CHARLOTTE, N.C. — It wasn't hard to spot Ben Overby and James Turner as they weaved through the stands at Saturday night's Atlantic Coast Conference championship game between No. 16 Virginia and Duke.
They were proudly wearing the purple of their alma mater, James Madison, which could potentially make the College Football Playoff thanks to the Blue Devils' victory.
''Nothing against UVA,'' Turner said excitedly, ''but we're just here to support Duke.''
Consider it a product of this most unlikely of pairings to determine the ACC title — Duke won 27-20 in overtime for its first outright league crown since 1962 — and the league's uncertain standing for bids to the 12-team CFP. And that meant Saturday's game attracted its share of curious onlookers, eager to see witness how it all might work out and how it might impact their favorite team.
A validating two bids for the ACC? Just one? A ''doomsday'' scenario of getting shut out of the playoff entirely? They were all seemingly in play. The only certainty was a Virginia win would secure a CFP bid for a team that was picked to finish 14th in the league in the preseason, leaving Miami to wait.
And now, after the five-loss Blue Devils claimed the first overtime championship game in ACC history, everyone must wait for Sunday's unveiling of the bracket to find out whether a Power Four champion really could miss the CFP in favor of a second Group of Five winner in JMU.
ACC commissioner Jim Phillips had argued this week that his league deserved two bids: one for No. 12 Miami as the league's highest-ranked team, the other for the Duke-Virginia winner as the league's champion.
Yet Duke, which won a five-way tiebreaker to play in the ACC title game, entered Saturday unranked in the CFP selection committee's rankings. And JMU sat at No. 25 before beating Troy for the Sun Belt Conference title in a 12-1 season a night earlier, raising the possibility that the Dukes might out-duke Duke to earn the last of the automatic bids that go to the five highest-ranked conference champions.