Rich Rodriguez Just Took A Strong Stand On Bigger Playoff Access

Big 12 coaches are rallying for a revolutionary shift toward a 24-team college football playoff, aiming to increase opportunities and competitive excitement on par with March Madness.

FRISCO, Texas - When the Big 12’s 16 head coaches were asked in May how they felt about College Football Playoff expansion, the answer came back loud and clear: all 16 picked the 24-team model.

That doesn’t mean the format is done and dusted. It still needs approval from all parties before it can become reality. But the conference’s coaches made their preference obvious, and at Big 12 Media Days, two of them - West Virginia’s Rich Rodriguez and Arizona’s Brent Brennan - explained why they landed there.

Rodriguez wasn’t caught up in the exact number. For him, the bigger issue was opening the door wider.

“I personally don’t care if it’s 24 or 30 or 36 or 52 or 112, you know?” he said.

What mattered to him was access, and the chance for more Big 12 teams to get a real shot on the sport’s biggest stage. He pointed to how the system would have played out in 2025, when five Big 12 teams would have made a 24-team playoff: Texas Tech, BYU, Utah, Arizona and Houston.

“There are a lot more teams in our conference that could compete nationally against the other teams, and they would see that in a playoff. … You give them the chance to compete against these other so-called power leagues, and you’ll see some positive results in our league,” Rodriguez said.

Brennan’s case was different, but it landed in the same place. Arizona would have benefited from the format last year, turning what was a strong nine-win season with a bowl victory into a playoff appearance.

He said his thinking goes back to the chaos and reach of March Madness.

“I take it back to March Madness,” Brennan said. “What a fun thing that is for America.

What a fun thing that is as a sports fan. Why not have some level of that in college football?

Right now, it just seems so exclusive. Why don’t we create a format or a system that is more inclusive and gives more people a shot of playing on that big stage?”

The version being discussed now is not the same 24-team setup the Big Ten floated last year, which other conferences rejected because of the imbalance in automatic bids. This one is a 23+1 model, with the top 24 teams getting in, plus the highest-ranked team from the Group of 6 conferences.

The playoff path to this point has been a long one. Until 1991, national champions were decided by polls such as the Associated Press and the Coaches’ Poll.

The Bowl Coalition arrived in 1992 in an effort to match the No. 1 and No. 2 teams from the final AP poll in a bowl game. The Bowl Alliance followed in 1995, though both systems struggled to bring the Rose Bowl into the fold.

Then came the Bowl Championship Series in 1998, which included every conference and used computer rankings to determine the top two teams for the title game, rotating that game through the New Year’s Six bowls.

The College Football Playoff launched in 2014 with four teams and expanded to 12 in 2024.

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