College Football Playoff board of managers discusses sport splitting from NCAA: report
The CFP board of managers consists of 11 college presidents and chancellors
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As the world of college athletics continues to shift with conference realignment and the arrival of the name, image and likeness (NIL) era, college football is discussing a new way of doing business.
On a Monday Zoom call, the College Football Playoff’s board of managers met and discussed the possibility of college football operating outside of the scope of the NCAA and moving to a format with the CFP as its head, according to ESPN.
The conversation about moving college football outside of the NCAA lasted around five minutes and no next steps were planned.
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Over the past several months, the idea of college football operating independently of the NCAA has been floated, especially as the concept of "super conferences" has emerged.
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The meeting also reportedly included a discussion about making changes to the current College Football Playoff format before the current contract is up after the 2025 season.
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In February, the proposal to expand the CFP to 12 teams was shut down after the board of managers was unable to come to a unanimous decision on the 12-team proposal.
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By declining to expand the CFP to 12 teams, the 10 conferences and independent Notre Dame cost themselves around $450 million, according to a report by ESPN.
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"I've always said the money was secondary and this proves it," American Athletic Conference Commissioner Mike Aresco said, per ESPN.
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"Obviously we're forgoing that. We all know it. It's something you would have liked to have had because you can use a lot of that for student-athlete health and well-being and the other things, but the feeling was that the most important thing was getting a format that everybody could agree on."