Bill Connelly, ESPN Staff Writer 268d

19 games that defined the four-team College Football Playoff era

College Football, Baylor Bears, TCU Horned Frogs, Wisconsin Badgers, Ohio State Buckeyes, Alabama Crimson Tide, Georgia Bulldogs, LSU Tigers, Michigan Wolverines, Michigan State Spartans, Iowa Hawkeyes, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, Cincinnati Bearcats, Clemson Tigers, Pittsburgh Panthers, Penn State Nittany Lions, Florida State Seminoles, Auburn Tigers, Utah Utes, USC Trojans, Oregon Ducks, Purdue Boilermakers, North Alabama Lions

The 10th and final four-team College Football Playoff starts Monday. The two games on the docket -- No. 1 Michigan vs. No. 4 Alabama in the Rose Bowl Game presented by Prudential and No. 2 Washington vs. No. 3 Texas in the Allstate Sugar Bowl -- pack seemingly endless plotlines and possibilities, and we're only beginning to talk about them in detail.

Starting in 2024, we will see an expanded, 12-team playoff field -- a genuine tournament structure seen at basically every other level of football, from high school to smaller-school college to pro. With more bids, the CFP committee will have more margin for error: Had this year's main controversy -- the appalling selection of one-loss Alabama over unbeaten Florida State -- happened next year, for instance, it would have involved who did and didn't get a first-round bye, not who got a shot at the title at all. But with the 12-team era dawning, let's look back at what we've seen and learned from the four-team era. Throughout these 10 seasons, specific games had an outsized impact on who did and didn't make the cut. From Big Ten championships to a couple of Pac-12 no-shows to lots of Alabama-Georgias, here are 19 of the most impactful games of these 10 title races.

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2014

No. 5 Baylor Bears 61, No. 9 TCU Horned Frogs 58

The best game of 2014 and a downright silly track meet. Baylor gained 782 yards to TCU's 485, but the Horned Frogs nearly stole this one with help from a second-quarter kick return score and a fourth-quarter pick-six. Baylor trailed 58-37 with 11 minutes left but scored three touchdowns in six minutes, then knocked in a game-winning field goal at the buzzer. This was obviously a huge result between top-10 teams, but it only got bigger as both teams kept winning. They reached the finish line a combined 22-2, with Baylor losing only to West Virginia the week after the TCU game.

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