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ARCHIVED TOPIC: This topic was archived on Sep. 18, 2012 and will no longer be updated.

The topic was archived because on June 26, 2012 the BCS announced the formation of a four-team playoff system and on Aug. 2, 2012 the NCAA formally approved extending the college football season by one day to accommodate the playoffs, thus ending the period of over 140 years with no playoff system in college football. The playoff is scheduled to begin during the 2014-2015 season with a selection committee ranking the top four teams at the end of the season; having #1 play #4 and #2 play #3 in bowl games (rotated annually among six different bowls); and having the winners play for the national championship (held in a different city each year). This website will remain accessible so that our readers can continue to benefit from the information it provides.

The Bowl Championship Series (BCS) was formed in 1998 to pit the top two BCS-ranked college football teams against each other in a national championship while eight other top teams play in four bowl games. [1]

Many football fans argue that a playoff system should replace the BCS. They contend that it is the only fair way to determine a national champion and that the BCS method is subjective, profit-motivated, and sometimes leaves the best teams out of the championship game.

Opponents argue that the BCS system is in the best interest of the athletes, fans, and sponsors because the bowl games generate huge profits for schools and their local economies, keep the season shorter for student athletes, and almost always have the two best teams playing each other for the national title.

43% of Americans say that football is their favorite sport to watch, more than three times any other sport. In 2008, a record 37.5 million people attended college football games. [2] 120 colleges and universities compete in 34 post-season bowl games, and one of the schools (and sometimes two) is crowned national champion each year.

The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), the governing body for college sports, does not recognize an official college football national champion and therefore has not established any rules in this matter. Since Princeton and Rutgers were declared the first national champions in 1869  (1.3 MB) [13], the best college football team has been determined by media polls, coaches polls, and mathematical rating systems but never a playoff system.

The Bowl Championship Series (BCS), a self-described "five-game arrangement for post-season college football," is a system that ranks teams and matches the top two in the national championship game to determine the national champion. The annual controversy about whether the BCS should be replaced by a playoff system centers on the BCS rankings (also called standings). The BCS standings are calculated by averaging three elements: the Harris Intercollegiate Football Poll, the USA TODAY Coaches’ Poll (which replaced the Associated Press Poll in 2005), and the average of six computer rankings. Proponents of the BCS say their rankings are as accurate as possible because the BCS incorporates human polls and computer ratings to calculate the standings, but critics counter that the BCS rankings often place teams in the wrong order and discriminate against smaller schools.

The number one and number two teams, selected by the various polls and ratings used over time, played each other in bowl games eight times out of 57 seasons (14%) between 1936 and 1992, when the first bowl coalition (a bowl agreement preceding the BCS) began. Since the creation of the Bowl Championship Series, the top two teams according to the AP poll have met eight out of 11 seasons (73%), a fact that the BCS proponents consider to be evidence that the system is working.

Fans nonetheless argue that the teams selected to play for the national championship are not always the two best teams. The University of Utah (in 2004 and 2008) and Boise State University (in 2006) were excluded from the national championship game despite being undefeated while teams with one or more losses played for the national title.

In 2003, for example, the top three teams finished the season with one loss each. The University of Southern California (USC) was ranked number one by the two human polls but the computer rating placed USC at number three and thereby excluded them from competing in the national championship. The AP poll chose USC as the national champion while the coaches’ poll selected Louisiana State University, so the national championship was split in 2003. The various polls and ratings used since 1869 have selected more than one team as the national champion in 110 of the last 140 years.

Six conferences (ACC, Big 12, Big East, Big Ten, Pac 10, SEC) plus the University of Notre Dame had existing bowl agreements before the BCS was formed in 1998, so the BCS rules were written to guarantee automatic entry into BCS bowl games for the champions of those six conference. Schools in those conferences are called BCS teams, while schools in the five conferences that are not guaranteed a BCS spot are referred to as non-BCS teams. A non-BCS team can earn a spot in a BCS bowl game by finishing in the top 12, or if it is ranked in the top 16 and ranked higher than at least one team from a BCS conference.

