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Urban Meyer Tells NCAA It’s Time for Major College Football Change

Urban Meyer, Ohio State, Michigan, Miami
Brett Davis-Imagn Images

On Tuesday evening, the College Football Playoff selection committee unveiled its penultimate top 25, a set of rankings that carries extra weight because it offers the clearest snapshot yet of how the committee values résumés just days before conference championship games.

Two title games dominate the conversation: No. 3 Georgia facing No. 9 Alabama in the SEC Championship and No. 4 Texas Tech taking on No. 11 BYU in the Big 12 Championship.

A loss by Georgia or Texas Tech is widely expected to keep either program comfortably inside the 12-team field. A BYU defeat, however, would almost certainly knock the Cougars out of contention.

The biggest question mark surrounds Alabama: if the Crimson Tide fall to Georgia, will the committee dock them for playing (and losing) an extra high-stakes game—the same fate that befell SMU a year ago when it stayed in the field after dropping the 2024 ACC title game to Clemson?

The root of the tension lies in the format itself. By guaranteeing berths to the five highest-ranked conference champions, the expanded playoff can sometimes reward league winners who sit well outside the national elite. Right now, that means No. 17 Virginia and No. 20 Tulane are on track to occupy two of the 12 spots simply by claiming their conference crowns. Should either stumble in their championship game, the ripple effects would only deepen the uncertainty.

In short, any program ranked lower than tenth entering next week’s final reveal on December 7 faces an uphill battle. The bracket remains a work in progress, and the process continues to expose structural imperfections that fuel arguments every year.

Moments after the rankings dropped, Hall of Fame coach and current Fox “Big Noon Kickoff” analyst Urban Meyer went on air and delivered a blunt assessment, calling for the complete abolition of the selection committee in favor of a new evaluation system.

“The committee’s got to go away. It’s got to go away,” Meyer said. “There’s 40, 50, 60 years of experience among us, and we still can’t agree on everything. I just can’t understand how you can penalize Texas for losing at Ohio State. If Bama loses [against Georgia], you cannot penalize them. That’s a reward. The season’s over unless you win. You cannot do that. I don’t understand. Like, if BYU beats Texas Tech, of course Texas Tech is in. A lot of things come across my mind—I’m just worried about the future of our game.”

Meyer’s frustration centers on Texas, which opened the season with a road loss to Ohio State—one of the most demanding non-conference tests any program scheduled this year. The lingering fear is that the committee could hold that defeat against the Longhorns (now ranked fourth) despite the strength-of-schedule benefit it provided.

If a single early-season road loss to a top opponent can ultimately cost a team its playoff life, programs may think twice before booking ambitious non-conference matchups in the future. As championship weekend approaches, that broader question—what kind of behavior the current system actually incentivizes—hangs over the sport as heavily as any individual ranking.

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