Greg Sankey joked recently that the SEC may bypass a nine-game league schedule for 10 conference games. Make his quip a real idea to explore.
Author: Blake Toppmeyer, USA TODAY NETWORK
Bryan Harsin can’t talk his way off the Auburn football hot seat | Opinion
Auburn football coach Bryan Harsin carried authority Thursday at SEC Media Days while he addressed “the gorilla in the room.”
SEC football coaches ranked: Kirby Smart nips at Nick Saban’s heels; then who? |Opinion
As Brian Kelly and Billy Napier enter the SEC, the league is stouter than ever and loaded with coaching talent.
Why a Notre Dame football alliance with the SEC makes so much sense | Opinion
The way to force Notre Dame into a conference would be to tighten playoff access for the Irish. That’s where the SEC can come in as a valuable ally.
What would a 20-team future look like for SEC football? Here’s one idea.
Conference growth and realignment is ingrained in college football, and thinking of a future in which the SEC has 20 teams is easy enough to envision.
After false starts at Southern Cal and Tennessee, will Ole Miss football be Lane Kiffin’s mecca?
Predicting Lane Kiffin’s next move is a fool’s errand, but his best move may be to stay at Ole Miss. But will he?
On SEC football schedule, Nick Saban was right 10 years ago. And he still is | Opinion
We fell into a time machine on Tuesday, when Alabama football coach Nick Saban was discussing a nine-game SEC football schedule again.
Imagining what a Nick Saban voicemail apology to Jimbo Fisher might sound like | Opinion
Did Nick Saban leave a voicemail apology? That’s the lingering question we would like answered after last week’s Saban-Jimbo Fisher spat.
With College Football Playoff compromise rejected, SEC will crush the meek | Opinion
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey tried to help weaker conferences. With his College Football Playoff proposal rejected, the SEC will continue to dominate.
As Dabo Swinney, Nick Saban and Kirby Smart grumble about new rules, they don’t admit this | Opinion
Athletes have more control than ever, and college football coaches have less – and that’s the shift the new rules have created that irks them most.