The ACC spent Wednesday trying to make sure last year’s playoff scare never happens again.
With the 12-team College Football Playoff now built around automatic bids for the five highest-ranked conference champions, the league can’t afford another season where its champion gets boxed out. That was the danger a year ago, when Miami kept chasing Notre Dame in the rankings after beating the Irish in Week 1, and the ACC’s own title-game path was headed toward a mess.
Duke ultimately won the league’s tiebreaker over Virginia, then got left out in favor of James Madison. Notre Dame was, rightfully, left scorned.
The ACC barely escaped an embarrassing outcome.
Now it has rewritten the rules.
At ACC Media Days, the league unveiled a new tiebreaker policy that puts head-to-head results first, but adds a second layer when that doesn’t settle things. In those cases, “when head-to-head competition cannot separate tied teams, the team with the strongest overall body of work will earn the opportunity to compete for the ACC Championship and the conference’s automatic qualifier to the College Football Playoff,” the statement reads.
Commissioner Jim Phillips said the league will lean on a team’s rating by Sports Source Analytics, the same system used in the CFP rankings.
The message is clear: if the ACC can’t separate teams cleanly on the field, it wants the best possible brand in the title game. In a 17-team league with both the ACC and SEC moving to nine-game schedules, that matters even more. And because the ACC has an uneven number of teams, not every school will play nine conference games, which only adds to the confusion.
That’s how a weird setup produced Duke’s trip to the championship game last season despite a 7-5 record, while Miami finished 10-2. The league has now acknowledged what should be obvious: if Miami is the team in that spot, the ACC’s playoff chances look much better. The same logic applies to Florida State.
And that’s where the frustration starts.
Florida State pushed hard to get out of the ACC, and the conference responded by adjusting its revenue distribution in ways that favor the top programs. Now it has handed those same programs another edge by making the title-game path friendlier. In practice, a tie now seems likely to break toward the biggest brand with the best shot at the playoff.
That should be a dream setup for Florida State. Instead, it keeps looking like a missed opportunity.
The league gave the Seminoles a better financial deal, and athletic director Michael Alford spent it on the stadium and the football facility, with Mike Norvell’s buyout looming next. Miami used its share to build the roster. Now the ACC has tilted the tiebreaker in a way that should help its heavyweights again, and Miami looks ready to cash in.
Florida State, meanwhile, feels farther away than ever.
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