Jump to content

2015–16 College Football Playoff

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2015–16 College Football Playoff
Season2015
Semifinals
Championship
Teams invited
ChampionsAlabama (1st CFP title, 16th overall title)

The 2015–16 College Football Playoff was a single-elimination postseason tournament that determined the national champion of the 2015 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It was the second 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 Clemson from the Atlantic Coast Conference, No. 2 Alabama from the Southeastern Conference, No. 3 Michigan State from the Big Ten Conference, and No. 4 Oklahoma from the Big 12 Conference.

The playoff bracket's semifinal games were held at the Orange Bowl and Cotton Bowl Classic on New Year's Eve, part of the season's slate of bowl games. In the Orange Bowl semifinal, Clemson defeated Oklahoma by twenty points. The second semifinal, at the Cotton Bowl, Alabama shutout Michigan State, 38–0. As a result of their victories, Clemson and Alabama faced each other in the national championship game, held on January 11 in Glendale, Arizona. In that game, Alabama won by five points, giving them their first CFP national championship and their sixteenth claimed national championship in school history.

Bracket

[edit]
Semifinals Championship
December 31 – Orange Bowl
Sun Life Stadium, Miami Gardens
  1   Clemson 37  
  4   Oklahoma 17   January 11 – National Championship
University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale
 
      1   Clemson 40
December 31 – Cotton Bowl
AT&T Stadium, Arlington
    2   Alabama 45
 
  2   Alabama 38
  3   Michigan State 0  


Selection and teams

[edit]

The 2015–16 CFP selection committee was chaired by Arkansas athletic director Jeff Long. Its other members were Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez, former United States Air Force Academy superintendent Michael C. Gould, Texas Tech athletic director Kirby Hocutt, former NCAA executive vice president Tom Jernstedt, former head coach Bobby Johnson, former Nebraska head coach Tom Osborne, Clemson athletic director Dan Radakovich, former United States secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, former Big East Conference commissioner Mike Tranghese, former USA Today reporter Steve Wieberg, and former college head coach Tyrone Willingham.[1]

2015 College Football Playoff rankings top six progression
No. Week 9 Week 10 Week 11 Week 12 Week 13 Final
1 Clemson (8–0) Clemson (9–0) Clemson (10–0) Clemson (11–0) Clemson (12–0) Clemson (13–0)
2 LSU (7–0) Alabama (8–1) Alabama (9–1) Alabama (10–1) Alabama (11–1) Alabama (12–1)
3 Ohio State (8–0) Ohio State (9–0) Ohio State (10–0) Oklahoma (10–1) Oklahoma (11–1) Michigan State (12–1)
4 Alabama (7–1) Notre Dame (8–1) Notre Dame (9–1) Iowa (11–0) Iowa (12–0) Oklahoma (11–1)
5 Notre Dame (7–1) Iowa (9–0) Iowa (10–0) Michigan State (10–1) Michigan State (11–1) Iowa (12–1)
6 Baylor (7–0) Baylor (8–0) Oklahoma State (10–0) Notre Dame (10–1) Ohio State (11–1) Stanford (11–2)

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

Playoff games

[edit]

Semifinals

[edit]

Orange Bowl

[edit]
2015 Orange Bowl
Quarter 1 2 34Total
No. 4 Oklahoma 7 10 0017
No. 1 Clemson 3 13 14737

at Hard Rock StadiumMiami Gardens, Florida

  • Date: December 31, 2015
  • Game time: 4:00 p.m. EST

Cotton Bowl Classic

[edit]
2015 Cotton Bowl Classic
Quarter 1 2 34Total
No. 3 Michigan State 0 0 000
No. 2 Alabama 0 10 21738

at AT&T StadiumArlington, Texas

  • Date: December 31, 2016
  • Game time: 7:20 p.m. CST

Championship game

[edit]
2016 College Football Playoff National Championship
Quarter 1 2 34Total
No. 2 Alabama 7 7 72445
No. 1 Clemson 14 0 101640

at University of Phoenix StadiumGlendale, Arizona

  • Date: January 11, 2016
  • Game time: 6:30 p.m. MST

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Year-by-year CFP selection committee membership". College Football Playoff. Retrieved July 21, 2024.