From 1998-2008, nine undefeated teams were excluded from the BCS National Championship game while teams with one or more losses were included. Eight of those nine teams were non-BCS schools; the one time an undefeated BCS school (Auburn University) was not selected for the national championship game was in 2004 when two other BCS schools (USC [16] and University of Oklahoma) were also undefeated. A non-BCS team has never played in the national championship game in the history of the Bowl Championship Series, and out of the 47 BCS bowl games played since 1998, non-BCS teams have played four times. [6]

President Barack Obama stated his support for instituting a playoff system on the Nov. 16, 2008 CBS television program 60 Minutes, "If you’ve got a bunch of teams who play throughout the season and many of them have one loss or two losses, there’s no clear, decisive winner. We should be creating a playoff system... It would add three extra weeks to the season. You could trim back on the regular season. I don’t know any serious fan of college football who has disagreed with me on this."

Congressman Joe Barton (R-TX) introduced the College Football Playoff Act of 2009 [14] on Jan. 9, 2009 to make it illegal to promote, market, or advertise a post-season game as a championship or national championship game unless it was "the final game of a single elimination post-season playoff system." The bill was approved by a subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee on Dec. 9, 2009, and it goes to full committee next, although a hearing has not been scheduled. [7] Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) claimed that the BCS violates the Sherman Antitrust Act, which prohibits contracts or conspiracies to limit competition, because the University of Utah was not selected to play in the 2008 National Championship Game despite being the only team to go undefeated that year.

The BCS commissioners voiced opposition to a playoff system for many years, despite political pressure and public criticism. To work on improving its image, the BCS hired the former director of the NCAA Division I men’s basketball tournament, Bill Hancock, as its first Executive Director on Nov. 17, 2009; launched a Twitter page on Nov. 19, 2009; and hired George W. Bush’s former press secretary, Ari Fleischer, as its spokesman on Nov. 21, 2009. [8][9] Bill Hancock said that "A lot of frustration with the BCS is because people don’t understand it... The fact is a playoff would be as contentious or more contentious than what we have now." [10]

The money college football teams make from ticket sales, television broadcasting rights, merchandising, and other revenue sources is often an important part of funding for their schools. For example, Forbes magazine estimated that the football team of the University of Notre Dame generated $97 million in contributions to the university’s other sports, academic programs, and the local economy of South Bend, Indiana in 2006. [11] The highest-paid college football team in 2011, the Texas Longhorns, reported $96 million in revenue and turned a profit of $71 million. [21] The total economic impact in the host cities of the five BCS games in Jan. 2010 was estimated to be $1.2 billion (2.3 MB). [5] Nearly $275 million in bowl game revenue was paid out to college football teams and conferences in 2011. [22]

After over 140 years without a playoff system, the BCS Presidential Oversight Committee approved a four-team college football playoff on June 26, 2012. The Division I Board of Directors approved legislation to allow the student athletes to participate in the additional post-season game at a meeting on Aug. 2, 2012. [23] The new Football Bowl Series (formerly Division I-A) playoff is scheduled to begin in the 2014-15 season and continue through the 2025 season.

According to the BCS, a selection committee will decide which teams will participate in the playoff. Decision factors include win-loss record, strength of schedule, head-to-head results, and whether a team is a conference champion. [18] The semifinals will rotate among current bowl sites, and the national championship game will be hosted in the city that places the highest bid. [17] Television contracts for the playoffs are estimated to generate annual revenues ranging from $600 million to $1.5 billion. [24]

BCS Executive Director Bill Hancock spoke favorably about the new playoff, saying "The new format will be good for student-athletes, fans, alumni and our institutions. It is a best-of-both-worlds result, bringing the excitement of a playoff while protecting this unique regular season and preserving the bowl tradition. A four-team playoff doesn’t go too far; it goes just the right amount, and it respects the academic calendar while limiting the number of games played by student-athletes." [19]

The debate on college football playoffs has mostly shifted to the selection method, which some say is too similar to the existing BCS ranking system, and the number of teams that will be included. An ESPN poll with 112,252 participants found that 77% said the four-team playoff was the right move for college football, but 61% said eight teams would be ideal, and 60% thought that the number of teams will expand shortly after the playoff is implemented. [20]

