As the College Football Playoff Enters the Quarterfinals, ESPN Blows Out Its MegaCast Multiplatform PlaybookOne of the options, Field Pass with The Pat McAfee Show, will air from different games on back-to-back daysBy Brandon Costa, Director of Digital Tuesday, December 30, 2025 - 12:54 pm
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As the College Football Playoff rolls into the Quarterfinals this holiday week, ESPN is once again leaning into one of its most powerful differentiators: production scale.
The network will ring in the New Year with an expansive MegaCast presentation across all four CFP Quarterfinal matchups on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1, deploying more than two dozen total viewing options across linear television, digital platforms, and audio outlets.
The alternate broadcast, Field Pass with The Pat McAfee Show , will run alongside two CFP quarterfinal games this week. During Round 1, the show was produced from the sidelines of Miami-Texas A&M in College Station, TX. (Photo: Rich Storry / ESPN Images)
The main telecast for each game will air on ESPN, but the broader story lives in the layers around it. From alternate camera angles and data-rich viewing modes to personality-driven sideline shows and on-site studio productions, ESPN's MegaCast continues to serve as a proving ground for how fans can experience the same game in dramatically different ways - and how the network can flex its multiplatform infrastructure at scale.
MORE: College Football Playoff Preview: For ESPN, Round 1 is a Fantastic - Yet Familiar - Saturday of Production
Field Pass Returns, Expands Its FootprintOne of the most visible elements of ESPN's MegaCast ecosystem, Field Pass with The Pat McAfee Show, returns for its fourth consecutive CFP run and will be deployed across two Quarterfinals on back-to-back days.
On New Year's Eve, Field Pass originates from the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic in Arlington, offering an alternate presentation of Miami vs. Ohio State on ESPN2. On New Year's Day, the production heads west to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl Game Presented by Prudential, where Indiana faces Alabama - again airing on ESPN2.
The Field Pass format continues to emphasize an informal, sideline-based production style, built around roaming commentary, live guest rotations, and constant interaction with the environment inside the stadium. From a production standpoint, it remains one of ESPN's most distinctive alternate presentations, blending traditional broadcast infrastructure with a looser, personality-driven editorial tone.
ACC Network will also deploy the Field Pass model at the Cotton Bowl, with Field Pass with ACC Huddle airing live from AT&T Stadium. The presentation integrates ACC Network's traveling studio operation with in-game sideline commentary, extending the MegaCast concept deeper into conference-specific coverage and further diversifying the Quarterfinal viewing menu.
A Deep Bench of Alternate Viewing ExperiencesBeyond Field Pass, ESPN's MegaCast slate for the Quarterfinals once again includes a full lineup of alternate feeds designed to appeal to different segments of the audience - and to showcase the network's technical depth.
SkyCast returns across multiple games and networks, delivering the familiar overhead SkyCam perspective that tracks the offense on most plays while maintaining replay integration without leaving the angle. Command Center presentations provide a multi-box viewing experience, combining multiple camera angles with real-time statistics and data overlays to give viewers a more analytical look at the game.
Select Quarterfinals will also be available in 4K, including the Rose Bowl Game, reinforcing ESPN's ongoing commitment to premium formats for its biggest college football properties. All alternate presentations will be accessible via the ESPN App, underscoring the role of digital distribution as a core pillar of the MegaCast strategy rather than a secondary outlet.
Studio Shows Go On the RoadESPN's shoulder programming will be just as active as the game productions themselves. College GameDay Built by The Home Depot continues its CFP run with a special New Year's Day edition originating from the Rose Bowl site in Pasadena, extending the network's long-standing tradition of anchoring major events with on-site pregame coverage.
SEC Network and ACC Network will also be deeply embedded on location throughout the Quarterfinal round. SEC Network plans live studio operations from Pasadena and New Orleans surrounding the Rose Bowl Game and the Allstate Sugar Bowl, while also utilizing its Charlotte studios to support the broader week of programming. The approach reflects the conference network's emphasis on immersive, on-site storytelling around its participating teams, paired with centralized production support.
ACC Network's ACC Huddle will travel to Arlington for Miami vs. Ohio State, pairing pregame analysis with live, in-game sideline commentary as part of its Field Pass integration. Postgame coverage will wrap up the night with ACC Huddle Final Score, completing a full day of event-centric programming from multiple locations.
Audio and Language Options Extend ReachComplementing the video offerings, ESPN Radio will carry all four Quarterfinals nationwide across more than 400 affiliates, with additional distribution through the ESPN App and major digital audio platforms. Spanish-language telecasts will also be available for all games via ESPN Deportes and the ESPN App, continuing ESPN's commitment to multilingual access across its biggest events.
Hometown radio audio options, synced with select SkyCast presentations, further round out the MegaCast menu, giving fans the ability to pair local calls with national-level production resources - another example of how ESPN continues to blur the lines between










