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The CFP expanded to a 12-team format for the 2024 and 2025 seasons. [20] [21] Features of the expanded playoff include: [22] Guaranteed bids for the top five conference champions in the CFP rankings; no conference will have an automatic bid, a conference must have a minimum of eight members for its champion to be eligible for a guaranteed bid.
Since 2025, the game is held on the third Monday of January and serves as the final game of the College Football Playoff (CFP), a bracket tournament between the top five ranked conference champions, and the top 7 ranked at-large teams in the country that are selected by a playoff committee, which was established as a successor to the Bowl ...
Davis selected national champions for each year dating back to college football's inaugural season in 1869, for which he selected the sole competitors Princeton and Rutgers as co-champions. [14] Similar retrospective analysis was undertaken in the 1940s by Bill Schroeder of the Helms Athletic Foundation and in Deke Houlgate's The Football ...
The following data is current through the end of the 2024 season, which culminated in the 2025 College Football Playoff National Championship.The following list reflects the records according to the NCAA.
Here is the first CFP projected bracket. Find out who is in and who is on the bubble. ... History of CFP Champions: 2014: No. 4 Ohio State def. No. 2 Oregon, 42-20. 2015: ...
L CFP Semifinal at Fiesta Bowl 45–51 vs. TCU: Jim Harbaugh: 2023 Michigan* 9–0: 15–0: No. 1: No. 1: W CFP Semifinal Rose Bowl 27–20 vs. Alabama W CFP National Championship 34–13 vs. Washington: Jim Harbaugh: 2024 Oregon: 9–0: 13–1: No. 1: No. 1: L CFP Quarterfinal Rose Bowl 21–41 vs. Ohio State: Dan Lanning
The round-by-round CFP numbers have climbed steadily this postseason, from 10.6 million in the first round to 16.9 million in the quarterfinals to 19.2 million in the semifinals.
In the inaugural season of Division I-AA, the 1978 postseason included just four teams; three regional champions (East, West, and South) plus an at-large selection. [1] The field doubled to eight teams in 1981, with champions of five conferences—Big Sky, Mid-Eastern, Ohio Valley, Southwestern, and Yankee—receiving automatic bids. [2]