College Football Playoff bracket: Schedule, rankings, scores
The College Football Playoff bracket is here. The 12-team bracket was announced on Sunday, Dec. 8. The official 12-team College Football Playoff field and final top 25 rankings were announced Dec. 8. The first round continues Saturday, Dec. 21 with three games.
Oregon is the No. 1 seed, with Georgia, Boise State and Arizona State also getting byes. Below is the bracket, final seeding and complete playoff schedule.
2024-25 College Football Playoff bracketThis bracket uses the committee's final top 25 rankings on Sunday, Dec. 8. It's important to note that the top 25 ranking does not always match the seed in the playoff, as the four highest-ranked conference champions receive the top four seeds and byes, no matter where those four teams rank in the top 25. The fifth-highest-ranked conference champion is also in automatically, though that team will not get a bye.
All times Eastern
First roundFriday, Dec. 20
No. 7 Notre Dame 27, No. 10 Indiana 17Saturday, Dec. 21
No. 6 Penn State 38, No. 11 SMU 10 No. 5 Texas 38, No. 12 Clemson 24 No. 9 Tennessee at No. 8 Ohio State | 8 p.m. | ABC/ESPN QuarterfinalsTuesday, Dec. 31
No. 3 Boise State vs. No. 6 Penn State (Fiesta Bowl) | 7:30 p.m. | ESPNWednesday, Jan. 1
No. 4 Arizona State vs. No. 5 Texas (Peach Bowl) | 1 p.m. | ESPN No. 1 Oregon vs. No. 8 Ohio State/No. 9 Tennessee winner (Rose Bowl) | 5 p.m. | ESPN No. 2 Georgia vs. No. 7 Notre Dame (Sugar Bowl) | 8:45 p.m. | ESPN SemifinalsThursday, Jan. 9
TBD vs. TBD (Orange Bowl) | 7:30 p.m. | ESPNFriday, Jan. 10
TBD vs. TBD (Cotton Bowl) | 7:30 p.m. | ESPN National Championship TBD vs. TBD (Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia) | 7:30 p.m. | ESPN College Football Playoff rankings, seedsYou can see how these numbers — the seed and the CFP ranking — differ below. The four teams with byes are in bold.
Here are the final CFP top 25 rankings, with teams in the CFP also getting their seeds included at the end.
Oregon — highest-ranked conference champion (Big Ten) and seeded No. 1 Georgia — second-highest-ranked conference champion (SEC) and seeded No. 2 Texas — at-large pick (second team from the SEC), seeded No. 5 Penn State — at-large pick (second team in the Big Ten), seeded No. 6 Notre Dame — at-large pick (independent), seeded No. 7 Ohio State — at-large pick (third team from the Big Ten), seeded No. 8 Tennessee — at-large pick (third team from the SEC), seeded No. 9 Indiana — at-large pick (fourth team from the Big Ten), seeded No. 10 Boise State — third-highest-ranked conference champion (Mountain West) and seeded No. 3 SMU — at-large pick (from the ACC), seeded No. 11 Alabama — first team out of the CFP Arizona State — fourth-highest-ranked conference champion (Big 12) and seeded No. 4 Miami (Fla.) — second team out of the CFP Ole Miss — third team out of the CFP South Carolina — fourth team out of the CFP Clemson — fifth-highest-ranked conference champion (ACC) and seeded No. 12 BYU — fifth team out of the CFP Iowa State — sixth team out of the CFP Missouri — seventh team out of the CFP Illinois — eighth team out of the CFP Syracuse — ninth team out of the CFP Army — 10th team out of the CFP Colorado — 11th team out of the CFP UNLV — 12th team out of the CFP Memphis — 13th team out of the CFPBoise State, which won the Mountain West Conference championship and has lost to only top-ranked Oregon, is the third-highest-ranked conference champion and thus received a bye into the quarterfinals despite ranking No. 9. Though Arizona State is ranked only No. 12, the Sun Devils are the fourth-highest ranked conference champion — over ACC champ Clemson (No. 16) — and earned the No. 4 seed and the final first-round bye.
There is no re-seeding once the official bracket is revealed on Sunday, Dec. 8.
The four quarterfinal games are not played at the campus sites. Instead, these four games — scheduled on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1 — will be played at the Fiesta Bowl, Rose Bowl, Peach Bowl and Sugar Bowl. The four highest-ranked conference champions will be assigned one of these bowls in consideration of historic bowl relationships as well as seeding.
The four quarterfinal winners will then meet in the semifinals at either the Orange Bowl or the Cotton Bowl on Jan. 9 and Jan. 10. If the seeds hold, that means (1) would meet (4) and (2) would play (3). The two semifinal winners will then play on Jan. 20 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta for the national championship.
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