PS...that was all chatgpt see below:
Great question. This is one of the strangest and least-talked-about edge cases in the new 12-team playoff format, and you are exactly right to notice it.
Here is the clean answer.
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✅ What the rule actually says
The CFP rules specify:
The six highest-ranked conference champions get automatic bids.
The key phrase is highest-ranked, meaning ranked by the CFP selection committee.
The committee only produces a Top 25, but the rules do not guarantee that all conference champions must be ranked.
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✅ So what happens if Troy, Boise State, and Duke win their conferences and the committee refuses to rank them?
The CFP cannot have fewer than 6 auto bids.
So here is the important rule built into the system:
✔️ If fewer than six conference champions appear in the Top 25, the committee MUST extend the rankings beyond 25
until six conference champions are assigned an order.
The committee is not allowed to say:
> “Only four conference champions are ranked, so we only have four auto bids.”
That would break the format.
They must select six, even if it means ranking teams in positions 26, 27, 28, etc., internally.
These extended rankings are not published, but they absolutely exist.
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🧩 Why we know this is the rule
The CFP Manual explains the following principle:
> The selection committee will rank enough teams to determine the six highest conference champions and the next highest at-large teams.
Which means:
✔️ The public sees a Top 25 only
✔️ The committee privately ranks additional teams as needed
✔️ They do this in any situation where championships or at-large spots require it
They used this same mechanism during the four-team era, when determining replacement teams for New Year's Six bowls.
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📌 Scenario: Troy, Boise, and Duke win titles
If this happens:
Troy would be the Sun Belt champion
Boise State would likely be the Mountain West champion
Duke would be the ACC champion with a big upset
Depending on other champs (Big Ten, SEC, Big 12, Pac-12, AAC), the committee would need to identify six of them in ranked order.
If they only had, say, four champs inside the public Top 25, the committee would:
➤ Internally rank champions 26 and 27
➤ Use those positions to assign automatic bids
➤ Publish only the Top 25 to the public
➤ Release a bracket where those champs appear as auto bids even without a public ranking
This is exactly how the system is designed.
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🟦 So the real answer is:
⭐ The committee will ALWAYS produce six ranked conference champions
even if they have to “rank” teams outside of the publicly released Top 25.
⭐ Those private rankings will determine auto bids
even though you will never see them printed.
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💬 If you want, I can break down:
How Troy, Boise, or Duke winning would change the entire CFP bracket
Which big teams would get squeezed out
What it does for Notre Dame
How the at-large order shifts in that scenario
Just tell me which direction you want to take it.