Ranking Each Team’s Annual Rivalry Slate by Difficulty

The time has come at last. Beginning in 2026, the SEC will match its primary conference rival, the Big Ten, and move to a nine-game conference schedule. Along with the elimination of divisions ahead of the 2024 season, the SEC football schedule has been radically reshaped as the sport continues to adapt in the College Football Playoff era. Commissioner Greg Sankey certainly hopes that the move helps make his teams even more competitive for at-large bids, especially with the possibility of CFP expansion to 16 (or more) teams in the near future.

The SEC took a fairly novel approach to its new-look schedule. Each team will face three annual rivals every year between 2026 and ’29, along with six other league schools. As a result, every SEC matchup will be played every two years at minimum, and should a player stay at the same school for four years, he will have a chance to face every other SEC team at home and on the road.

More: Ranking 10 Best SEC Rivalry Games Still Alive With New Conference Schedule—And Five We Lost

The league says it looked to protect traditional and regional rivalries, while also building more balanced schedules with this four-year rollout. In its release, the SEC touted that the “highest opponent average winning percentage for any school in the 2026–29 schedules is 55.67% while the lowest is 46.65%, a difference of only 9.02%.” With the previous model, that difference was 21.56%. The league will look back into its scheduling ahead of the 2030 season, and could reshuffle annual opponents to maintain competitive balance.

While these schedules are quite balanced, not all SEC teams are created equal. Looking ahead to the next four years, which programs are primed to dominate their three annual rivals, and which have their work cut out for them? We’ve ranked all 16 annual matchup slates, from easiest to most difficult.

(All home and road matchups listed are for the 2026 season. If a team plays one home game and two road games in its 2026 rotation, it will play the reverse two home games and one road game the following year.)

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Georgia football coach Kirby Smart looks on during a game

Kirby Smart and Georgia will see three longtime heated rivals each year through 2029. / Alan Poizner-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Neutral Site Game

2026 Road Game

Georgia Opponent

Auburn

Florida

South Carolina

Yes, Georgia—the current most consistently dominant program in the Southeastern Conference—got the most manageable draw of annual opponents in the conference. That isn’t to say this is an easy three-game slate, of course. There are very few true walkovers in the SEC, especially in a world where Vanderbilt is a Top 15 program and Mississippi State can thoroughly beat a Big 12 title contender.

Georgia has the benefit of being unable to draw Georgia. The Dawgs don’t get Alabama every year—though in the new nine-game rotation they’ll play the Crimson Tide more frequently than before in regular season play. No LSU, no Oklahoma, no Ole Miss, neither of the Texas schools pop up here. The three choices they get instead are completely logical—all former SEC East rivals, one with which is shares one of the conference’s most famous rivalries (Florida) and another that it faces in the Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry (Auburn). South Carolina is a local, regular opponent.

If Auburn and Florida were at the peak of their powers, or South Carolina was still enjoying its Steve Spurrier halcyon days, when they were a sharp spur in the side of the Dawgs, this slate would probably be near the top of the list. Instead, Auburn and Florida could both go through coaching changes and program resets in the next four years, while South Carolina has struggled to take a step forward from its late-2024 success. Georgia will be a strong favorite against all three of their rivals for the foreseeable future.

Diego Pavia and Vanderbilt celebrate a win vs. Georgia State.

Diego Pavia may be in his final college football season, but he has helped Vanderbilt reach heights not seen in generations. / Andrew Nelles / The Tennessean / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

2026 Road Game

Vanderbilt Opponent

Tennessee

Auburn

Mississippi State

Down the list, Vanderbilt’s surprising Diego Pavia-led surge has some of these slates looking much more difficult than expected. Vandy’s set of games is not without obstacles. Tennessee has become one of the SEC’s more consistently solid programs and is riding a six-game winning streak vs. its in-state rival. Auburn is, at best, a national championship-caliber program, though it hasn’t risen to those heights in over a decade. Mississippi State looks improved in 2025, but is yet to play an SEC game, and historically has its back against the wall as much as any conference program outside of, well, Vanderbilt.

The jury is out on how Clark Lea will handle the post-Pavia world at Vandy, after entering 2024 on a very hot seat. He’s given himself plenty of rope over the last year-plus, and will have a reasonable—by SEC standards—set of annual opponents to deal with over the next four years.

Mark Stoops grabs his headset during a Kentucky football game.

