College

Baylor AD Mack Rhoades leaves role as CFP chairman and Hunter Yurachek replaces him

Associated Press
By Associated Press
2 Min Read Nov. 13, 2025 | 1 month Ago
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Baylor athletic director Mack Rhoades stepped down from his role as chairman of the College Football Playoff selection committee and is taking a leave of absence from the school while it investigates allegations against him.

While not going into additional details, Baylor vice president Jason Cook said Thursday those allegations against Rhoades do not involve Title IX, student-athlete welfare or NCAA rules violations and do not involve the football program. Cook said the university takes the allegations seriously and is in the process of conducting a thorough investigation.

The school earlier in the day released a statement that said Rhoades began his leave for “personal reasons” Wednesday.

Rhoades didn’t respond to a message from the Associated Press. He told ESPN he initiated his leave from Baylor but declined to explain why.

The new allegations received this week are not related to a report earlier this month of an alleged verbal and physical altercation involving Rhoades, a football player and an assistant coach. The school previously said it reviewed and investigated that matter, and that it was closed after appropriate actions were taken.

Rhoades was in the second year of a three-year CFP appointment and his first season as chairman of the committee.

The CFP later Thursday appointed Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek as the committee chairman for the rest of the season. The chair is the primary spokesperson for the CFP decision-making process, regularly appearing on weekly prime-time ESPN reveals of its rankings and the announcement of the 12-team playoff field Dec. 7.

Utah AD Mark Harlan will fill Rhoades’ vacancy on the board as the Big 12 representative. Harlan previously served a one-year term on the committee in 2023.

The selection committee, which has done two weekly rankings this season, already wasdown from its standard 13 members to 12 after Randall McDaniel last month stepped away from his role on the committee for personal reasons, though the former Arizona State guard is expected to return next year.

Rhoades has been Baylor’s athletic director since July 2016, when he took over in the wake of the revelation of a sprawling sexual assault scandal that cost two-time Big 12 champion football coach Art Briles his job. That NCAA case against the Bears wasn’t resolved until 2021, when the school was placed on four years of probation.

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