College Football Playoff leaders discussed options for 16- and 24-team formats Wednesday as administrators continue to work toward expanding the postseason field.“I think we probably walked out with more questions than we had going in because it seemed like every answer we had, it drove a couple more questions from the commissioners, which is a good thing,” CFP executive director Rich Clark told The Athletic.The CFP meeting was part of a three-day gathering of Division I conference commissioners in Denver. Even before the current 12-team format debuted in 2024, further expansion had been a recurring topic among the management committee, which is comprised of 11 FBS conference commissioners and Notre Dame’s athletic director.After more than a year of talks about various versions of a 16-team Playoff, the Big Ten proposed doubling the field to 24 late last year. Over the past couple of months, most of the other conferences have publicly jumped on board with the concept.The SEC has remained a holdout, with commissioner Greg Sankey and most of his constituents tapping the brakes, seeking more information and leaning toward a more modest expansion to 16 teams.Clark said format discussions dominated Wednesday’s three-plus-hour meeting. An expansion to 16 teams would be less disruptive, while going to 24 would require a dramatic overhaul of college football’s current December calendar.