
The nature of future college football schedules is a cycle. First, we want to know who our teams play. Second, we want to know when they play, and finally, we want to know when they kick off. On Thursday, December 11th, the SEC gave us step two in the cycle. After releasing future opponents for 2026 through 2029 earlier in the fall, we now have the week by week 2026 schedule. However, we will have to wait until the week after Memorial Day until we find out step 3.
During May, the networks have their “upfront” presentations, where they release details on fall schedules for advertisers and investors. As you can probably guess, football plays a large part in these upfronts. During upfront season, the NFL schedule comes out, and college football’s first three weeks of the season gets announced. In addition, special dates like Black Friday also get released.
Sports media is kind of a niche interest of mine, and through years of keeping track of TV times for kickoff, I will take a crack of guessing the first three weeks of the SEC season so we can look at how wrong I was once late May comes around.
Before we get started, this is just an educated guess, so please do not make hotel or flight accommodations based on what you see in this article. However, there are a few ground rules I must share to let you know how I came up with the list.
Alright, seems a bit complicated right? Have no fear, you don’t have to remember all that. Let’s get into it. For week 1, we have Mizzou continuing the trend of opening up on Thursday night, and we have Louisville and Ole Miss’s neutral site game moved to Sunday night, as ABC likes to show a Sunday night game on Labor Day weekend. ESPN also likes to show games on Friday night, so a couple of these games could be moved around.
Week One:
In week two, Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, and Miss State all go on the road. Tennessee goes to Georgia Tech, Arkansas and Missouri go to Big 12 foes Utah and Kansas respectively, Miss State travels to Minnesota, and Oklahoma goes to the Big House as previously mentioned. These games are controlled by the home conference’s media partners. Since the ACC is only with ESPN, it’s easier to include with the SEC games. However, the Big 12 shares rights between ESPN, Fox, and TNT. Meanwhile, the Big Ten shares rights with Fox, CBS, and NBC, with BTN, Peacock, and FS1 in the action as well.
Week Two:
In week three, conference play gets into high gear with five matchups, meanwhile Alabama hosts Florida State. Someone is going to be upset with a noon game, and we give it to the new rookie coaches. However, we think Lane Kiffin returning to Oxford is perfect for College Gameday and the primetime game. Imagine how great the signs will be!
Week Three:
And bonus time, rivalry weekend. Rivalry weekend is known for Black Friday action, creating two days worth of college football frenzy. The SEC announced already that Texas and Texas A&M would play on Black Friday, and we think the Egg Bowl will remain on Black Friday as well as both teams play FCS opponents the week before. And before you get in your feelings about no Egg Bowl on Thanksgiving, I just don’t see ESPN wanting to put a SEC game up against the NFL on NBC now that they control all the rights. When the SEC was with CBS, ESPN had limited opportunities to show SEC games as they couldn’t go up against CBS. Now with ABC, ESPN has full say on the matter and I don’t see a heated SEC rivalry game ever returning to Thanksgiving night. And as a reminder, Florida vs. Florida State and South Carolina at Clemson are ACC controlled games.
Rivalry Week (Week 14):
Alright, there’s your early prediction on the first three weeks of the season and rivalry week. Let’s bookmark this article so we can see how wrong I was come May and June! And as a reminder, this is just a guess, so save your angry tweets to the SEC admin then.
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