• Loading stock data...
Tuesday, April 14, 2026

College Football Devolves Into Sniping As Playoff Bracket Nears

Traditionally, administrators wait until the final CFP rankings have been released to air grievances. Not this year.

Lane Kiffin
Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

Criticizing the College Football Playoff rankings is an annual tradition across the sport. It even spawned a lawsuit—still ongoing—after Florida State was left out of the four-team Playoff last season.

Traditionally, however, college sports administrators wait until the final rankings have been released to air their grievances. That isn’t the case this year—for the past few weeks, commissioners, athletic directors, and even coaches have begun advocacy campaigns in favor of their programs, taking shots at the committee and one another.

Those propaganda campaigns reached a crescendo after the committee released its penultimate rankings Tuesday evening. Iowa State AD Jamie Pollard criticized the committee for how it considered the strength of schedule metrics for Boise State, SMU, and Indiana—all of which had been ranked above Iowa State. 

Less than 30 minutes later, SMU athletic director Rick Hart fired back. “Jamie, respect you but bad take…Stay off my lawn!” he wrote, embellishing with a friendly crying-face emoji.

The 12-team bracket will ultimately consist of the top four-ranked conference champions in the top four spots (all of whom earn a first-round bye). A fifth conference champion, as well as seven at-large teams, will then be ranked in order and assigned first-round games. The higher-ranked team in each game will host. 

Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark was one of the earliest lobbyists, arguing publicly that his conference champion should be ranked higher than the Mountain West winner. The Big 12 has come down to No. 15 Arizona State and No. 16 Iowa State, both of which sit several spots below No. 10 Boise State, which still has to beat UNLV on Friday to win the Mountain West.

“I see no rationale for the Big 12’s champion not getting a first-round bye,” Yormark told Yahoo Sports last week as part of a detailed argument.

ACC commissioner Jim Phillips waited until after the final rankings last year to make the case for the Seminoles, when it was already too late. He’s not being nearly as quiet this year, waging an all-out campaign in print media and the radio for Miami and SMU to earn bids. On Tuesday night, he told The Athletic that he was “shocked and disappointed” that Miami had dropped to the 12th spot. “Miami absolutely deserves better from the committee,” he said.

No one, though, has been more boisterous than Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin. His 9–3 Rebels are currently ranked 13th, two slots out of the postseason. (The Big 12 champion will jump whichever team ends up ranked No. 12.)

For days, Kiffin has been posting about why Ole Miss should make the expanded field, using his X feed as a propaganda machine featuring original posts, retweets from other fans and pundits, and even reposts of articles about his own posts. Kiffin appears to have also formed an online alliance with Pollard, as the two have shared grievances about the strength of schedule arguments and retweeted each other in multiple posts.

On Sunday, Kiffin retweeted a Saturday Down South article with comments he made about South Carolina jumping the Rebels in rankings, saying, “Why do we even play the games?” Then, he wrote out a plea to the CFP, screenshotted it, and tagged the Playoff’s X account with no other context. 

He’s gotten increasingly vocal since then, quoting a post on Wednesday morning from an Ole Miss fan. “You guys actually meet for days and come up with these rankings??” Kiffin wrote, tagging the CFP’s account again. “Do you actually watch the quality of players, teams, and road environments (we played in one of yours this year) or just try and make the ACC feel relevant??” 

The CFP selection process has always been an imperfect and oft-criticized science. But the committee isn’t Congress—of all the considerations, it’s unlikely that administrators’ lobbying campaigns will have much of an impact. The committee members are more than used to online attacks and even harassment, and they have never bent to the will of their critics before.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Jul 29, 2025; Montreal, QC, Canada; Maya Joint (AUS) reacts after scoring a point against Leylah Fernandez (CAN) in first round play at IGA Stadium.

NCAA Proposes Prize Money Rule Change After Landmark Settlement

The change would allow players to accept prize money without affecting eligibility.
Mar 29, 2026; Washington, DC, USA; UConn Huskies guard Braylon Mullins (24) celebrates after making the game-winning three-point basket against the Duke Blue Devils in the second half during an Elite Eight game of the East Regional of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Capital One Arena

Braylon Mullins Waiting to Cash In On Game-Winning Shot

Mullins is holding off on NIL opportunities until the Huskies’ season ends.
Mar 30, 2026; Phoenix, AZ, USA; NFL insider reporter

How Ian Rapoport, Daniel Jeremiah Fit in ESPN’s Plans

ESPN has high hopes for two of NFL Network’s biggest stars.

Brett Yormark and Cody Campbell Fight Over Who Runs Big 12

“He is not the dictator of the conference. That’s not his role.”

Featured Today

‘The Sonics Never Died’: The Long Afterlife of Seattle NBA Merch

Inside “the largest team shop for a team that doesn’t exist.” 
Mar 27, 2026; Washington, DC, USA;UConn Huskies forward Tarris Reed Jr. (5) dunks the ball against the Michigan State Spartans in the second half during a Sweet Sixteen game of the East Regional of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Capital One Arena
March 28, 2026

March Madness Coaches Debate ‘Blueblood’ in NIL Era

The term’s meaning was up for debate at men’s March Madness.
Maxime Vachier Lagrave
March 25, 2026

The Planet’s Best Chess Players Are Having Their LIV Golf Moment

Chess’s most prestigious tournament is battling a splashy Saudi event.
Beau Brune/LSU
March 22, 2026

College Athletic Departments Are Becoming Media Companies

“There’s only so many tickets you can sell, but content is infinite.”

NCAA Is Trying to Close NBA Draft Eligibility Loophole

If passed, the rules will be implemented by the next academic year.
April 1, 2026

Why a Furniture Store Is Risking $50M on UConn Basketball

Jordan’s Furniture will refund purchases if both Huskies teams make the final.
April 2, 2026

Iowa State Star Audi Crooks Enters Transfer Portal

Crooks, an Iowa native, has one year of eligibility remaining.
Sponsored

Baseball Is Back: MLB Opening Day Prices Soar

MLB Opening Day ticket prices are at record highs. TickPick data breaks down demand, pricing trends, and where fans are paying the most.
April 1, 2026

The European Agent Behind the Illinois Final Four Run

Miško Ražnatović represents four of the Illinois “Balkan Five.” 
March 30, 2026

Top Seeds Sweep Women’s Final Four As 2025 Teams All Return

It’s the first repeat Final Four in 30 years.
exclusive
March 30, 2026

Alabama, Nebraska, Michigan Spent Most on CFB Private Jet Travel

Texas A&M spent $493,000 on coach Mike Elko’s travel alone.
March 29, 2026

UConn Men, Women Reach Final Four Despite Financial Pressures

UConn men and women both reach Final Four in rare feat.