The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Realignmen­t leaves bids for conference champs in flux

- By Ralph D. Russo

College Football Playoff managers will meet this week, but with the future of the Pac-12 still unsettled, it will be difficult to make a final decision on whether the number of places reserved for conference champions in the soon-to-be expanded field should be six or five.

The 10 conference commission­ers and Notre Dame’s ath- letic director that comprise the CFP management com- mittee will gather today and Wednesday at the Big Ten offices just outside Chicago.

Since the last CFP meet- ing, Stanford and California announced they will be exiting the Pac-12 for the Atlantic Coast Conference next year. Still, Oregon State and Wash- ington State remain committed to rebuilding the Pac-12.

The playoff expands from four teams to 12 next sea- son and the managers have already agreed the field should be made up of the six highest ranked confer- ence champions and six at-large selections, regard- less of league.

But that was before the Pac- 12 was torn down by confer- ence realignmen­t.

“Six and six worked at the time we were making the deci- sion, but circumstan­ces have changed,” Southeaste­rn Con- ference Commission­er Greg Sankey said Saturday night at the Arkansas-lsu game.

The Pac-12 has status as a Power Five conference for two more years under the cur- rent CFP contract. That status comes with much larger revenue payouts than that of the so-called Group of Five conference­s.

Whether there will be a Pac- 12 next year remains murky, but it is clear a new Pac-12 will not be as strong as the cur- rent one, Sankey said.

“There is a need for clar- ity on what’s going to happen out West, but the strength of the Pac-12 — and, I mean this respectful­ly to Washing- ton State and Oregon State ... that strength has migrated into other conference­s,” San- key said.

The Pac-12 has six ranked teams this week, including Washington State at No. 16 and Oregon State at No. 19.

“And if you look at a six- and-six format from (2024) forward, the sixth-best con- ference champion would be unranked some years, or in the 20s, and you’re dis- placing now the 11th-ranked team,” Sankey said. “That just doesn’t work, and we have to understand that. And that’s not meant to be disrespect­ful to anyone. That’s just meant to acknowledg­e new realities.”

Making a change in the format for the next two seasons would require a unanimous vote among the 11 manag- ers. Not everyone believes the number of conference champions included in the field should change because the number or compositio­n of conference­s is about to change.

“There’s only going to be a (Power Four), we get that. We understand that,” Ameri- can Athletic Conference Com- missioner Mike Aresco said. “There might be calls for let’s change this to 5-7, but for the two years remaining where you need unanimity, why would we give up the 6-6, where we would have some- what greater access?”

There are no contracts in place for the College Football Playoff beyond 2025. While the 12-team format has been agreed upon, other aspects of the model and how the CFP is managed could be changed. That includes the need for unanimity among the par- ticipating conference­s.

Aresco and others in the Group of Five might want to protect the 6-6 model in the short-term, but it could come at the risk of the power con- ferences shrinking access to the playoff even more drasti- cally in the long-term.

“We will fight to keep 6-6 for at least a couple of years,” Aresco said. “Beyond that, I think the key for us is to make sure there are at least five automatics.”

The university leaders of Oregon State and Washington State said last week they hope to have the clarity they need about the Pac-12′s finances and who has the legal right to run the conference in the next 30 days.

 ?? YOUNG KWAK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Saturday’s Washington State-oregon State game wasn’t a title game, but with the Pac-12 dismantlin­g, the future of conference champ bids is uncertain.
YOUNG KWAK/ASSOCIATED PRESS Saturday’s Washington State-oregon State game wasn’t a title game, but with the Pac-12 dismantlin­g, the future of conference champ bids is uncertain.

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