Ahead of tonight’s national championship game between Ohio State and Notre Dame, ESPN College GameDay host Rece Davis sees a narrow path forward for the Fighting Irish to come out with a win. It involves a two-step process,
In an interview with "The Press Box" podcast from the site of the title game in Atlanta, Davis shared his strong opinions about the format of the 12-team playoff, revealing that he shared some of them with members of the CFP committee.
Rece Davis, the host of ESPN’s College GameDay show, recently joined The Press Box podcast and discussed the inaugural year of the 12-team College Football Playoff. Davis weighed in on what worked
Four weeks ago, both the No. 7 Notre Dame Fighting Irish and No. 8 Ohio State Buckeyes were just two teams seeded in the middle of the first-ever 12-team
Kirk Herbstreit couldn’t help but get emotional in the broadcast booth on Monday night. The longtime ESPN college football announcer, who has become one of the key voices in the sport the past few decades,
Rece Davis and the "College GameDay Podcast" crew reviewed the College Football Playoff national championship matchup between Ohio State and Notre Dame shortly after the Buckeyes' win over Texas.
Former Alabama football coach Nick Saban was surprised by the news of his hall of fame selection on ESPN's College Gameday.
Indiana achieves third-highest final ranking in school history after 11-2 College Football Playoff-qualifying season.
Following a 34-23 victory for the Ohio State Buckeyes in the national title game of the College Football Playoff, head coach Ryan Day spoke with the media. Day was asked to review the first-ever 12-team College Football Playoff after he led Ohio State to a national championship over the Notre Dame Fighting Irish.
Leave it be. Enjoy the show. Let a good thing be a good thing. This 12-team College Football Playoff format works beautifully.
THE Ohio State Buckeyes ran the gauntlet and won the first ever 12-team College Football Playoff. Last night’s championship game wasn’t all that entertaining, but it was still close enough to keep things interesting.