Mark Stoops is one of the longest tenured SEC coaches after taking over Kentucky in 2013. / Matt Stone/Courier Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

2026 Road Game

Kentucky Opponent

Florida

South Carolina

Tennessee

Will Mark Stoops be around for most—or any—or the four upcoming nine-game SEC schedules? That is a fair question, as Kentucky comes off of a deeply disappointing 4–8 2024 campaign and has held serve through three games in ’25. Stoops, who was set to take the Texas A&M job just a few years ago, seems to have hit a skid in Lexington. After watching his brother Bob Stoops retire from coaching fairly early, it would be a mild surprise to see the 58-year-old Mark remain with the Wildcats for the long term.

Kentucky will have some pretty familiar annual opponents as long as Stoops is still plying his trade, with three former SEC East rivals. Tennessee is currently one of the toughest outs in the league. Florida and South Carolina are more difficult to get a read on, and the Gators are very likely to make a coaching change in the near future, barring an impressive turnaround.

Florida's DJ Lagway throws a pass during a game at Miami.

DJ Lagway’s struggles have been a major issue for Florida in 2025. / Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Neutral Site Game

2026 Road Game

Florida Opponent

South Carolina

Georgia

Kentucky

The game once known as the The World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party is one of the two protected neutral-site annual SEC matchups, along with the Red River Rivalry between Oklahoma and Texas. That is tough news for the Gators, who will continue to face Georgia—currently the class of the SEC—each and every year. The 2026 game will be contested in Atlanta and the ’27 edition in Tampa before it returns to its traditional home of Jacksonville in ’28, following a large-scale redesign of EverBank Stadium.

Kentucky and South Carolina should be winnable games on a regular basis for a decent Florida squad, but the Gators have struggled to field decent squads with any consistency since Urban Meyer was taking them to national titles.

Shane Beamer claps during a South Carolina football game.

South Carolina will maintain annual series with a few fellow former SEC East programs through 2029. / Jeff Blake-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

South Carolina Opponent

Georgia

Kentucky

Florida

Another former SEC East program in the back end of this list. South Carolina is among the unlucky programs that will need to deal with Kirby Smart’s squad on an annual basis. Florida and Kentucky are two question marks, however. The Gators could reemerge as a national title threat, but they haven’t had a coach last more than four seasons since Meyer stepped down, and Billy Napier appears to be on a similar path.

Mark Stoops’s future with Kentucky is also an open question, though that may be good news for the Gamecocks. While Shane Beamer’s club has a three-game winning streak against the Wildcats entering this weekend’s game, Stoops won seven of eight games in the series between 2014 and ’21.

Kalen DeBoer looks up during Alabama's 2025 loss to Florida State.

Alabama received a manageable draw with the SEC’s new annual rivalry games. / Melina Myers-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

2026 Road Game

Alabama Opponent

Auburn

Mississippi State

Tennessee

Forde: Dropping Alabama-LSU Heavyweight Clash Is Most Painful Rivalry Loss

Alabama’s three-team group featured one of the more surprising snubs of the entire release: the Crimson Tide’s annual game against LSU. The SEC opted to protect two more historic rivalries in Auburn and Tennessee as well as a long-running series with Mississippi State that dates back to 1896 with 108 all-time meetings entering 2025.

Auburn and Tennessee can be national championship contenders in any given year. They can also fall apart in spectacular ways, as evidenced by the post-Gus Malzahn Auburn years and the wilderness that Tennessee has waded through for much of the 2000s and 2010s. Mississippi State is traditionally one of the weaker teams in the league.

Josh Heupel high-fives a Tennessee player during the game against UAB.

Josh Heupel has returned Tennessee to its most consistent level since Phillip Fulmer’s retirement. / Caitie McMekin/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

Tennessee Opponent

Alabama

Kentucky

Vanderbilt

Assuming Alabama stabilizes under Kalen DeBoer, the Crimson Tide should be one of the most difficult outs in the league—and one that Tennessee will contend with on the Third Saturday in October for the forseeable future, as the SEC made sure to protect the cigar-toting series. Kentucky, meanwhile, looks to be past its plucky prime under Mark Stoops.

And so, this three-game slate hinges on Vanderbilt. Will Clark Lea’s squad remain one of the SEC’s most surprising teams after Diego Pavia has finally matriculated out of college, or will the Commodores return to bottom feeder status? That is the question that Josh Heupel and many others in Knoxville taking a quick peek at the future want answered.

Missouri coach Eli Drinkwitz speaks to an SEC Network reporter.

