Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Guide to college football playoff

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A look at how the new College Football Playoff will work and what fans need to know about it:

THINK BCS Those involved in putting the playoff together and managing it cringe when it’s suggested that the new system is BCS 2.0, but to understand how it works it helps to keep in mind how the Bowl Championsh­ip Series worked.

In the BCS there were four, and later five games played each season. Only one, the national championsh­ip game, had anything to do with the national championsh­ip.

The others were glitzy bowl games played in showcase stadiums that tried to come up with compelling matchups. Six conference­s had automatic bids to those games, and other teams could earn automatic entry.

The new system will have a total of seven games, including two national semifinals and a final that will determine the champion. The four other games will be glitzy bowl games played in showcase stadiums that hopefully will have compelling matchups.

There will no longer be automatic bids for six conference champions, as was the case for the BCS. Now five conference­s (the Big Ten, Big 12, SEC, ACC and Pac-12) each have guaranteed a spot for their champions in either the semifinals or one of the four glitzy bowls. There also will be a guaranteed spot for the best team from the five FBS conference­s (American Athletic Conference, Mountain West, Sun Belt, Conference USA and Mid-American).

PICKING TEAMS A 13-member selection committee will pick the teams to play in the semifinals and set some of the matchups in those other bowl games. The committee also will release a weekly Top 25 starting, Oct. 21.The matchups will be revealed Dec. 7. The committee members:

Jeff Long (chairman), Arkansas athletic director.

Barry Alvarez, Wisconsin athletic director.

Lt. Gen. Mike Gould, former superinten­dent of the U.S. Air Force Academy.

Pat Haden, Southern Cal athletic director.

Tom Jernstedt, former NCAA executive vice president.

Oliver Luck, West Virginia athletic director.

Archie Manning, former Mississipp­i quarterbac­k.

Tom Osborne, former Nebraska coach and athletic director.

Dan Radakovich, Clemson athletic director.

Condoleezz­a Rice, Stanford professor and former secretary of state

Mike Tranghese, former Big East Conference commission­er.

Steve Wieberg, former USA Today college football reporter.

Tyrone Willingham, former head coach of Notre Dame, Stanford and Washington.

WHERE WILL THEY PLAY?

The semifinals will rotate through six bowl games: the Rose (Pasadena, Calif.), Orange (Miami), Sugar (New Orleans), Fiesta (Glendale, Ariz.), Cotton (Arlington, Texas) and Peach (Atlanta). When those games don’t host a semifinal, they will put on one of the glitzy bowls. The semifinals this season will be played in Pasadena and New Orleans.

The championsh­ip game will be bid out like the Super Bowl and move all over the country. The first one will be played at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, home of the Dallas Cowboys and the Cotton Bowl.

WHEN WILL THE PLAY?

Three games will be played back to back to back on New Year’s Eve, and there will be another triplehead­er on New Year’s Day. Adjustment­s will be made in the future if Dec. 31 or Jan. 1 falls on a Sunday so as to not conflict with the NFL.

The championsh­ip game will always be played on a Monday, at least a week after the semifinals.

This season the semifinals will be Jan. 1. The Rose will kick off around 4 p.m. Central. The Sugar around 7:30 p.m. Central. The championsh­ip game in Texas will be played the night of Jan. 12.

The Rose and Sugar bowls will always be played on New Year’s Day, so in most seasons the semifinals will be played on New Year’s Eve.

WHO’LL TELEVISE IT? All these games will be shown on ESPN. It reportedly paid about $7.2 billion for the entire package.

WHO GETS THAT MONEY? About 85 percent of it will go to the Big Five conference­s. The other five FBS leagues will split the rest, but don’t feel too badly for them. Most will be making about five times the amount they made with the BCS.

WHEN CAN IT BE CHANGED? The conference­s and ESPN worked out a 12-year deal based on a four-team playoff format, so it seems to be locked in for 12 years, but the structure is there for it to grow.

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