The 2025 College Football Playoff arrives with a historic 12-team field, and all eyes are on undefeated Indiana and Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza, whose rise as a Cuban-American star headlines the most compelling postseason in years.
The road to the National Championship has never been wider, harder, or more compelling. The 2025 College Football Playoff (CFP) is set to begin, fully realizing the chaotic glory of the 12-team format.
The expanded field has delivered exactly what was promised to fans: more meaningful late-season games, more pathways for Cinderella stories, and a postseason bracket loaded with traditional powerhouses and stunning newcomers alike.
As the nation gears up for a month of high-stakes college football, the storylines are plentiful. Yet, none is more captivating than the team sitting at the very top of the bracket, led by a quarterback who has not only rewritten his school’s history books but is also carving out a significant legacy for Hispanic representation in the sport.
The Mendoza Effect: Indiana’s improbable No. 1 Seed

The undisputed headline of the 2025 season is the Indiana Hoosiers. Sitting at a perfect 13-0 as Big Ten Champions, they enter the playoff as the No. 1 overall seed—a massive improvement from their 3-9 season just a few years ago. The engine powering the Hoosiers’ run has been quarterback Fernando Mendoza.
Mendoza, a proud Cuban-American from Miami, has delivered one of the most remarkable individual seasons in recent memory, culminating in his becoming the first Indiana player and Cuban-American to win the Heisman Trophy. His journey, from an overlooked recruit who transferred from Cal to leading a historic undefeated season, embodies his resilience.
For the Hispanic community, Mendoza’s rise to the pinnacle of college football is also profoundly significant. The quarterback position at major programs has historically lacked Latino representation. To have the Heisman winner and the leader of the No. 1 seed be a fiercely competitive, cerebral passer of Cuban heritage is a watershed moment.
Mendoza isn’t just chasing a national title; he’s visible proof to a younger generation of Hispanic athletes that they can command the biggest stages in American sports.
The Gauntlet: Navigating the 12-Team Field
While Mendoza and the Hoosiers enjoy a crucial first-round bye, the rest of the field faces a grueling path. The 12-team format means that seeds 5 through 8 will host on-campus playoff games, bringing an electric, hostile atmosphere that the old four-team model lacked.
The narrative tension of this playoff lies in the clash between the established elite and the disruptors. Teams like Ohio State, which Mendoza and Indiana beat in the Big Ten title game, Georgia, and Oregon are lurking in the bracket, filled with five-star talent and postseason experience. They will look to expose any cracks in the armor of newer contenders like Texas A&M, Tulane, and James Madison.
Indiana’s challenge will be maintaining their momentum after the layoff. History has shown that the bye week can be a double-edged sword—providing rest but sometimes cooling off hot teams. Mendoza’s leadership and poise, traits he has demonstrated all season in clutch moments, will be tested like never before as the competition narrows to the absolute best in the country.

A Defining Postseason
This year’s College Football Playoff feels different because the ceiling for history is higher. We aren’t just watching for who lifts the trophy; we are watching to see if the sport’s traditional hierarchy can be disrupted.
If Fernando Mendoza can navigate this expanded, treacherous field and deliver a National Championship, it won’t just be the greatest story in Indiana football history—it will be a monumental cultural achievement that resonates far beyond the gridiron.



