Greg McElroy sees a brutal path ahead for four SEC teams in 2026, and the league’s new scheduling setup is a big reason why.
With the SEC moving to nine conference games ahead of the 2026 season and requiring every one of its 16 schools to add a non-conference opponent from another Power Four league or Notre Dame, the schedule grid has gotten a lot tighter. Former Alabama quarterback and ESPN analyst Greg McElroy recently broke down what he считает the four toughest SEC slates on an episode of "Always College Football," and his list came down to Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas A&M.
Texas has a little breathing room between its Sept. 12 meeting with Ohio State and SEC play, thanks to UTSA sitting in the middle. That trip to Columbus in 2025 left the Longhorns with a messy start, but McElroy pointed to the 2026 setup as one that could swing the other way if Texas handles the early stretch.
October keeps Texas inside the state, but the Longhorns still have plenty to deal with, including Oklahoma in Dallas and Ole Miss at home. The real grind comes in November, when Texas goes to Missouri, then has to turn around for a trip to LSU before closing the regular season at Texas A&M.
Arkansas also drew a schedule that looks unforgiving from the jump. The Razorbacks go to Utah for a late-night kickoff on Sept. 12, then come home the following week to face two-time defending SEC champion Georgia on Sept.
- That’s a rough opening for any first-year SEC head coach.
The middle of the schedule eases a bit after Arkansas visits Texas A&M on Oct. 3, but the finish may be just as tough as the start. The Razorbacks will play at Texas in the penultimate regular-season game, and for the first time in 13 years, the Battle of the Golden Boot against LSU lands in the final week.
Oklahoma’s non-conference slate may be the most demanding of the SEC bunch. The Sooners open with a road trip to Michigan, then return home to face New Mexico, a Group of Six team coming off a nine-win season and bringing back much of its top talent from 2025.
The SEC portion does not get much easier. Oklahoma opens league play at Georgia, then gets the annual Red River Shootout two weeks later. The back end of October is manageable enough, but the final stretch brings a trip to Florida followed by home games against Ole Miss and Texas A&M.
Texas A&M has a different kind of challenge. The Aggies’ non-conference schedule is lighter than the others on McElroy’s list, with Arizona State coming to College Station on Sept. 12 as the marquee matchup. That is not the same level of difficulty as road tests at Utah or Michigan, or an early showdown with Ohio State.
Where Texas A&M really gets squeezed is on the road in conference play. Tiger Stadium was a house of horrors for the Aggies until 2025, their last win in Bryant-Denny Stadium came with Johnny Manziel at quarterback in 2012, and they have dropped each of their last two games in Williams-Brice Stadium.
The home slate in SEC play builds gradually for Texas A&M, starting with Kentucky before ending with Texas. The Aggies have not played Texas within single digits over the last two seasons.
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What makes this one especially worth watching is that Ourigou is still early in the process, with the possibility of moving up a cycle hanging over everything. If he stays put, he would join Davion Thompson as part of Arkansas 2027 class, giving the Razorbacks an encouraging early foundation as they keep building out a roster that has been in need of more length inside. [Read more 🡒]