PROSCONS
Pro 1: A post-season playoff leading up to the National Championship would replace the subjectivity of human and computer polls with the objective measure of winning or losing a game. Read More.Con 1: A playoff system would extend the 13 week regular season by at least a month, which would interfere with athletes’ college studies and which could potentially lead to more injuries from playing. Read More.
Pro 2: A 2007 Gallup poll showed that 85% of college football fans supported a change to a playoff system of some kind. Read More.Con 2: The BCS system makes every regular season game crucial for the teams in contention to finish in the top two. Read More.
Pro 3: If a team loses one game it is probably out of contention for the National Championship; if it loses twice there is little chance the team will qualify for any BCS game. Read More.Con 3: Before 1998, bowl revenue was shared only by the conferences that had teams playing in the major bowl games, (2.3 MB) but the BCS changed the system to share the revenue with every conference. Read More.
Pro 4: A playoff system would give each school an opportunity to earn a fair share of the revenue distributed to the 11 conferences in the FBS. Read More.Con 4: The BCS rankings are designed to favor consistency over the course of the entire season. Read More.
Pro 5: The BCS human polls are subject to bias, which has been cited as one reason the University of Utah was kept out of the 2008 championship game. Read More.Con 5: The college football post-season bowl games are popular and profitable. Critics of BCS say that most people want a playoff system, but the bowl game attendance numbers contradict their argument. Read More.
Pro 6: The BCS rewards undefeated BCS teams, so schools sometimes try to schedule games against weaker opponents to protect their records. Read More.Con 6: The proposed playoff system alternatives are actually less fair than the BCS system in place. Read More.
Pro 7: A playoff system would not mean the end of the BCS rankings, which could still be used to determine the top 4, 8, 12, or 16 teams, depending on how many playoff games are feasible. Read More.Con 7: The BCS conferences have stronger teams in them. Read More.
Pro 8: The national champions in other major college sports are determined by playoff systems. Read More.Con 8: A playoff system would entail each team playing games in different cities during the holiday season in December and January, with no way to predict where any game besides the first one would take place. Read More.

Pro Arguments

 (Go to Con Arguments)

Pro 1: A post-season playoff leading up to the National Championship would replace the subjectivity of human and computer polls with the objective measure of winning or losing a game.

This change would be good for college football.

Pro 2: A 2007 Gallup poll showed that 85% of college football fans supported a change to a playoff system of some kind. 

69% of fans surveyed preferred the idea of a playoff tournament involving the top four, eight, or 16 teams to replace bowl games while 16% preferred a one-game playoff between the top teams emerging from the post-season bowl games.

Pro 3: If a team loses one game it is probably out of contention for the National Championship; if it loses twice there is little chance the team will qualify for any BCS game. 

Therefore, if a team loses early in the season then the rest of its games lack excitement, and the claim by BCS proponents that every game counts does not hold true.

Pro 4: A playoff system would give each school an opportunity to earn a fair share of the revenue distributed to the 11 conferences in the FBS.

Since the BCS conferences automatically qualify for BCS bowl games, they receive a disproportionate amount of the annual bowl revenue. Since football earnings fund other sports, this disparity affects athletes in all sports. [3]

Pro 5: The BCS human polls are subject to bias, which has been cited as one reason the University of Utah was kept out of the 2008 championship game. [4]

One third of the standings are based on how the coaches rank the teams, which assumes that coaches have time to watch all of the games while also preparing their teams each week. A playoff system, used by most other sports, would eliminate the controversy.

Pro 6: The BCS rewards undefeated BCS teams, so schools sometimes try to schedule games against weaker opponents to protect their records.

A playoff would remove the easy schedule and make the championship solely about performance.

Pro 7: A playoff system would not mean the end of the BCS rankings, which could still be used to determine the top 4, 8, 12, or 16 teams, depending on how many playoff games are feasible.

Every game during the regular season would still be as important as under the current system, because a few losses would make it difficult for a team to qualify for the playoffs.

Pro 8: The national champions in other major college sports are determined by playoff systems.

Even the 140 plus football teams of the NCAA’s FCS (formerly known as Division I-AA) compete in a 16-team tournament. The only reason that the BCS is still controlling the football post-season is because the system has become entrenched.

Con Arguments

 (Go to Pro Arguments)

Con 1: A playoff system would extend the 13 week regular season by at least a month, which would interfere with athletes’ college studies and which could potentially lead to more injuries from playing.

This change would be bad for college football.

Con 2: The BCS system makes every regular season game crucial for the teams in contention to finish in the top two.