Missouri’s annual conference opponents include a pair of conference rivals dating back to the Big Eight and Big 12 days. / Denny Medley-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

Missouri Opponent

Oklahoma

Texas A&M

Arkansas

The schedule release takes Missouri back to the future, as the Tigers renew their old Big Eight/12 rivalry with conference newcomer Oklahoma, and add an annual series with another former Big 12 foe, Texas A&M. Mizzou and A&M joined the SEC together in 2011 and played each other in each of their first four years in the league, but have only matched up twice since.

Arkansas left the Southwest Conference before a number of its biggest members left to form the Big 12, so the Razorbacks did not have a ton of history with the Tigers before they became SEC foes, despite being separated by just about 300 miles. The league has tried to make the rivalry happen, with the introduction of the Battle Line Trophy in 2015, though its been quite one-sided with Missouri winning all but two matchups since it became a schedule staple in ’14.

Texas coach Steve Sarkisian does a Horns Up gesture ahead of a Longhorns game.

Texas reunited with Arkansas and Texas A&M with their move to the SEC. / Scott Wachter-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Neutral Site Game

2026 Road Game

Texas Opponent

Arkansas

Oklahoma

Texas A&M

It will be very easy to compare Texas and Missouri over the next four years, as they have the exact same slate of protected opponents, with the only major difference being that the Red River Rivalry against Oklahoma will remain an annual neutral site game played in Dallas.

Texas renewed two of its biggest rivalries when it joined the SEC a year ago. Texas A&M was the obvious one, and that game has become part of a stacked final weekend lineup for the SEC. Arkansas and Texas only played six times between when the Razorbacks left the SWC and Texas joined the SEC—two of which were bowl matchups—but the Hogs never quite found an SEC rivalry with as much animosity as they have for Texas. That game is now protected for at least four years as well.

Brian Kelly looks on during an LSU football game vs. Southeastern Louisiana.

Brian Kelly has found some success in his three-plus years at LSU, but is yet to lead the Tigers to the College Football Playoff. / Stephen Lew-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

2026 Road Game

LSU Opponent

Texas A&M

Arkansas

Ole Miss

With the dissolution of divisions, the SEC West is no longer, but the schools that once occupied that division still have some really tough draws with most protected rivalry games falling along those old division lines. The loss of the annual Alabama–LSU game drew plenty of headlines, but the Tigers will have plenty on their plate, with Ole Miss and Texas A&M regularly competing near the top of the league.

Arkansas should be the easiest of the three games, and faces an uncertain future as Sam Pittman’s job status is extremely tenuous, espeically after Week 4’s loss to Memphis. Pittman has fallen under .500 for his tenure as Hogs coach, meaning Bobby Petrino is once again the last coach to post a winning record in Fayetteville.

Lane Kiffin gestures on the sideline during an Ole Miss game.

Should Lane Kiffin remain at Ole Miss amid rumors of his candidacy at other SEC programs, he’ll have to contend with a difficult slate of annual opponents over the next few years. / Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

Ole Miss Opponent

LSU

Mississippi State

Oklahoma

There are likely a few SEC coaches that aren’t happy with the scheduling news. Because Lane Kiffin is Lane Kiffin, we’re very aware he falls in that camp. Games with LSU and in-state foe Mississippi State are logical. He’s no fan of an annual game with SEC newcomer Oklahoma, however.

“Oklahoma is really disappointing,” he said on the SEC teleconference Wednesday. “We don’t have anything in common with them or our fans. So that doesn’t make any sense at all. And so that’s unfortunate with so many great teams that we’ve played for a long time here, especially from our SEC West years. So that’s unfortunate but it is what it is.”

The injury to OU quarterback John Mateer aside, it looks like OU has turned a corner under Brent Venables, which could be in the back of Kiffin’s mind with this quote. The Sooners are a rough annual draw if they’re operating at full strength.

Mississippi State players and fans celebrate a win over Arizona State.

Mississippi State’s nonconference win over Arizona State signaled a step forward for the Bulldogs. / Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

Mississippi State Opponent

Alabama

Vanderbilt

Ole Miss

Life was difficult for Mississippi State when they were regulars near the SEC West basement, and that remains the case in the nine-game schedule era. The Bulldogs draw in-state rival Ole Miss every year, as expected, but the SEC also chose to protect their longstanding rivalry with Alabama. Jeff Lebby may not have minded seeing that fall off the calendar.

As is the case with so many other teams, Vanderbilt is the hinge game. If Clark Lea maintains momentum with the Commodores, this is a murderer’s row.

