The College Football Playoff’s 12-team expansion is already under fire, with ESPN’s Michael Wilbon calling out his own network for prioritizing profits over practicality.
Pardon The Interruption's Michael Wilbon recently called out his employer for their greed surrounding the expansion of the college football playoff, and he's not wrong. Some people, me included, thought moving to a six—or eight-team playoff would've been an excellent transition from four.
In 10 seasons, top-seeded teams in both the AFC and NFC were 14-4 in the postseason, combining for a 28-8 overall record. Top seeds won by an average of 14.1 points per game, and their losses came by an average of 5.8 points per game.
After years of waiting for a bigger and better College Football Playoff, the moment is finally here. The field has been whittled from 12 to eight to four and now just two teams. Ohio State and ...
NICK SABAN AND THE REST OF THE 2025 COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME CLASS. The 2025 College Football Hall of Fame class is full of bi
The College Football Playoff has dramatically shifted the college ... The Huskies' offense was led by its QB, Michael Penix Jr., who put on a show, with 430 passing yards and two passing touchdowns.
The Wild Card Round wasn't the most exciting NFL playoff weekend ever. Five of the six games were blowouts. I had high hopes coming in, and they very much went unfulfilled. I highly, highly doubt that happens again this weekend.
For all the flag-planting of rivalry week, Ohio State is proving teams can overcome multiple losses (including the big one) on way to glory.
Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon discuss Joel Embiid's injury update, JuJu Watkins 51 point performance, and if Caleb Williams can play his hand in this upcoming draft. Learn more about your ad ...
The title-winning teams from Alabama, Clemson, Georgia, Ohio State, Michigan and LSU ranked against each other
The College Football Playoff, during its decade-plus existence, has had no shortage of detractors. The 12-team format poured gasoline on the fire with a dud of a first round, which saw all four higher-seeded and home-based teams win in dominant fashion.
The College Football Playoff committee has been under constant scrutiny over the past month, as fans grew frustrated with the twelve teams who were let into the tournament to decide a champion, and the sheer number of blowouts that took place in the first two rounds.