University football playoffs could be in massive expansion.
This week, the Big Ten launched the idea of increasing the playoffs to 24 or 28 teams, according to Pete Thamel of ESPN, although the possibility is still an extinguished way.
The proposal would eliminate “the conference title games and (would offer) a large number of car offers for the four power leagues,” sources told Thamel.

Under the proposal of 28 teams from Commissioner Big Ten, Tony Petitti, the heavyweights of university football, Big Ten and the dry, each would obtain seven car offers.
The ACC and the Big 12 would each obtain five automotive offers, while two others would go to non-power conferences and two larger teams.
The committee of the playoffs would go to the teams and decide large -scale offers.
The latest CFP report comes while university football enters its second year with a playoff of 12 teams.

From this season, the qualifying teams will be classified 1-12 according to the classification of the selection committee rather than reserving the first four heads for the conference champions.
The new idea of Big Ten is an important step for the proposal of 14 or 16 teams, which was considered a probable landing place for the 2026 season.
The disagreement on the number of car offers and teams in general was a point of collision that retains negotiations on an expansion, by Thamel.
It doesn’t matter where the powers in place are earthy, the CFP is extremely likely to develop when the contract of the 12 -team playoff model ends after the 2025 season.