The four-team college football playoff will expand to 12 teams.
Big Ten games will be available on CBS, Fox, NBC, Big Ten Network, Peacock and Home Shopping Network. OK, so one of those is not true.
College football is being put in a blender after this season. This might give traditionalists cold sweats. Savor what's left of the good ol' days while you still can.
TV deals worth billions created a gold rush that ignited conference realignment chaos and a future that inches closer to forming one massive league that breaks away from the NCAA's governance. Hyperbole? Not really. Any scenario seems plausible given how much has changed with the sport already.
The expanded playoff might not solve the parity problem, but at least it will give more teams — and more fan bases — a greater sense of excitement by being in contention. The same teams from a very exclusive club — Georgia, Alabama, Ohio State — will likely remain kings of the sport whether the playoff field features four, 12 or 64 teams. However, the late-season drama that comes with jockeying for playoff position will multiply in college towns across the country with a larger field.
That will have to wait until next year. The current version of college football has one last jaunt to complete, which will conclude with a four-team playoff. This feels like preparing to ride Space Mountain at Disney World by first taking a spin on Dumbo the Flying Elephant.