TUSCALOOSA, AL – Somewhere in downtown Birmingham, less than an hour from this Mecca of college football and home office for the SEC, they have to be rethinking the decision of money over self-destruction.
Of hoarding cash and building bank over preventing an unraveling on the field at the worst time of all.
And here’s the scary part: We’re only dealing with the beta version on this random, too-close-to-call November Saturday.
The real thing — a nine-game slog of a conference schedule through a 16-team league where it’s life and death on every campus, every week — doesn’t begin until 2026. Until then, we’ll watch November crazy play out in the eight-game version. Just like it did in 2024.
With more potential for chaos on the horizon.
‘We know what we’re up against and what the stakes are if we lose,’ said Oklahoma quarterback John Mateer.
They’re not much different than last season, when Oklahoma and Texas officially joined the SEC and all 16 teams found their footing in the NIL-fueled world of player empowerment. There are no tiers in the conference, just which team does enough to win and which team eventually loses. Week after week.
What’s the difference between No. 11 Oklahoma shocking No. 4 Alabama, 23-21, on an unseasonably warm Saturday afternoon and damaging the TIde’s College Football Playoff seeding, and the Sooners beating Alabama in 2024 and ending their CFP hopes?
What’s the difference from South Carolina nearly beating Texas A&M in the noon window of games Saturday and damaging a rare season, and Florida beating Ole Miss in 2024 to eliminate the Rebels’ CFP hopes?
Different teams, different scenarios and one common theme: elite-level play all over the field, no matter who’s playing. Where home-field advantage means next to nothing, and want and will supersedes all.
‘It’s a one-possession league,’ said Oklahoma offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle.
Now add eight more of these games, eight more chances for the unthinkable to unfold and affect the SEC’s postseason. Eight more opportunities where the difference between the best of the league and the worst could be as simple as an untimely turnover.
We laugh and make fun of the biggest, baddest conference of all, of how things are different here in the Ess Eee See, son. But you’re not watching Minnesota travel to Oregon and scare the bejeezus out of the Ducks.
But South Carolina, which had lost six of seven, rolled into College Station on Saturday and had a 27-point lead on the No. 3 team in the nation.
Or Oklahoma, which lost twice while starting quarterback Mateer was healing from a broken bone in his throwing hand, found a way to survive and advance in the biggest game of the season despite only 212 yards of offense.
Because that’s the SEC now. Survive the grind, and hope for the reward from the CFP selection committee.
‘We’re 8-2 now,’ said OU coach Brent Venables. ‘That’s what it means.’
It means a game next week against Missouri, and another after that against LSU ― and despite what the records say, either one of those teams can end Oklahoma’s CFP run. Two of Missouri’s three losses are one-possession games, as are two of LSU’s four losses.
The Big Ten, while it has won the past two national titles, is top heavy. Once you get past the first two or three teams, there’s a whole lot of Maryland and Michigan State.
The difference between winning and advancing in the SEC is as gut-wrenching as Tennessee’s Max Gilbert — maybe the best kicker in the conference — missing a makeable field goal at the end of regulation, and the Vols then losing to Georgia in overtime.
Or officials on the field not close enough to get a clear view of Florida wide receiver J. Michael Sturdivant’s potential fourth-quarter catch against Georgia, and official replay staying with the call on the field. The Gators were playing with an interim coach, and without numerous starters because of injury — and still could’ve beaten Georgia.
Or that Texas should’ve lost at Kentucky in regulation before winning in overtime. Or that Arkansas fumbled at the Ole Miss 27 with less than two minutes to play while driving for the game-winning score.
That’s how close the SEC is from getting five teams in the CFP, or five teams with two or three losses — and the field opening up for the ACC and Big 12 (and Big Ten) based solely on record.
Who in their right mind believes Georgia Tech or Virginia or Michigan or Notre Dame has played a similarly difficult schedule?
“I don’t think anybody would want to play (Florida),” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. “Regardless of their record.”
But here we are, and it’s only going to get worse next season when eight more of these prize fights are added to the system. Selfishly, we should be celebrating the move — more SEC games, better product, high-value entertainment.
Like Vanderbilt nearly losing to another team with an interim coach that, prior to firing coach Hugh Freeze, couldn’t figure out how to cobble together first downs — much less efficiently use the best wide receiver tandem in the league.
In its first game post-Freeze, the Auburn offense scored 38 points and wide receivers Cam Coleman and Eric Singleton Jr., combined to catch 21 passes for 245 yards and two touchdowns.
Arkansas, another team with an interim coach (see the win-or-walk trend?), lost Saturday by a single point to LSU (hello, interim). It was the Hogs’ fifth SEC loss by one possession this season, and their — ready for this? — 30th in six seasons under former coach Sam Pittman and interim Bob Petrino.
So you’re really going to be surprised that Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson, who had thrown one interception in 306 attempts, threw a pick-six. Or that two more Alabama turnovers — the Tide were third in the nation coming into the game with just six all season — led to 10 more Oklahoma points and a whole lot of four-quarter angst in the house Bear built and Saban flipped.
And SEC commissioner Greg Sankey and the university presidents want eight more of these white-knuckle rides potentially impacting a 12- or 16-team playoff? For what, more money?
More money, more chaos.
Long after the celebrated on the turf at Bryant-Denny Stadium, after they took an impromptu team picture on Saban Field and after they sang ‘Sweet Home Alabama’ and ‘Dixieland Delight’ in the postgame locker room, Venables tried to explain the enormity of playing in the conference where you’re one play away every play.
He talked about guts and will and playing with an edge. All of those coach-isms players feed off.
And then he delivered reality.
‘They’re going to make plays, we’re going to make plays,’ he said. ‘Turnovers are a part of it, the struggle is part of it, having to overcome bad plays is part of it. The team that can figure it out is going to win.’
Enjoy it those wins and rare moments. It gets more difficult in 2026
Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.