The Daily Press

Conference­s and Notre Dame agree on 6-year deal to continue College Football Playoff through 2031

- By Ralph D. Russo AP College Football Writer

The nine Bowl Subdivisio­n conference­s and Notre Dame reached an agreement Friday on a six-year deal to continue the College Football Playoff through the 2031 season, a significan­t step that establishe­s a revenue-sharing plan and allows the CFP to finalize a media rights agreement.

Executive Director Bill Hancock said the agreement doesn’t lock in a format for the CFP for 2026 and beyond, but it guarantees at least a 12-team field and five conference­s having annual access to the playoff through 2031.

The playoff is expanding this season from four teams to 12, with the five highestran­ked conference champions — regardless of league — and seven at-large selections making up the field.

“Anything else regarding format is to be determined,” Hancock said.

The number of teams in the CFP could grow after the current contract with ESPN expires after the 2025 season, but for now there is no plan in place and no urgency to make a decision, Hancock said.

Hancock said the conference commission­ers who manage the

CFP might want to let the coming season play out and evaluate the first iteration of the 12team model.

“We’re going to take a deep breath, step back, and begin those conversati­ons whenever it’s appropriat­e,” he said.

Hancock said the Pac-12, which is set to operate as a two-team league with just Washington State and Oregon State next season, didn’t sign the agreement because of its uncertaint­y beyond 2025.

The CFP implemente­d a rule recently that a conference had to have at least eight teams to be eligible to qualify for access to the playoff.

The CFP has an agreement in principle with ESPN on a new media rights agreement worth $7.8 billion that adjusts the value of the last two years of the current 12-year contract to account for more playoff games and runs through 2031.

The CFP couldn’t complete that deal without the conference­s first agreeing to participat­e in the playoff and a revenue-sharing plan.

“We are still negotiatin­g with ESPN,” Hancock said. “We’re encouraged about the position we are in. But we still have work to do.”

Hancock declined to give details of the revenue-sharing agreement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States