Hugh Freeze speaks to an official during an Auburn game.

Hugh Freeze hasn’t gotten his Auburn tenure off the ground yet, and the Tigers will face one of the tougher arrays of annual opponents in the SEC. / John Reed-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

2026 Road Game

Auburn Opponent

Vanderbilt

Alabama

Georgia

Fischer: SEC Football Schedule Winners and Losers: Auburn Draws Both Powerhouses

The Iron Bowl was never going anywhere. The Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry was also a difficult one for the SEC to take off the annual schedule. Hugh Freeze has his work cut out for him with the two teams that have defined SEC football over the last 15 years remaining on the annual schedule.

Throw in the wild card that is Vanderbilt, and Auburn may have a gripe here, although 13 months ago no one would have complained with regular trips to Nashville. It goes to show that as much as we think we know about SEC football, the sands are always shifting, especially in the transfer portal and NIL era.

Oklahoma's Brent Venables celebrates with Sooners players after a win.

Oklahoma’s Brent Venables is off to a much-needed strong start in 2025 after concerns that he could slip onto the hot seat. / Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Neutral Site Game

2026 Road Game

Oklahoma Opponent

Ole Miss

Texas

Missouri

This is what Oklahoma signed up for when it left the Big 12, along with Texas, to join college football’s most vaunted conference. The annual Red River Rivalry remains locked in, now a key part of the annual SEC slate in early October. Missouri—a longtime former conference rival of the Sooners in the Big Eight and Big 12—are back on the annual schedule as well.

Time will tell whether the denizens of Norman, Okla. take exception to Lane Kiffin’s comments about the two programs having nothing in common. On its face, his quote was not really a shot at OU—and was more a comment about conference realignment than anything else. Still, lesser statements have been used to spark rivalries. Perhaps we’ll have Ole Miss vs. Oklahoma circled on the calendar as a can’t-miss game in four years, when the SEC reevaluates its schedule.

Arkansas quarterback Taylen Green celebrates a touchdown.

Arkansas football’s new protected SEC games lock in games with Razorback rivals old and new. / Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

Arkansas Opponent

LSU

Missouri

Texas

Arkansas vs. Texas was one of the more under-discussed rivalries renewed with the Longhorns’ move to the SEC. With the schedule release, the Razorbacks will get the Longhorns for the next four years. The league also protects two of its more recent inventions: the Battle Line rivalry with Missouri and the Battle for the Boot with LSU, which became a trophy game in 1996.

Texas and the Bayou Bengals are two of the better bets to be powerhouses for the foreseeable futures—at least, as long as Steve Sarkisian is in Austin, as LSU coaches tend to find their level. Mizzou has been surprisingly consistent since joining the SEC in 2011 and leads the all-time rivalry 11–4. There’s no pushover in this group.

Texas A&M coach Mike Elko paces the sideline during a game against Utah State.

Mike Elko and Texas A&M draws a brutal three-game permanent schedule, with a pair of the SEC’s top programs in Texas and LSU. / Sean Thomas-Imagn Images

2026 Home Game

2026 Road Game

2026 Road Game

Texas A&M Opponent

Texas

LSU

Missouri

Looking at these slates in September 2025, there are a number of contenders for the most difficult group of annual opponents. What will happen with teams like Arkansas, Florida and Vanderbilt over the next four years is anyone’s guess. On paper, Texas looks like it should be a true power every single year, but as we know, that wasn’t the case for nearly 15 years after Vince Young and Colt McCoy cycled out of Austin.

Based on what we know today, Texas A&M’s schedule is tough to match. Steve Sarkisian and the Longhorns look like they’re here to stay, much to the chagrin of those down in Aggieland. Brian Kelly has had a rocky tenure at LSU, but the Tigers remain a threat every year, and the last three coaches to hold his job have won national championships. That is for good reason. Nick Saban created the blueprint that has turned LSU into one of the highest-ceiling programs in the country.

Missouri is just a tough out, and have split the six games that they’ve played with A&M since the pair came over from the Big 12 in 2011. Eli Drinkwitz hasn’t vaulted the Tigers to the top of the SEC, but they’ve consistently brought in explosive players and may take another step in 2025.

Most programs with the aspirations of Texas A&M, which hasn’t captured a national title since 1939, would probably like to work in some more winnable games into their annual matchups, but remember, this is the SEC. With a nine game conference schedule, it truly just means more starting in 2026.

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