Beginning in 2027, college football could have an earlier official start to the season, as the NCAA’s Football Oversight Committee on Thursday recommended a standard start before Labor Day weekend.
Under the proposal, the regular season would begin on the Thursday of what is now called Week Zero, and still end on the Saturday after Thanksgiving. Schools would have 14 weeks to schedule 12 games. This model would give teams two open dates and allow for “flexibility for potential changes to the postseason.”
That’s significant, as leaders of the College Football Playoff continue to discuss how and when to expand the current 12-team field. The proposed calendar change would also preserve standalone weekends for conference championship games and the Army-Navy game.
Vanderbilt coach Clark Lea, who is a member of the Football Oversight Committee, told ESPN the football season calendar has been a “health and safety issue” that needed to be addressed.
“To go through a season without two bye weeks is challenging to a roster,” he said, “and in a time where we’ve imposed roster limits, and in our league where we’re playing nine league games now, on the off years where we weren’t able to get that second bye, we believe there’s a negative impact mentally, physically, emotionally, to the players, coaches, everyone involved. So from our vantage point, it was something we’ve supported and feel strongly about.”

