2019–20 College Football Playoff

College football tournament

  • Peach Bowl, Fiesta Bowl
  • December 28, 2019
ChampionshipTeams invited
ChampionsLSU (1st CFP title, 4th overall title)

The 2019–20 College Football Playoff was a single-elimination postseason tournament that determined the national champion of the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It was the sixth edition of the College Football Playoff (CFP) and involved the top four teams in the country as ranked by the College Football Playoff poll playing in two semifinals, with the winners of each advancing to the national championship game. Each participating team was the champion of its respective conference: No. 1 LSU from the Southeastern Conference, No. 2 Ohio State from the Big Ten Conference, No. 3 Clemson from the Atlantic Coast Conference, and No. 4 Oklahoma from the Big 12 Conference.

The playoff bracket's semifinal games were held at the Peach Bowl and the Fiesta Bowl on December 28, 2019, part of the season's slate of bowl games. The Peach Bowl semifinal saw LSU defeat Oklahoma by a margin of thirty-five points, and Clemson defeated Ohio State by six points in the Fiesta Bowl semifinal. Following their semifinal wins, LSU and Clemson advanced to the national championship game, held on January 13 in New Orleans. In the championship game, LSU beat Clemson 42–25 to win their first CFP national championship and their fourth national championship in school history.

Bracket

Semifinals Championship
December 28 – Peach Bowl
Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta
  1   LSU 63  
  4   Oklahoma 28   January 13 – National Championship
Mercedes-Benz Superdome, New Orleans
 
      1   LSU 42
December 28 – Fiesta Bowl
State Farm Stadium, Glendale
    3   Clemson 25
 
  2   Ohio State 23
  3   Clemson 29  
This bracket:
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Selection and teams

The 2019–20 CFP selection committee was chaired by Oregon athletic director Rob Mullens. Its other members were Iowa athletic director Gary Barta, former Virginia Tech head coach Frank Beamer, former The Arizona Republic reporter Paola Boivin, Oklahoma athletic director Joe Castiglione, former head coach Ken Hatfield, Robert Morris University president Christopher B. Howard, former NFL player Ronnie Lott, Arkansas State athletic director Terry Mohajir, USA Football chairman and former Army chief of staff Ray Odierno, former Texas A&M athletic director R. C. Slocum, Georgia Tech athletic director Todd Stansbury, and Florida athletic director Scott Stricklin.[1]

2019 College Football Playoff rankings top six progression
No. Week 9 Week 10 Week 11 Week 12 Week 13 Final
1 Ohio State (8–0) LSU (9–0) LSU (10–0) Ohio State (11–0) Ohio State (12–0) LSU (13–0)
2 LSU (8–0) Ohio State (9–0) Ohio State (10–0) LSU (11–0) LSU (12–0) Ohio State (13–0)
3 Alabama (8–0) Clemson (10–0) Clemson (10–0) Clemson (11–0) Clemson (12–0) Clemson (13–0)
4 Penn State (8–0) Georgia (8–1) Georgia (9–1) Georgia (10–1) Georgia (11–1) Oklahoma (12–1)
5 Clemson (9–0) Alabama (8–1) Alabama (9–1) Alabama (10–0) Utah (11–1) Georgia (11–2)
6 Georgia (7–1) Oregon (8–1) Oregon (9–1) Utah (10–1) Oklahoma (11–1) Oregon (11–2)

Key:  Team increased ranking from previous week   Team decreased ranking from previous week   Team selected to College Football Playoff 

Playoff games

Semifinals

Peach Bowl

2019 Peach Bowl
Quarter 1 2 34Total
No. 4 Oklahoma 7 7 7728
No. 1 LSU 21 28 7763

at Mercedes-Benz StadiumAtlanta, Georgia

  • Date: December 28, 2019
  • Game time: 4:00 p.m. EST

Fiesta Bowl

2019 Fiesta Bowl
Quarter 1 2 34Total
No. 3 Clemson 0 14 7829
No. 2 Ohio State 10 6 0723

at State Farm StadiumGlendale, Arizona

  • Date: December 28, 2019
  • Game time: 8:00 p.m. EST

Championship game

2020 College Football Playoff National Championship
Quarter 1 2 34Total
No. 3 Clemson 7 10 8025
No. 1 LSU 7 21 7742

at Mercedes-Benz SuperdomeNew Orleans, Louisiana

  • Date: January 7, 2019
  • Game time: 7:00 p.m. CST

References

  1. ^ "Year-by-year CFP selection committee membership". College Football Playoff. Retrieved July 21, 2024.
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2019–20 NCAA football bowl game season
All-Star Games
East–West Shrine Bowl (Jan. 18)
NFLPA Collegiate Bowl (Jan. 18)
Senior Bowl (Jan. 25)
Hula Bowl (Jan. 26)
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College Football Playoff
Overview
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Championship games for each season are played in January, as well as the Rose Bowl semifinal and the Sugar Bowl semifinal