With March Madness underway, the focus of sports fans has been on college basketball. But in the SEC, where football is always on the forefront, presidents in the conference voted on an important topic.

According to 247Sports, one of the topics of conversation in Nashville among athletic directors and presidents was whether or not there’s a need to expand the College Football Playoff field. It’s not too surprising that the four-team format seems to be just fine for most of the important people in the SEC.

“We voted yesterday to support the four-team football playoff,” South Carolina President Harris Pastides said. “We think it’s working fairly well. Some fans, of course, want eight, others want 16. If you go to 16, people want 32. Mainly this is based on player welfare. At that time of the year after playing a rugged season, the last thing these great student-athletes need is to play yet another football game. That is something that I’m confident all power five conferences will be supportive of.”

Recently, the argument for an eight-team playoff has gained some serious steam. Last year’s debate between Ohio State, Oklahoma and Georgia for the fourth and final spot in the College Football Playoff sparked the idea the format needed to be expanded.

Commissioners Jim Delany (B1G) and Bob Bowlsby (Big XII) both agreed that expanding the field needed some serious consideration as both conferences have been left out in recent years.

The SEC is one of just two conferences to make the College Football Playoff every year, with the ACC being the other. The SEC is the only conference to have two teams make the same field, with both Alabama and Georgia earning a spot in the 2018 field.

Right now, it seems like there’s a lot of work to be done before expansion would be in serious consideration. And it doesn’t sound like the SEC is in favor of that idea.