The importance of every game increases attendance and revenue, which is shared with other sports and non-athletic programs at each school.

Con 3: Before 1998, bowl revenue was shared only by the conferences that had teams playing in the major bowl games,  (2.3 MB) [12] but the BCS changed the system to share the revenue with every conference.

Replacing the BCS would decrease the revenue to conferences without teams in the playoffs.

Con 4: The BCS rankings are designed to favor consistency over the course of the entire season.

It rewards teams that beat the opponents they are supposed to beat as well as underdogs that upset higher-ranked teams. Under a playoff system, a team could lose an entire season’s worth of hard work by having one bad day.

Con 5: The college football post-season bowl games are popular and profitable. Critics of BCS say that most people want a playoff system, but the bowl game attendance numbers contradict their argument.

Attendance at the 2008 season bowl games was nearly equal to each stadium’s capacity, in some cases exceeding it. For example, the Rose Bowl capacity is 91,000 and attendance was 93,293. [5]

Con 6: The proposed playoff system alternatives are actually less fair than the BCS system in place.

In a league of 120 teams, there is no way for every team to play each other in the course of the regular season, let alone in a playoff during the post-season.

Con 7: The BCS conferences have stronger teams in them.

An undefeated or one-loss record in a BCS conference should mean more than the same record in a weaker, non-BCS conference because the teams are not facing opponents of the same quality. The BCS rankings consider strength of schedule in the computer rating formulas, and the human voters account for it as well.

Con 8: A playoff system would entail each team playing games in different cities during the holiday season in December and January, with no way to predict where any game besides the first one would take place.

Students and alumni would be unable to make travel plans in advance to support their teams.

Did You Know?

  1. 77% of people polled by ESPN think the four-team playoff announced on June 26, 2012 was the right move for college football. [20]
  2. Television contracts for the playoffs are estimated to generate annual revenues ranging from $600 million to $1.5 billion. [24]
  3. Congressman Joe Barton (R-TX) introduced the College Football Playoff Act of 2009, a bill that would make any national championship game illegal if it did not result from a playoff system. [14]
  4. Princeton and Rutgers were both chosen as the first college football national champions in 1869. [13]
  5. The various polls and ratings used since 1869 have named two or more teams as the national champion in 110 of the last 140 years. [13]

Sources

  1. Bowl Championship Series, "The BCS Is...," bcsfootball.com (accessed Nov. 2, 2009)
  2. Gary K. Johnson, "Football Attendance Continues to Rise Amid Economic Uncertainty," ncaa.org, Feb. 11, 2009
  3. Richard Evans, "NCAA Bowl Finance: Something Changed in 1995," econosseur.com, Nov. 2, 2009
  4. Dan Wetzl, "Utah out of Sight, out of Mind," yahoo.com, Jan. 5, 2009
  5. Bowl Championship Series, "Bowl Championship Series 2009-2010 Media Guide," Aug. 24, 2009
  6. Bowl Championship Series, "How Are the BCS Standings Compiled?" bcsfootball.org, Oct. 30, 2009
  7. Sean Brown, Congressman Barton’s press secretary, told ProCon.org in a phone call on Dec. 9, 2009 that the vote in the subcommittee was a "voice vote," which means that no official tally is released other than the outcome that the bill was passed. He also stated that they are not expecting the bill to be heard in the House Energy and Commerce Committee until some time in 2010, and he provided a press release(200 KB)  with Congressman Barton’s opening statement for the Dec. 9, 2009 subcommittee vote.
  8. Dennis Dodd, "BCS Hires Fleischer to Spread Good Word? Good Luck," cbssports.com, Nov. 24, 2009
  9. Associated Press, "BCS Exec Hancock Hires PR Firm," espn.com, Nov. 21, 2009
  10. Associated Press, "BCS Creates Football Executive Director Role," New York Times, Nov. 17, 2009
  11. Jack Gage and Peter J. Schwartz, "The Most Valuable College Football Teams," forbes.com, Jan. 2, 2007
  12. Bowl Championship Series, "Media Guide," BCS.org (accessed Nov. 25, 2009)
  13. NCAA, "Football Bowl Subdivision Records," NCAA.org (accessed Sep. 4, 2009)
  14. Joe Barton, "H.R. 390," house.gov, Jan. 9, 2009
  15. Derrick Fox, "Statement of Derrick Fox to the House of Representatives," house.gov, May 1, 2009
  16. USC won the 2004 National Championship with a 55-19 victory over the University of Oklahoma in the 2005 Orange Bowl. On June 6, 2011, the BCS officially stripped USC of the title after the university lost an appeal over sanctions by the NCAA for violations regarding running back Reggie Bush committed during the 2004 season. As a result, there is no BCS champion for that year. USA TODAY reported this is the first time in the history of the BCS that a title has been vacated.
  17. Heather Dinich, "Playoff Plan to Run Through 2025," ESPN.com, June 27, 2012
  18. Bowl Championship Series, "BCS Presidential Oversight Committee Establishes New Postseason Format," bcsfootball.org, June 26, 2012
  19. Bill Hancock, "College Football Is Back, with a New Playoff on the Horizon," bcsfootball.org, Sep. 11, 2012
  20. "College Football Playoffs," ESPN.com (accessed Sep. 13, 2012)
  21. Chris Smith, "College Football’s Most Valuable Teams," Forbes.com, Dec. 22, 2011
  22. "2011-2012 College Football Season Bowl Results," CollegeFootballPoll.com (accessed Sep. 14, 2012)
  23. Greg Johnson, "DI Board Approves Process to Fill Football Bowls in Case of Shortfall," NCAA website, Aug. 2, 2012
  24. Allie Grasgreen, "It’s a Playoff," Insider Higher Ed, June 27, 2012
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College Football Playoff (CFP), annual series of U.S. college football postseason bowl games (2014– ) that determines the national champion of the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS; formerly known as Division I-A) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The original format featured 4 teams, but it expanded to 12 teams with the 2024–25 season.

