The road to the 2025-2026 College Football Playoff is already underway, with Kirby Smart completely revamping a number of areas through the transfer portal, namely the wide receiver room.
Where is Georgia football in the coaches and AP polls in the final top 25 of the season? Here's where the voters put the Bulldogs on Tuesday.
Assuming we want to put forth an entirely new College Football Playoff field without any returning teams from last year, how would we got about doing it? After picking five non-playoff teams to win their leagues,
ATHENS, Ga. — Three years ago, Georgia won a national championship and then set a modern NFL Draft record when 15 players from that team were selected. Five Georgia players went in the first round, all off a defense that was regarded then and still might be as generationally great. All in all, it was an immense, irreplaceable loss of talent.
This year, Boise State was the non-power representative for the College Football Playoff. Next year, it will be Tulane, but it will be a very different situation than the Broncos'. Boise State got a bye and was actually ranked inside the top-12. That won't be the case next season.
The Georgia Bulldogs have been given the second-best odds to win the national title in 2025/2026 according to the latest Championship Future odds. The Georgia
Kirby Smart and his Georgia football team have already started working on the 2025 campaign, but now they can do so with last season in the rearview mirror.
Making it to No. 1 in the College Football Playoff rankings means everything. What teams have made it to the top of the polls up to now?
Even with a 12-team College Football Playoff, who’s No. 3 at the end of the season still matters. So does No. 13. And No. 18. And No. 25.
Ohio State’s run to its first national championship in a decade enabled the Buckeyes to dominate the AP All-College Football Playoff team.
Ohio State Buckeyes did two things no College Football Playoff national champion ever accomplished. Not only are they the first team to win the expande
The Wall Street Journal shared valuation estimations for every FBS college football program after this year's College Football Playoff. The values are from an analysis from Ryan Brewer, an associate professor of finance at Indiana University Columbus.