College Football Playoff Schedule Released for 2024 Season

College Football Playoff Schedule Released for 2024 Season

The College Football Playoff released the full schedule for the playoff games in 2024 on Wednesday, giving college football fans a full six months to prepare for watch parties.

The announcement included dates, kickoff times and broadcast information regarding the CFP games. This year's announcement is particularly significant as it's the first year the CFP is doing a 12-team format. The schedule will look different because of that, with a first round and quarterfinals bracket introduced this year.

Take a look at the schedule for the College Football Playoff this upcoming season, all the way up until the National Championship is played on Monday, Jan. 20.

The College Football Playoff will kick off on Friday, Dec. 20 with one first round game being played, followed by the three other first round games taking place on Saturday, Dec. 21.

With 12 teams now competing for the national title, the CFP will be played over the course of a month.

Here's the full broadcast schedule for the playoffs.

Playoff Game

Date

Time

Channel

Playoff First Round

Friday, Dec. 20

8 p.m. ET

ABC/ESPN

Playoff First Round

Saturday, Dec. 21

12 p.m. ET

TNT

Playoff First Round

Saturday, Dec. 21

4 p.m. ET

TNT

Playoff First Round

Saturday, Dec. 21

8 p.m. ET

ABC/ESPN

Playoff Quarterfinals

Tuesday, Dec. 31

7:30 p.m. ET

ESPN

Playoff Quarterfinals

Wednesday, Jan. 1

1 p.m. ET

ESPN

Playoff Quarterfinals

Wednesday, Jan. 1

5 p.m. ET

ESPN

Playoff Quarterfinals

Wednesday, Jan. 1

8:45 p.m. ET

ESPN

Playoff Semifinals

Thursday, Jan. 9

7:30 p.m. ET

ESPN

Playoff Semifinals

Friday, Jan. 10

7:30 p.m. ET

ESPN

National Championship

Monday, Jan. 20

7:30 p.m. ET

ESPN

The College Football Playoff adopted a new team format for the 2024–25 season, so the CFP will look different to fans. The top four ranked teams earn a bye for the first round, meaning the last eight teams will face off in the first round.

The first round will consist of four matchups: No. 5 vs. No. 12, No. 6 vs. No. 11, No. 7 vs. No. 10 and No. 8 vs. No. 9. The winning teams will advance to the quarterfinals to face the top four teams.

The quarterfinal matchups will be played as the Fiesta Bowl, Peach Bowl, Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl. The Cotton Bowl and the Orange Bowl will act as the semifinals matchup spots.

The 12 teams will be decided by the five highest-ranked conference champions, who receive automatic bids, followed by the seven highest-ranked teams remaining. The top four ranked teams will receive byes in the first round of the playoffs.

The 2023 season still followed the four-team format. But, to help fans understand a bit better about what the 12-team format will look like, here's what last year's playoffs would've turned out with the 12-team format.

No. 1 Michigan, No. 2 Washington, No. 3 Texas and No. 4 Alabama would've all received byes for the first round. They also all four ranked highest in their respective conferences.

No. 5 Florida State would've faced No. 12 Liberty, a team that jumped to the 12th spot over Oklahoma because they won their conference. The rest of the matchups would've been No. 6 Georgia vs. No. 11 Ole Miss, No. 7 Ohio State vs. No. 10 Penn State and No. 8 Oregon vs. No. 9 Missouri.

The National Championship, which takes place on Monday, Jan. 20, will be played in Atlanta, Ga. at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, where the New Orleans Saints play.

2024 National Championship Odds: Georgia Favored to Win First Expanded College Football Playoff

2024 National Championship Odds: Georgia Favored to Win First Expanded College Football Playoff

College football season is drawing closer, and the 2024 season is set to be the most unique one yet.

The 2024 College Football Playoff will expand to 12 teams this season, featuring the top four ranked conference champion teams receiving a first round BYE with teams seeded five through 12 featuring the other Power 5 conference champion and the next six highest ranked teams in the eyes of the College Football Playoff Committee.

This is a big change that will open up the field for many schools to compete on the biggest stage for a National Championship, but the odds at the top remain quite the same, with Georgia as the clear favorite, the winner of two of the past three Naitonal Championships.

However, the odds are shifting for more teams further down the board, once viewed as complete non factors in the National Championship picture, as seen below.

Odds courtesy of FanDuel Sportsbook

Georgia narrowly missed out on the opportunity to three-peat in the CFP last season, but Kirby Smart's bunch are expected to be right in the mix in this season, listed as the favorite with potential No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 Carson Beck under center.

Behind Georgia is a handful of loaded teams, including Ohio State, who will look to prevail in the new-look Big Ten with Kansas State transfer Will Howard replacing Kyle McCord as well as Ole Miss transfer Quinshon Judkins joining the likes of TreVeyon Henerson in the backfield to mkae a potent offense around an elite defense.

Two teams on the move are expected to adjust quickly with Texas jumping to the SEC this season with Quinn Ewers at quarterback in hopes of making it back to the CFP and into the National Championship picture. In addition, Oregon is now in the Big Ten with Oklahoma transfer filling in for now Denver Broncos quarterback Bo Nix and the Ducks firmly in the mix to breakthrough this season after failing to make the CFP since 2014.

While the cream will likely rise to the top, for the first time ever, there are more teams truly viable to make the postseason, and with that more opportunities for teams to make a run in the postseason, more similar to the NFL style.

Overall, there are 10 teams with odds of +2500 or shorter, making this by default the most wide open College Football Playoff field in history.

Stay tuned for more coverage this offseason ahead of what should be an epic season in the first of the new college football.

Game odds refresh periodically and are subject to change.

If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help, call 1-800-GAMBLER.

PODCAST: CFB Super League Ridiculousness + Audience Q&A

PODCAST: CFB Super League Ridiculousness + Audience Q&A

Time to take some questions from the audience about the upcoming G5 football season and more. Obviously, the expansion of the College Football Playoff opens the door for at least one team from the G5 to make that tournament. Who might that program be in this first year of the 12-team format?

Could all of that change with the potential creation of a G5 super league? Is this the potential impetus for the G5 to make their own playoff? Eric Henry of 247Sports joins once again for a discussion of what this offseason prognostication means for the sport. Happy football watching! Look for more audience participation and Q&A opportunities in future episodes of the show.

Happy football watching!

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