(Read Walter Camp’s 1903 Britannica essay on inventing American football.)

Background and BCS

The College Football Playoff replaced the first true, though imperfect, postseason football championship arrangement in the history of the NCAA’s highest division: the Bowl Championship Series (BCS), a system instituted in 1998 that produced a national championship matchup based on a combination of computer rankings and polls. Since the 1970s the NCAA’s lower divisions—the Football Championship Subdivision (formerly Division I-AA), Division II, and Division III—and the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) have determined their national champions through single-elimination tournaments with fields ranging from 16 to 32 teams. Previously, the title of Division I-A “national champion” was bestowed on the team (or teams) that ended the season atop one of the polls taken of a fixed pool of coaches or sportswriters. Conventionally, the teams ranked first in the Associated Press (AP), United Press International (UPI), and coaches’ polls were given the greatest claim to the title, but various other polls also named national champions throughout the years. As a result, many seasons ended with split national champions. Because of contractual obligations between bowl games and conferences, postseason matchups between the two consensus top-ranked teams occurred in only 8 of the 57 seasons between 1936 (the first year of the AP poll) and 1992.

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American Sports Nicknames

From its creation, the BCS came under increasing criticism from fans and media who agitated for a playoff system that would provide a clear-cut national champion. The bowl committees and many conference administrators resisted change, arguing that the BCS be kept principally because of the long-standing bowl tradition (more than 30 games played from just before Christmas to just after New Year’s Day, usually in warm locales, attracting hundreds of thousands of vacationing fans) and because the lack of a playoff increased the importance of college football’s regular season. Often unspoken was the great financial windfall provided by the bowls, which was occasionally supplemented by illegal bribes and other improprieties among bowl officials and local politicians, most notably in the case of an expenditure scandal that led to the firing of the Fiesta Bowl’s CEO in 2011. However, public desire for a playoff—as well as criticism of the bowl system’s corruption—grew so pronounced that a committee of university presidents replaced the BCS with the four-team College Football Playoff in 2014.

History of the CFP

The four entrants in the original College Football Playoff were selected from among all FBS schools by a 13-member selection committee composed of former college administrators and coaches. While the committee took polls and computer rankings into account, it was an autonomous entity and decided on the College Football Playoff field by weighing factors such as strength of schedule and record against common opponents. Once the field was decided upon, the teams were seeded, with the top seed facing the fourth seed in one semifinal and the remaining two teams playing in the other game. The semifinals took place consecutively on either New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day, rotating among the following host bowl sites on a three-year cycle: Rose and Sugar, Cotton and Orange, and Fiesta and Peach. The national championship game was held at a predetermined site that was chosen from bids submitted by prospective host cities, similar to the process for determining locations for the Super Bowl and various All-Star games for major professional sports.

