On3 leak reveals SEC teams’ three annual opponents


Matt Bush-USA TODAY Sports

The official unveiling of every SEC team’s three annual opponents isn’t scheduled until Tuesday. However, according to a report from On3 the future opponents have officially been set.

What You Need To Know

The league will shift to a nine game conference schedule beginning in 2026. That means each team will keep three annual opponents while rotating home-and-away series with six others every two years, facing all 12 remaining teams over four years.

The biggest change here, besides revenue that will be shoved even deeper into the pockets of the conference, is that every team will host and travel to every school in the conference at least once every four years.

The Schedule

Alabama: Auburn, Tennessee, Mississippi State

Arkansas: Missouri, Texas, LSU

Auburn: Georgia, Alabama, Vanderbilt

Florida:Georgia, South Carolina, Kentucky

Georgia: Auburn, Florida, South Carolina

Kentucky: South Carolina, Tennessee, Florida

LSU: Arkansas, Ole Miss, Texas A&M

Mississippi State: Ole Miss, Alabama, Vanderbilt

Missouri: Arkansas, Texas A&M, Oklahoma

Oklahoma: Texas, Ole Miss, Missouri

Ole Miss: Mississippi State, LSU, Oklahoma

South Carolina: Georgia, Kentucky, Florida

Tennessee: Alabama, Vanderbilt, Kentucky

Texas: Texas A&M, Arkansas, Oklahoma

Texas A&M: Texas, LSU, Missouri

Vanderbilt: Tennessee, Mississippi State, Auburn

What We Kept

One of the main points of emphasis and focus from the SEC and commissioner Greg Sankey was to preserve some of the annual and most longstanding rivalries in the conference. That means annual in-state rivalries and most of the annual contests between the original members of the conference were maintained.

Games like the Egg Bowl, Iron Bowl, and Georgia vs. Florida were kept. A good deal of other former cross divisional rivalries were kept, as well. Here’s a look at some of the bigger rivalries and games that were kept.

  • Alabama vs. Tennessee
  • Auburn vs. Georgia
  • LSU vs. Ole Miss
  • Texas vs. Oklahoma
  • Arkansas vs. Missouri
  • Arkansas vs. LSU

What We Lost

Expanding to a nine-game SEC schedule meant fans would inevitably lose some of their favorite yearly matchups. Nowhere is that more obvious than with LSU and several other former divisional rivalries. Yes, these teams will still meet every three or four years, but some of the conference’s most iconic and traditional showdowns are no longer annual fixtures.

That includes:

  • LSU vs. Alabama
  • LSU vs. Florida
  • Georgia vs. Tennessee

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