Alabamas 2026 Schedule Just Put DeBoer Under Real Playoff Pressure

Brace yourself as college football's elite brace for a gauntlet of grueling 2026 schedules that could make or break their playoff dreams.

The path to the College Football Playoff never gets easier, and in 2026 it looks especially brutal for a handful of teams with real postseason ambitions. The SEC and Big Ten once again dominate the conversation, which is no surprise when you start stacking up ranked opponents, rivalry games, and road trips into some of the sport’s loudest environments.

With Talkin’ Season heating up, here’s an early look at 10 playoff hopefuls that are staring at the toughest schedules in college football next year.

USC is in the thick of it again, and the Trojans’ 2026 slate gives Lincoln Riley plenty to prove. After opening with San Jose State, Fresno State, and Louisiana, USC heads to Rutgers before a run that includes Oregon, Washington, Penn State, Wisconsin, Ohio State, Indiana, Maryland, and UCLA.

Playing in the Big Ten for two full seasons now, Riley needs to show he can get USC into playoff position, and that means tougher defense and a more physical style. The Trojans are set to be tested in four games during the second half of the season.

Alabama’s schedule is no picnic either. The Crimson Tide open with East Carolina, Kentucky, Florida State, and South Carolina before a stretch that features Mississippi State, Georgia, Tennessee, Texas A&M, LSU, Vanderbilt, Chattanooga, and Auburn.

Kalen DeBoer is trying to lead Alabama into better days after a disastrous College Football Playoff exit, but this lineup could expose some roster weaknesses. The month-long stretch beginning with Georgia stands out as especially punishing.

Georgia has its own gauntlet, even if the Bulldogs begin SEC play on the road at Arkansas. That game is followed by Oklahoma, Vanderbilt, Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Ole Miss, Missouri, South Carolina, and Georgia Tech, with road tests against Alabama and Ole Miss standing out in particular. Georgia has beaten the Bulldogs 2-0 in its last two regular-season meetings, and that kind of run only adds to the pressure of the schedule ahead.

Texas A&M may not get much relief, either. The Aggies start with Missouri State, Arizona State, Kentucky, LSU, Arkansas, Missouri, The Citadel, Alabama, South Carolina, Tennessee, Oklahoma, and Texas.

Some critics argued Texas A&M caught a break last year, but that won’t be the case in 2026. The second half is especially rough, with a road trip to Oklahoma sandwiched between Tennessee and Texas to close things out.

LSU’s slate is loaded from top to bottom. The Tigers open with Clemson and Louisiana Tech, then face Ole Miss, Texas A&M, McNeese, Kentucky, Mississippi State, Auburn, Alabama, Texas, Tennessee, and Arkansas.

All eyes are on Lane Kiffin taking over in Baton Rouge, and he’ll inherit a schedule that could quickly define the season. LSU should see consecutive games against ranked opponents, including a brutal run against Alabama, Texas, and Tennessee that will say plenty about the Tigers’ playoff case.

Ole Miss also has no shortage of land mines. The Rebels begin with Louisville, Charlotte, and LSU before heading to Florida and Vanderbilt, then taking on Missouri, Texas, Auburn, Georgia, Oklahoma, Wofford, and Mississippi State.

Pete Golding did a fair job leading Ole Miss in the College Football Playoff after suddenly taking over from Lane Kiffin, but now the job is his from start to finish. It begins in Nashville against a rising ACC hopeful before another punishing SEC stretch.

Michigan’s schedule is another one that jumps off the page. The Wolverines open with Western Michigan, Oklahoma, and UTEP before Iowa, Minnesota, Penn State, Indiana, Rutgers, Michigan State, Oregon, UCLA, and Ohio State.

Kyle Whittingham steps into the top job with a clear mandate: get Michigan back to beating Ohio State and back into the playoff. The road dates at Oklahoma and Oregon, plus key tests against the reigning champs, make this one of the tougher slates in the country.

Ohio State may have the single toughest schedule of them all. The Buckeyes start with Ball State, then travel to Texas before games against Kent State, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Indiana, USC, Oregon, Northwestern, Nebraska, and Michigan.

Ryan Day is staring at a rematch with the Longhorns on the road, this time against an improved Arch Manning, and the travel gets no easier with road games at Iowa, Indiana, and USC. Oregon comes to Columbus, but there’s little breathing room anywhere else.

Oklahoma is also in for a grind. The Sooners open with UTEP, then go to Michigan before facing New Mexico, Georgia, Texas, Kentucky, Mississippi State, South Carolina, Florida, Ole Miss, Texas A&M, and Missouri.

That’s a demanding early run for what should be another tough Oklahoma defense, but John Mateer and the run game have to take a real step forward. The slate includes Michigan, Georgia, and Texas early, then a very difficult final month.

Texas rounds out the list with a schedule that could shape the entire playoff race. The Longhorns begin with Texas State, Ohio State, and UTSA before trips and home dates against Tennessee, Oklahoma, Florida, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Missouri, LSU, Arkansas, and Texas A&M. Manning and Texas have a chance to change the conversation right away with a statement against Ohio State at home, and that opener could set the tone for a schedule that may include seven other ranked opponents down the line.

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It is an easy debate for Crimson Tide fans to jump into, especially with DeBoer having guided Alabama back to the College Football Playoff last season and now entering his third year in Tuscaloosa. McElroys point centered on DeBoers success against some coaches ranked ahead of him, which only adds to the case that the conversation around Alabamas coach may be lagging behind what he has actually done on the field. [Read more 🡒]