Commissioners get expansion ideas out

ROSEMONT, Ill. -- College Football Playoff expansion took another step forward Friday as the full group of commissioners who manage the postseason system wrapped up two days of digging into a plan for a 12-team format that would revamp the national championship.

The first debate about what the final version of a new playoff will look like has emerged: The Pac-12 is pushing for each Power 5 conference to receive an automatic berth.

Expect a lot more negotiating to come.

"This is the beginning of a long, ongoing process," Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby said as he departed Big Ten headquarters in suburban Chicago. "It's going to be months before we come to any closure on any of this."

There is no announced timeline and the earliest expansion would be possible is 2023 if there are no big snags. Change could be as far out as the 2026 season after the current media rights contract with ESPN expires. The proposal put forth by a subcommittee that included Bowlsby does not address when a new format could be implemented.

"The working group intentionally did not get into it. They wanted to put a proposal in front of the management committee that the committee could consider without having the shackles of trying to figure out when to implement it," CFP Executive Director Bill Hancock said. "The group this week didn't get into implementation time in a significant way. That will come later."

Last week, the CFP unveiled a plan to expand from four to 12 teams. Six spots would be reserved for the highest-ranked conference champions, but no league automatically would qualify. The other six teams would be chosen at-large from the selection committee's rankings. The plan calls for first-round games on campuses, and quarterfinal and semifinal games played in bowls.

The detailed proposal was developed over two years by four members of the CFP management committee: Bowlsby, SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey, Notre Dame Athletic Director Jack Swarbrick and Mountain West Commissioner Craig Thompson.

"You can imagine how many pages of notes I have on two years of work. And that's what we're trying to bring everybody else up to speed with," Bowlsby said.

This week's meeting was the first chance for the entire 11-person management committee to discuss the proposal in person. The other members include the commissioners of the Big Ten, Pac-12, Atlantic Coast Conference, American Athletic Conference, Conference USA, Sun Belt and Mid-American Conference.

"Four of us were at one place. Now I think we have 11 of us at that place," Bowlsby said. "Now, we move to talk to the presidents and see if we can get them at that place."

Incoming Pac-12 Commissioner George Kliavkoff, whose represents the only Power 5 conference to publicly support playoff expansion, left his first CFP meeting encouraged.

"The good news is everyone who's on this conference committee supports expansion. So we're aligned on that," said Kliavkoff, who attended the meeting along with outgoing Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott.

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