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Report: ACC Opposes Potential Playoff Changes from Big Ten, SEC

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The ACC.

There is a lot at stake when it comes to the future of the College Football Playoff next season — and in the years beyond — and the ACC is directly involved.

The Big Ten and SEC are pushing to alter seeding in the upcoming College Football Playoff, according to a report by Ross Dellenger of Yahoo! Sports. The “Power Two” are looking to eliminate the conference byes and usher in a seeding that aligns directly with the selection committee’s rankings.

But Dellenger further reported that the 10 FBS leagues, and Notre Dame, will have to agree in order to bring about change in the 2025-26 season. And the ACC — and Big 12 — isn’t in agreement with losing an automatic bye.

“It’s not as if this system is so foreign,” Jim Phillips said via Yahoo! Sports. “This shouldn’t be used as a convenient rationale. It deserves a review, and we should talk about how it went. But it’s not some exotic structure.”

The CFP Management Committee, which includes the 10 FBS conference commissioners and the Notre Dame athletic director, is set to meet next week. And there’s a lot at stake.

Dellenger previously reported that the Big Ten and SEC are working to expand the CFP to 14 or 16 teams, assign multiple automatic qualifiers per league (with as many as four each for the Big Ten and SEC) and finalize a lucrative scheduling agreement from television partners.

Clemson and SMU, who played in the ACC championship game a couple of weeks ago, earned the 11 and 12 seeds in the latest College Football Playoff, respectively. And they both went down in the first round.

The ACC hasn’t had a national champion since Clemson won the CFP in 2018-19. There have been two ACC national champions in the CFP era, and the Tigers won both. Florida State, in the inaugural CFP in 2014-15, is the only other ACC school to qualify.

The ACC didn’t have a team in the final three four-team CFPs, and while two teams made the first 12-team Playoff, it obviously didn’t go well.

There’s an obvious gap between the SEC and Big Ten and the rest of college football, even when looking at the ACC and Big 12, and the performances this season won’t do much to change anyone’s mind — fairly or unfairly.

Sandy Schall, Coldwell Banker

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