ESPN's "Megacast" for the National Championship is back, this year featuring 14 different ways to watch Alabama vs. Clemson. That's up from six different broadcasts in 2014 and 12 different broadcasts in 2015. You can watch on every major ESPN channel, with options ranging from the standard broadcast to in-depth analysis. The game will be played in Glendale, Ariz., on Jan. 11, at 8:30 p.m. ET.
Here's how you can watch, from ESPN:
ESPN — Standard Broadcast
This is the normal broadcast for the game, with Chris Fowler and Kirk Herbstreit — ESPN's primetime duo — in the booth, and Heather Cox and Tom Rinaldi on the sidelines.
ESPN2 — Film Room
Brian Griese and Chris Spielman will be breaking down the game from multiple angles, along with Florida coach Jim McElwain and "other additional guests." Dan Mullen, Pat Narduzzi and Mike Riley provided awesome analysis from a coaches' perspective last year.
ESPN Radio — Standard Broadcast
This is the standard radio broadcast for the game, with Mike Tirico and Todd Blackledge in the booth, and Holly Rowe and Joe Schad on the sidelines.
ESPNews — ESPN Voices
This is just a bunch of people — some of whom pay attention to college football — watching a game together. Last year, it was just a lot of people eating food. It was more entertaining than most of this year's bowl games.
ESPNU — Homer Broadcast
This broadcast will feature different former players watching the game together. Joe Tessitore will host former Clemson quarterback Tajh Boyd and former Alabama center Barrett Jones watching the game together. Other "partisan guests" will join, too.
SEC Network — Finebaum Film Room
Paul Finebaum will host a show with analysis from Greg McElroy, Booger McFarland and Arkansas coach Bret Bielema. They will take live calls from fans, and fans can interact with the Twitter hashtag #FinebaumFilmRoom. Tune in to see Bielema talk to angry/happy Alabama fans.
ESPN Classic — Sounds of the Game
This is the live broadcast of the game, with all natural sound and no announcers. You can also watch this on ESPN3.
ESPN Goal Line — Command Center
This will be a split-screen telecast with live game action, immediate replays of every play, isolated camera feeds of both head coaches, enhanced statistics, real-time drive charts and the ESPN Radio broadcast.
ESPN Deportes — Spanish-Language Call
The game will be broadcast in Spanish by Lalo Varela, Pablo Viruega, Bernardo Osuna and Carlos Nava
ESPN3
- Mock Replay Booth: In this broadcast, current ACC and SEC replay officials will join another official and rules expert to take viewers through every relay review, explaining the process and which plays are subject to review.
- PYLON CAM: Pylon cam came up big in the Clemson-Oklahoma game, and it will broadcast the whole game, with camera angles on eight pylons around the end zones, along with other camera feeds.
- Home Town Radio: The radio announcers for each team will be calling games on separate feeds, with customized shots of head coaches and star players.
- Data Center: This feed will show analytics, drive charts, win probability updates, social media reaction and more.
- Spider Cam: The "spider cam" that maneuvers the field will give fans a better view to analyze the game.
- Taco Bell Student Section: These cameras will focus on "the most enthusiastic fans" in the student sections, plus bands, mascots and cheerleaders.