SEC teams falter in the College Football Playoff, leaving fans questioning bold pregame statements by Commissioner Greg Sankey.
Leave it be. Enjoy the show. Let a good thing be a good thing. This 12-team College Football Playoff format works beautifully.
Notre Dame's athletic director said "I think there's a chance" there will be tweaks to the way the College Football Playoff awards byes next year — an issue that will be discussed this weekend but that would need unanimous approval from the 10 conferences and the Fighting Irish.
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey "absolutely" wants changes to the College Football Playoff format in 2025, according to The Athletic's Seth Emerson. Sankey argues the 12-team playoff was initially ...
College football's 2025 season is filled with marquee matchups. In the expanded College Football Playoff era, every weekend is vital toward building resumes. Many of the preseason ranked teams face out-of-conference showdowns that could be the difference in landing as an at-large or just missing out.
Oh, the bilious anger with which Ohio State football fans chanted their coach’s name after a 13-10 upset loss to mega-rival Michigan at Ohio Stadium to end the regular season. Only they didn’t chant “fire” at all, but rather a different four-letter F-word.
Eliminating the CFP’s rule designating the top four seeds and first-round byes to conference champions won't likely change next year.
College football will again have a break from SEC dominance with a national championship showdown Monday between Notre Dame and Ohio State.
After calling all of Notre Dame's Playoff games for ESPN, McElory has a unique perspective on the Fighting Irish.
The SEC's football national title drought is officially at 2 years. Does that mean the dominance is over? Don't bet on it.
A couple of years ago, colleague Andy Nesbitt, writing for For The Win, authored an article arguing that college football’s national championship game being on Monday night is one of the dumbest things in sports.
In 10 seasons, top-seeded teams in both the AFC and NFC were 14-4 in the postseason, combining for a 28-8 overall record. Top seeds won by an average of 14.1 points per game, and their losses came by an average of 5.8 points per game.