The College Football Playoff is exactly two weeks away from a Dec. 1 deadline, when it has to inform ESPN of any changes to its 2026 format, including expansion.
However, Front Office Sports has learned that there is potential wiggle room on that time frame—if the powers that be want it.
A source tells FOS that the CFP would need to ask ESPN to delay the deadline, and then ESPN would consider pushing it back. ESPN would not initiate that conversation, though, the source says.
Another source says there has been no discussion to this point about the CFP seeking an extension, though, as momentum for expanding beyond 12 teams has appeared to die down. If the CFP did ask for an extension, there is no guarantee ESPN would grant one.
Big Ten vs. SEC
Effectively, the expansion decision is in the hands of SEC commissioner Greg Sankey and Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti, who remain at odds over what the format of an expanded CFP bracket would be. Sankey and the SEC favor more at-large spots selected by the CFP committee, while Petitti and the Big Ten are seeking more automatic qualifiers.
From 2026 onward, the SEC and Big Ten have the authority to make changes to the CFP format—and must agree on them together—according to a memorandum of understanding that the 10 FBS conferences signed in 2024.
On Saturday, Sankey said expanding the CFP to 16 teams “should be a priority for all of us in conference leadership.”
A Big Ten spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment by FOS. ESPN and the CFP declined comment.
Game Theory
Expanding the CFP from 12 to 16 teams would create four new first-round game windows that ESPN would need to find broadcast slots for.
This season, ESPN will once again sublicense two first-round matchups to TNT Sports—the 3:30 p.m. ET and 7:30 p.m. ET games on Dec. 20. ESPN and ABC will simulcast the primetime matchup on Dec. 19, and the noon ET game on Dec. 20.
After beating the CFP’s TV ratings last season, the NFL will once again provide competition Dec. 20 with a Week 16 Saturday doubleheader, Packers-Bears and Eagles-Commanders, which will air on Fox; game times have not been announced.
The 2026 CFP schedule is not set, but it’s expected to start on the same weekend in December. Adding more first-round CFP games would either mean airing multiple games in the same broadcast windows, going head-to-head with more NFL action on Thursday or Sunday, or moving games even earlier to Wednesday or Tuesday that week.
The 2026 season will mark the first of a six-year, $7.8 billion CFP media-rights extension that ESPN signed in 2024.
The post CFP Expansion Deadline Has Flexibility—If Leaders Ask ESPN appeared first on Front Office Sports.

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