-used bit player at Iowa, but the Big Ten title game should be on repeat for NFL scouts. Jones was unbelievable, catching 13 passes for 165 yards and tripling his nearest teammate in receiving. Every time Purdue needed a big play, Jones managed to complete acrobatic catches around aggressive Michigan defensive backs. Jones will finish with nearly 1,400 yards receiving in a sensational senior season. Not many receivers nationally can boast 100-yard receiving games against Michigan, Iowa, Wisconsin and Penn State. 

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Rose Bowl agrees to amended deal allowing for early CFP expansion

The last remaining obstacle to expanding the College Football Playoff to 12 teams in the 2024 and 2025 seasons has been cleared.

A source told ESPN on Wednesday night that the Rose Bowl has agreed to terms that will pave the way for the College Football Playoff to expand in the final two seasons of the current contract — 2024 and 2025.

Any more steps toward an announcement are a formality, as the formal announcement of the playoff expansion beginning in 2024 is expected to be imminent.

In early September, the College Football Playoff board of managers voted to expand the College Football Playoff to 12 teams starting in 2026.

With nearly $450 million at stake in the final two years of the current contract, the path toward expanding in those two seasons has been fraught with complications.

But after months of haggling, getting the Rose Bowl on board loomed as the final step. The Rose Bowl needed to amend its contract as the other five so-called “contract bowls” needed to do in order to accommodate the new system. Ultimately, the Rose Bowl’s cooperation loomed as the final barrier.

A source told ESPN’s Heather Dinich earlier this week that the Rose Bowl was essentially given an ultimatum this week to agree to terms or risk being shut out of the next television contract, which begins in 2026.

The Rose Bowl’s requests for special treatment included an exclusive window for the game — a television window considered one of the most valuable in the sports — in years when the Rose Bowl wasn’t hosting a College Football Playoff game on New Year’s.

Essentially, sources told ESPN that CFP officials told the Rose Bowl this week that they’d make good faith efforts to work with them. But that would not include the exclusive window for the Rose Bowl that isn’t a part of the CFP. Any of the Rose Bowl’s requests that involved the next contract — be it financial or otherwise — were impossible to even address, as there’s no way to know what the television contracts for the next iteration of the CFP will look like.

Ultimately, if the Rose Bowl wanted to take part in the next version of the CFP, it needed to accept a role that didn’t include significant special favors. The upcoming announcement puts an end to the awkward and complex process to expand the College Football Playoff, which has epitomized the fractured and non-linear structure of college sports. To reach the September expansion decision to 12 teams, it took a significant momentum swings that included introducing a 12-team proposal in June of 2021. That eventually got shot down amid conference in-fighting, leading to second-guessing on why a potential model was announced before it was approved by all the constituents.

The following year, the college presidents who make up the CFP Board of Managers essentially decided to work backwards, first approving the 12-team model in September that would start in 2026. They then targeted 2024 and 2025, which was always going to be complicated because it required presidents from all 10 conferences and Notre Dame to agree unanimously.

Then the group of commissioners dove in for months of meetings, calls and all the details involving schedule, bowl games, game sits, the academic calendar and television contract complications. Three full months later, the Board of Managers pushed through all the issues — revenue distribution was a big one — until finally solving the Rose Bowl conundrum on Wednesday night. The 12-team playoff will start in the 2024 season, meaning just two more four-team playoffs — this year and next — before the sport’s postseason changes indelibly.

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Tennessee falls to South Carolina, USC keeps CFP hopes alive

USC quarterback Caleb Williams runs the ball against UCLA at the Rose Bowl on November 19, 2022 in Pasadena, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

No. 5 Tennessee was blown out 63-38 by South Carolina in the biggest upset of the day. The Vols defense was helpless against the Gamecocks’ prolific passing game.

That loss could potentially be great news for No. 7 USC, which held off UCLA 48-45 in a wild affair. That puts the Trojans at 10-1 with a spot in the Pac-12 title game secured. The Trojans’ playoff hopes are very much alive.

Meanwhile, it was a scary day for another group of playoff hopefuls as No. 2 Ohio State, No. 3 Michigan and No. 4 TCU all had to survive some close calls on Saturday.

Ohio State held off a furious late rally from Maryland to win 43-30, Michigan beat Illinois 19-17 on a field goal with 9 seconds to play, and TCU prevailed 29-28 over Baylor on their own last-second field goal.

Even No. 1 Georgia had a less-than-convincing 16-6 victory over Kentucky. In the end, everyone got the job done to get up a high-stakes final weekend of the regular season.

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