College Football Playoff Executives Expected to Adopt a Straight-Seeding Model for the 2025 Playoff

College football’s postseason format could change on Thursday.

According to Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger, College Football Playoff executives have a scheduled call Thursday afternoon and are expected to adopt a straight-seeding model for the 2025 playoff.

The executives’ adoption would feature a financial compromise, Dellenger reported. In the current 12-team format, the College Football Playoff committee designates the top four seeds to the four best conference champions. However, in the new format, the committee would determine all 12 seeds but distribute the same revenue ($8 million) to the four best conference champions, even if those programs fall outside the top four seeds.

Had the College Football Playoff committee used the pending new format in the 2024 playoff, here’s how the 12 seeds would have shaken out:

  1. Oregon
  2. Georgia
  3. Texas
  4. Penn State
  5. Notre Dame
  6. Ohio State
  7. Tennessee
  8. Indiana
  9. Boise State
  10. SMU
  11. Arizona State
  12. Clemson

As a result, Ohio State’s path to its ninth national title, assuming the higher seeds win their matchups, would have been Arizona State, Texas, Penn State and Oregon.

While CFP executives may discuss the CFP format for 2026 and beyond on Thursday, Dellenger reported that the executives are not expected to make a formal decision. The Big Ten and SEC, which Dellenger reported “control” the future format, currently support a 16-team playoff that grants each conference twice as many automatic qualifiers (four) as the ACC and Big 12 (two).

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