Current format

In 2022 it was decided to expand the playoffs to include 12 teams, starting in the 2024–25 season. Other changes included the composition of the selection committee. While former players, coaches, and administrators continued to serve, an athletic director from each of the five major conferences (Big Ten, ACC, SEC, Big 12, and Pac-12) was added.

As in the original process, the CFP selection committee ranks the top 25 teams at the end of the season. Guaranteed bids are given to the five highest-ranked conference champions. The next seven ranked schools receive at-large bids. The four highest-ranked conference champions are then seeded and given a first-round bye. The remaining schools compete in first-round games, with the 5 through 8 seeds playing the teams ranked 9 through 12. The six original CFP bowls (Cotton, Fiesta, Orange, Peach, Rose, and Sugar) host the quarterfinals and semifinals and rotate annually. And, as in the previous system, the national championship game is staged at a neutral site.

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FBS college football champions

A list of FBS college football national champions is provided in the table.

College football national champions*
season champion
*National champion determined by various polls until the introduction of the BCS system in 1998; BCS system replaced with the College Football Playoff system in 2014–15.
**Southern California won the BCS championship but had its title stripped in 2011 because of rules violations committed during the 2004 and 2005 seasons.
1924 Notre Dame
1925 Dartmouth
1926 Stanford
1927 Illinois
1928 Southern California
1929 Notre Dame
1930 Notre Dame
1931 Southern California
1932 Michigan
1933 Michigan
1934 Minnesota
1935 Southern Methodist
1936 Minnesota
1937 Pittsburgh
1938 Texas Christian
1939 Texas A&M
1940 Minnesota
1941 Minnesota
1942 Ohio State
1943 Notre Dame
1944 Army
1945 Army
1946 Notre Dame
1947 Notre Dame
1948 Michigan
1949 Notre Dame
1950 Oklahoma
1951 Tennessee
1952 Michigan State
1953 Maryland
1954 Ohio State (AP), UCLA (UP)
1955 Oklahoma
1956 Oklahoma
1957 Auburn (AP), Ohio State (UP)
1958 Louisiana State
1959 Syracuse
1960 Minnesota
1961 Alabama
1962 Southern California
1963 Texas
1964 Alabama
1965 Alabama (AP), Michigan State (UPI)
1966 Notre Dame
1967 Southern California
1968 Ohio State
1969 Texas
1970 Nebraska (AP), Texas (UPI)
1971 Nebraska
1972 Southern California
1973 Notre Dame (AP), Alabama (UPI)
1974 Oklahoma (AP), Southern California (UPI)
1975 Oklahoma
1976 Pittsburgh
1977 Notre Dame
1978 Alabama (AP), Southern California (UPI)
1979 Alabama
1980 Georgia
1981 Clemson
1982 Penn State
1983 Miami (Fla.)
1984 Brigham Young
1985 Oklahoma
1986 Penn State
1987 Miami (Fla.)
1988 Notre Dame
1989 Miami (Fla.)
1990 Colorado (AP), Georgia Tech (UPI)
1991 Miami (Fla.; AP), Washington (UPI)
1992 Alabama
1993–94 Florida State
1994–95 Nebraska
1995–96 Nebraska
1996–97 Florida
1997–98 Michigan (AP), Nebraska (USA Today/ESPN)
1998–99 Tennessee
1999–2000 Florida State
2000–01 Oklahoma
2001–02 Miami (Fla.)
2002–03 Ohio State
2003–04 Louisiana State (BCS), Southern California (AP)
2004–05 vacated**
2005–06 Texas
2006–07 Florida
2007–08 Louisiana State
2008–09 Florida
2009–10 Alabama
2010–11 Auburn
2011–12 Alabama
2012–13 Alabama
2013–14 Florida State
2014–15 Ohio State
2015–16 Alabama
2016–17 Clemson
2017–18 Alabama
2018–19 Clemson
2019–20 Louisiana State
2020–21 Alabama
2021–22 Georgia
2022–23 Georgia
2023–24 Michigan
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