NCAAF: Report: College Football Playoff, ESPN reach $7.8B extension

Date:

Share post:


The College Football Playoff agreed to a six-year extension of its broadcast deal with ESPN worth $7.8 billion, The Athletic reported on Monday.

The deal keeps all CFP games on ESPN’s family of networks through the 2031 season, concluding with the national title game in January 2032.

However, the contract won’t be ratified until CFP leadership irons out the format of the tournament going forward.

The playoff will expand from four to 12 teams for the first time next year, and the original agreement was to include the six highest-ranked conference champions and the six highest-ranked at-large teams — the so-called 6+6 model.

With the Pac-12 set to fold following the current season, the number of power conferences shrinks, and some league commissioners are pushing to modify the format to 5+7, which most likely would keep the field at one “Group of Five” conference champion.

The extension kicks in for the 2026 season, but for the next two years ESPN still controls the rights to all games, including the new first round and quarterfinals.

According to the report, ESPN will have the right to “sublicense” CFP games over the course of the contract to other media organizations or streamers.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: Ex-Colorado CB Cormani McClain heading to Florida

Cormani McClain, the No. 1 cornerback prospect of the Class of 2023, is transferring from Colorado to Florida. Multiple...

NCAAF: UCLA to pay Cal $10M per year for Big Ten departure

UCLA's windfall for moving to the Big Ten Conference during the next academic year just got a little...

NFL: Amid turmoil, Jeff Fisher to lead Arena Football League

Former NFL coach Jeff Fisher has been named interim commissioner of the Arena Football League. Fisher is taking the...

NFL: Giants to make ‘Hard Knocks’ debut

The New York Giants will make their "Hard Knocks" debut this year on the long-running HBO docuseries, the...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.