College Football Playoff expansion to 24 teams gains momentum as coaches back major overhaul

College football coaches are moving forward in favor of maximum playoff expansion — potentially to 24 teams — along with several other sweeping changes across the sport, Yahoo Sports reported Tuesday.

According to American Football Coaches Association executive director Craig Bohl, the AFCA voted last week to recommend increasing the CFP bracket to a maximum number of teams, do away with conference championship games, end the season during the second week of January and protect the Army-Navy game’s exclusive time window.

The AFCA has not publicly revealed its decisions on those changes, but coaches across college football have made their opinions clear.

Earlier this year, decision-makers in the Big Ten and the SEC were at a stalemate over future CFP formats. The Big Ten prefers a 24-team field with multiple automatic qualifiers per conference, while the SEC prefers a 16-team “5+11” format. Under the SEC’s previously proposed model, which then had the backing of the ACC and Big 12 before support shifted toward the 24-team idea, guaranteed bids would go to the five highest-ranked conference champions. The Big Ten prefers a 24-team bracket with ongoing debate on how those teams are chosen.

One Big Ten model suggests one automatic qualifier — the highest-ranked Group of Six champion — and 23 at-large selections determined by the selection committee’s CFP rankings. Theoretically, this format would reward the Big Ten and SEC, given the strength-of-schedule advantages they have over the other Power Four leagues.

The AFCA is the primary professional organization for football coaches at all levels, boasting over 10,000 members worldwide and representing coaches from the NFL, NCAA, NAIA, NJCAA, and high school levels.

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