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Posted (edited)

Since the playoffs have been a hot topic of late, let's see what the ultimate professionalization of CFB looks like:

National College Football League (NCFL) an NFL-mirrored 32-team college football league and playoff format.

Selected Top 32 Programs. These are chosen based on a blend of all-time success (winning percentage, national titles, AP rankings history), recent performance (including Indiana’s 2025 national championship), fanbase size/TV value, facilities, and sustained competitiveness. This creates a closed, elite league with no promotion/relegation (just like the NFL). All the other programs fall into DII because...who cares.

  • Alabama Crimson Tide
  • Auburn Tigers
  • Boise State Broncos
  • BYU Cougars
  • Clemson Tigers
  • Florida Gators
  • Florida State Seminoles
  • Georgia Bulldogs
  • Indiana Hoosiers
  • Iowa Hawkeyes
  • LSU Tigers
  • Miami (FL) Hurricanes
  • Michigan Wolverines
  • Missouri Tigers
  • Nebraska Cornhuskers
  • Notre Dame Fighting Irish
  • Ohio State Buckeyes
  • Oklahoma Sooners
  • Oklahoma State Cowboys
  • Ole Miss Rebels
  • Oregon Ducks
  • Penn State Nittany Lions
  • TCU Horned Frogs
  • Tennessee Volunteers
  • Texas A&M Aggies
  • Texas Longhorns
  • Texas Tech Red Raiders
  • USC Trojans
  • Utah Utes
  • Virginia Cavaliers
  • Washington Huskies
  • Wisconsin Badgers

League Structure (Exact NFL Mirror)

  • 32 teams divided into 2 conferences of 16 teams each: American Football Conference (AFC) and National Football Conference (NFC).
  • Each conference has 4 divisions (East, North, South, West) of exactly 4 teams each.
  • Divisions are aligned geographically where possible while preserving major rivalries (e.g., Michigan–Ohio State, Alabama–Auburn–Georgia–Florida) and balancing competitive strength.

AFC Divisions

  • East: Clemson Tigers, Florida State Seminoles, Miami (FL) Hurricanes, Virginia Cavaliers
  • North: Michigan Wolverines, Ohio State Buckeyes, Penn State Nittany Lions, Notre Dame Fighting Irish
  • South: Alabama Crimson Tide, Auburn Tigers, Florida Gators, Georgia Bulldogs
  • West: LSU Tigers, Oklahoma Sooners, Texas Longhorns, Texas A&M Aggies

NFC Divisions

  • East: Indiana Hoosiers, Oklahoma State Cowboys, TCU Horned Frogs, Utah Utes
  • North: Iowa Hawkeyes, Nebraska Cornhuskers, Wisconsin Badgers, Missouri Tigers
  • South: Ole Miss Rebels, Tennessee Volunteers, BYU Cougars, Boise State Broncos
  • West: Oregon Ducks, USC Trojans, Washington Huskies, Texas Tech Red Raiders

Regular Season Format (Mirrors NFL)

  • 17-game schedule per team (exact NFL length).
  • Every team plays its 3 division opponents twice (home-and-away = 6 games).
  • Remaining games rotate among intra-conference and inter-conference opponents (just like NFL scheduling formulas).
  • College scheduling constraints (academics, bowl tie-ins) would be restructured for this closed league; conference championship games are replaced by the NFL-style playoff seeding.

Playoff Format (Exact NFL Mirror – 14-team playoff) 7 teams qualify per conference (total 14-team postseason):

  • The 4 division winners (seeded 1–4 based on record).
  • The 3 wild-card teams (best non-division winners, seeded 5–7).
  • First round (Wild Card): Lower seeds (5 vs. 4, 6 vs. 3, 7 vs. 2) play single-elimination games. Top seed in each conference gets a bye.
  • Divisional round: Winners advance; higher seeds host.
  • Conference Championship: Two games (AFC and NFC).
  • NCFL Championship Game (the “College Super Bowl”): AFC champion vs. NFC champion at a neutral site (rotating or fixed like SoFi Stadium/Las Vegas).

This format keeps the drama of NFL playoffs while giving the top 32 programs a true pro-style structure with balanced divisions, protected rivalries, and a clear path to a national title. It would revolutionize college football by creating stability, massive TV revenue, and an NFL-like product while retiring the chaotic current bowl/playoff system for these elite programs.

Edited by Buck Travis
  • Buck Travis changed the title to The National College Football League - NCFL

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