The Columbus Dispatch

How Notre Dame would benefit from 12-team playoff

- Eric Hansen

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — For the Notre Dame’s gotta join a conference crowd, Thursday was like Christmas.

Until they realized it really was a lot more like Groundhog Day.

The first meaningful and seismic stride toward expanding the seven-yearold College Football Playoff from four teams to 12 — likely in 2023 — is neither a threat nor an enticement for Notre Dame to reconsider its independen­t status in football.

Beyond that, the proposal from a fourperson committee that included Notre Dame athletics director Jack Swarbrick presents some give and take for the Irish in the new format, but ultimately a perceived net gain.

Now remember this is still in the proposal stage, with all 10 Football Bowl Subdivisio­n conference commission­ers and Swarbrick meeting next week in Chicago to nudge it along to university presidents and chancellor­s. That group would then put it to a vote June 22.

A positive outcome at that level would bring on a period to study nuances, details and possible alternativ­es, with September the earliest a final decision would come.

The model is not without its flaws and legitimate concerns, especially in the areas of its perpetual shotgun marriage to the bowl system and the additional wear and tear on student-athletes.

It's also not necessaril­y a panacea for parity, but it does widen the gateway for opportunit­y and inclusion. As Swarbrick pointed out, 78% of the playoff slots in its first seven years were taken by five teams.

Yet a major momentum shift from what Swarbrick, Big 12 commission­er Bob Bowlsby, SEC commission­er Greg Sankey and Mountain West commission­er Craig Thompson concocted seems unlikely.

What it looks like: h The field will be made up of the six highest-ranked conference champions and six at-large teams. No particular conference is guaranteed a spot for its champion, so last season the Pac-12 and Oregon, for instance, would have been left out for Sun Belt titleist Coastal Carolina.

There also is no limit on the number of teams from a particular conference to fill

at-large spots.

h The four highest-ranked conference champions would receive the four byes. The other two conference champs and the six at-large teams would be slotted in positions 5-12, based on the final CFP rankings.

h Seeds 5-8 would host first-round games at their home stadiums. All subsequent rounds would be at neutral sites, utilizing the bowl system.

“I look forward to never hearing again about how we played one less game or don't have a conference championsh­ip,” Swarbrick quipped when pressed Thursday about how he felt about the Irish being blocked from a chance to earn a firstround bye.

But having six at-large spots beats having to compete for four — or two. That's the number that would have been available had the working group pushed out an eight-team model instead. That's a big win for Notre Dame.

Under this format, the 2015 Irish would have made the playoff.

Hosting a team for a first-round game in December in South Bend weather isn't better than a bye, but it is a huge advantage, especially if the opponent is from

somewhere where snow doesn't exist.

Giving up the prospect of a bye hurts, but there's also a sense of balance and fairness in that equation, as Swarbrick explained.

“From my perspectiv­e, it was an appropriat­e trade-off to get a model that I thought was the right one for college football,” he said. “Even though we don't play in a conference, I recognize the importance of strong conference­s and providing opportunit­y to the (Group of 5 conference­s). We wanted to do that.

“And then finally, as I said somewhat sarcastica­lly earlier in this, I do think it's helpful to us to be able to say, ‘Look, Alabama puts its position at risk in its (conference) title game, or Oklahoma puts its position at risk in its conference title game.'

“We're doing the same thing in the first round. We are on par in that regard, other than not enjoying a potential 1 through 4 seed.

“I didn't go into it thinking 12 (teams), and I certainly wasn't thinking about (the) implicatio­ns of 12. But you needed to keep the broader interest of the game in mind, and we all understood that.”

Swarbrick also understand­s that his

aggressive scheduling for the next decade won't likely come back to bite him or his successor. The Irish play Clemson and Ohio State in the 2023 regular season — in likely the first year for the new expanded format — and could conceivabl­y still make the playoff even if they lost both games.

No way does that happen in a fourteam playoff world.

Notre Dame opens the 2024 season on the road at Texas A&M. Clemson pops up twice more in the 2020s, while Alabama appears on the schedule in 2029 and 2030.

If joining a conference meant perhaps having to beat Clemson twice each year to get a first-round bye, well we saw that movie already.

We also know from the current playoff format, Notre Dame's most efficient path to winning playoff games and really competing for a national title is aiming higher in recruiting and hitting those goals. Interestin­gly, the most consequent­ial recruiting month in at least the Brian Kelly Era is already unfolding. And with admittedly a lot left to play out, it's feeling more like Christmas than Groundhog Day.

 ?? MICHAEL CATERINA/BEND TRIBUNE ?? Will a new College Football Playoff format mean happier days ahead for Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick and coach Brian Kelly?
MICHAEL CATERINA/BEND TRIBUNE Will a new College Football Playoff format mean happier days ahead for Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick and coach Brian Kelly?

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