Current:Home > NewsRekubit Exchange:ESPN, TNT Sports announce five-year deal to sublicense College Football Playoff games -Capitatum
Rekubit Exchange:ESPN, TNT Sports announce five-year deal to sublicense College Football Playoff games
TrendPulse View
Date:2025-04-06 13:30:27
As the College Football Playoff format changes start this upcoming season,Rekubit Exchange details on how it will operate and look are continuing to come out.
One of those being TV rights and schedule.
On Wednesday, ESPN and the College Football Playoff announced that the network came to a five-year contract agreement with TNT Sports — a subdivision of Warner Bros. Discovery — to sublicense select CFP games from ESPN, starting with two first-round games this upcoming season. Games will be broadcast on TNT.
"We're delighted to reach this agreement with ESPN, providing TNT Sports the opportunity to showcase these College Football Playoff games on our platforms for years to come," TNT Sports Chairman and CEO Luis Silberwasser said in a statement. "TNT Sports aims to delight fans and drive maximum reach and engagement for these marquee games."
Broadcasting college football will be a first for TNT Sports — which has added rights to the NHL and MLB in recent years to its resume to go along with the NBA and the NCAA Tournament. As part of the deal with ESPN, TNT Sports will also receive two quarterfinal games on top of its two first-round games starting in 2026. Per the press release, ESPN will broadcast all other CFP games on its networks including the national championship game.
"ESPN is pleased to sublicense to TNT Sports a select number of early round games of the College Football Playoff, an event we've helped to grow — alongside the CFP — into one of the preeminent championships," ESPN executive vice president, programming & acquisitions Rosalyn Durant said in a statement. "We're confident in the reach and promotion that this new agreement will provide as we enter the new, expanded playoff era."
Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed in the release, but according to the Associated Press, the sublicense of the CFP to TNT Sports is possible because of ESPN's new $7.8 billion deal it signed back in March to retain the rights to the CFP.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL RE-RANK 1-134: Georgia, Ohio State lead after spring practices
College Football Playoff format
The news of TNT Sports joining the broadcast rights for the CFP comes after the College Football Playoff Board of Managers unanimously approved the adoption of the College Football Playoffs format going from five teams to 12, i.e. the 5+7 model format, back in February.
"It is exciting to add TNT Sports, another highly respected broadcaster, to the College Football Playoff family," Executive Director of the College Football Playoff Bill Hancock said in a statement. "Sports fans across the country are intimately familiar with their work across a wide variety of sports properties over the past two decades, and we look forward to seeing what new and innovative ideas they bring to the promotion and delivery of these games."
In the 5+7 model format, the four highest-ranked conference champions earn first-round byes and are seeded one through four, with the remaining eight teams getting seeded five through 12. These eight teams then play each other in the first round on the home field of the higher-ranked team.
Here is a look at the schedule for the 2024-25 College Football Playoff with the 12-team model:
First round (on campus)
- Friday, Dec. 20, 2024: One game
- Saturday, Dec. 21, 2024: Three games
Quarterfinals
- Tuesday, Dec. 31, 2024: Vrbo Fiesta Bowl
- Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025: Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl, Rose Bowl Game and Allstate Sugar Bowl
Semifinals
- Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025: Capital One Orange Bowl
- Friday, Jan. 10, 2025: Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic
National championship
- Monday, Jan. 20, 2025: Mercedes-Benz Stadium (Atlanta)
veryGood! (3)
Related
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Kaia Gerber Reveals Matching Tattoo With The Bear's Ayo Edebiri
- How to safely watch the total solar eclipse: You will need glasses
- Aaron Donald, Rams great and three-time NFL Defensive Player of Year, retires at 32
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Ree Drummond clears up weight loss medication rumors: 'I did not take Ozempic, Wegovy'
- PETA tells WH, Jill Biden annual Easter Egg Roll can still be 'egg-citing' with potatoes
- California man sentenced to life for ‘boogaloo movement’ killing of federal security guard
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Target is pulling back on self-checkout, limiting service to people with 10 items or fewer
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Internet gambling revenue continues to soar in New Jersey. In-person revenue? Not so much.
- Judge asked to dismiss claims against police over killing of mentally ill woman armed with shotgun
- Home sellers cut list prices amid higher mortgage rates as spring buying season begins
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- Man, woman arrested in connection to dead baby found in Florida trash bin
- Parents of school shooting victims vow more action - even after shooter's parents convicted
- 22 artifacts looted after the Battle of Okinawa returned to Japan
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
DeSantis signs bills that he says will keep immigrants living in the US illegally from Florida
The Supreme Court won’t intervene in a dispute over drag shows at a public university in Texas
Teen Mom's Jade Cline Reveals Her and Husband Sean Austin’s Plan for Baby No. 2
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Q&A: What’s So Special About a New ‘Eye in the Sky’ to Track Methane Emissions
Connecticut trooper who shot Black man after police chase is acquitted of manslaughter
Judge delays Trump’s hush-money criminal trial until mid-April, citing last-minute evidence dump