MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — While fans trickled into the Orange Bowl stadium for a quarterfinal where tickets were going for as little as $39, the commissioner of the Big 12 said ''everything is on the table'' when it comes to rebooting the College Football Playoff, including potentially moving more games onto campus.
The commissioners have until Jan. 23 to figure out what the playoff will look like next year. Expansion from the current 12-team format and automatic bids have been the two biggest headlines in that discussion, though the idea of keeping more games on campus will factor in.
''We have to examine that, too,'' Brett Yormark said Thursday, about a half-hour before kickoff of the quarterfinal between Texas Tech and Oregon. ''Operationally, can we do it? The first-round games have been fantastic in every respect. I think it's a differentiator.''
Under the 12-team format, now in its second season, first-round games involving the fifth through 12th seeds have taken place on the campus of the better-seeded team. The rest of the rounds are at traditional bowl sites, with this year's final coming to Miami Gardens.
Oregon's 23-0 win over Texas Tech kicked off in front of thousands of empty seats at Hard Rock Stadium. The Ducks traveled 3,200 miles to get to Miami and will next head to Atlanta for the semifinals in the Peach Bowl. If they return to South Florida for the final on Jan. 19, they will travel around 17,500 miles in the span of three weeks.
''This is a playoff. A playoff in my opinion should've been played in Lubbock, Texas," Oregon coach Dan Lanning said. ''There are a lot of people who do playoffs. Playoffs have looked a certain way for a long time. We're trying to serve two purposes here. The amount of time between games, obviously it's tough for teams. We experienced it last year.''
Including Oregon's loss last year (in the Rose Bowl after a bye) and Texas Tech's loss on Thursday, teams with first-round byes in the 12-team playoff fell to 0-6 with two quarterfinals left. Yormark said the sport's ''clunky'' calendar — an issue that encompasses long layoffs, the transfer portal and an ever-moving coaching carousel — is another issue the commissioners will discuss.
There has been a wide gap between the Southeastern Conference and Big Ten visions of what the next iteration of the playoff should look like. The SEC sees a 16-team field filled with at-large bids; the Big Ten has pushed for a field of 16 or more with more automatic qualifiers.