The SEC heads into 2026 with a familiar kind of confidence and a very unfamiliar problem: the league hasn’t produced college football’s national champion since 2022. That drought doesn’t erase the SEC’s depth, though. Even with the Big Ten holding the recent hardware edge, the conference still stacks up with anybody when it comes to top-end talent.
That’s the backdrop for the 80th annual SEC preseason football report, first published by the Birmingham News in 1947. In voting among AL.com sports staff members, the panel laid out how it sees the league’s biggest questions playing out this season.
Arch Manning is the pick for the SEC’s top Heisman Trophy candidate, and it’s easy to see why. “Arch Madness” never really took hold in 2025, but Manning still finished the year as one of the country’s most productive quarterbacks. Now he gets a stronger supporting cast, with transfer running back Hollywood Smothers coming over from North Carolina State and Cam Coleman arriving from Auburn.
Texas also owns the choice for the league’s best overall defensive player in Colin Simmons. With Anthony Hill and Michael Taaffe gone to the NFL, Simmons steps into the role of veteran leader for the Longhorns’ defense in 2026.
Texas has talent at every level, but Simmons’ pass rush is what makes him the headliner. Others receiving votes: KJ Bolden, DB, Georgia; Xavier Atkins, LB, Auburn; Dylan Stewart, DL, South Carolina; Princewill Umanmielen, DL, LSU.
The offensive line vote produced no clean winner. Texas’ Trevor Goosby, LSU’s Jordan Seaton and Missouri’s Cayden Green each drew three votes, leaving the category in a three-way tie. Goosby is on what may be the best team, Seaton was the highest-rated recruit, and Green brings the most experience with 29 career starts.
The most impactful transfer in the league is projected to be Cam Coleman, the receiver who moved from Auburn to Texas. After two seasons in a struggling Auburn offense, Coleman should find a much better fit catching passes from Arch Manning.
Ryan Wingo is back at receiver, and Hollywood Smothers gives the Longhorns another weapon to spread the load. Others receiving votes: Rasheem Biles, LB, Texas.
For true freshmen, the staff settled on Jared Curtis at Vanderbilt. He could have gone to Georgia and waited behind Gunner Stockton, but instead he chose to take over for Diego Pavia in Nashville.
Vanderbilt is coming off a two-year run unlike anything it has seen on the West End since the Roaring (19)20s, and Curtis will be asked to help push that stretch to three. Others receiving votes: Faizon Brandon, QB, Tennessee; EJ Crowell, RB, Alabama.
When it comes to surprise teams, Auburn and Oklahoma drew the most support. Auburn gets a fresh start with Alex Golesh bringing in a new offense, while Oklahoma’s case rests on a healthy John Mateer and another strong defense that could make Norman a tough place to visit.
On the other side of the ledger, Alabama, Tennessee and Vanderbilt were tied as the teams most likely to fall short of expectations. Alabama’s offense comes with plenty of question marks, while Tennessee and Vanderbilt may both be leaning on true freshmen at quarterback. Others receiving votes: LSU, South Carolina, Texas A&M.
The hottest seat belongs to Shane Beamer at South Carolina. He’s now on his third offensive coordinator in three years, and the concern is that the Gamecocks could waste elite talent in quarterback LaNorris Sellers and defensive end Dylan Stewart if things don’t turn quickly. The panel’s warning was blunt: this time next year, he might regret not following his father’s path to Virginia Tech.
As for the playoff picture, the SEC is projected to land four teams. Some panelists went with five, others with three, but four was the most common answer. Texas and Georgia drew the most votes, followed by Lane Kiffin’s new team, LSU, and his old one, Ole Miss.
And at the top of the whole thing, Texas is the choice to win the national championship. Voters could have gone outside the SEC, but still settled on the Longhorns to finish with the trophy even though they didn’t make the playoff in 2025.
It feels like a now-or-never season for Steve Sarkisian, with Arch Manning and others likely headed to the NFL in 2027. Texas was the only SEC team to get a national title vote.
In Other News...
Auburn Fans Wont Love How Alex Golesh Is Being Judged
Brian Hartline did not waste much time putting his own stamp on USF, and part of that meant taking a public shot at the program Alex Golesh left behind. Hartline acknowledged there was some success during Goleshs three-year run, but he also made clear he believed the Bulls were still nowhere near where they should have been when the handoff took place. For Auburn fans, it is a reminder that the coach arriving on The Plains comes with a rsum that is still being argued over in another part of the sport.
Golesh has already moved on to a bigger stage in the SEC, where the expectations are different and the margin for progress is thinner. Auburn is betting that his next stop gives him a better chance to build something more complete, and maybe even put the Tigers in position to chase bigger goals in the rivalry picture. The frustration at USF is part of the backdrop now, but the more interesting question is how quickly Golesh can turn that fresh start into something Auburn can feel good about. [Read more 🡒]
Miles Kelly Just Gave Auburn Fans A Real Reason To Watch
Miles Kellys first Summer League run with the San Antonio Spurs gave Auburn fans something to track beyond the usual offseason box scores. In the California Classic against Miami, Kelly was one of the more productive players on the floor, showing the kind of two-way activity that can matter for a guard trying to carve out a pro role. He has been trying to make that case after being waived by Dallas, where he was mostly on the margins, and this was a chance to show he can do more than just fill a roster spot.
Keyshawn Hall and Tre Donaldson were also in action, but their debuts were quieter and a little rougher around the edges, with limited offense and turnover issues slowing both down. For Auburn followers, the bigger question is whether Kellys outing was the start of a real summer push, while the early returns on Hall and Donaldson leave more uncertainty about how their college games translate once the pace and pressure pick up. [Read more 🡒]
Andre Jordan Jr. Could Be Auburns New Answer At Corner
Andre Jordan Jr. arrived at Auburn with a track record that made him easy to notice before he ever took a snap in orange and blue. The transfer from UCLA brought All-Big Ten honorable mention recognition from last season, and since then he has quickly worked his way into the conversation as one of the Tigers top cornerbacks, giving Auburn a veteran presence in a spot that needed one.
Spring practices have only strengthened that impression. Jordan has stood out in scrimmage work, and Auburns cornerbacks coach and teammates have pointed to his experience and upside as reasons for optimism in the secondary, which has started to look less like a concern and more like a group with real potential if he settles in the way the staff expects. [Read more 🡒]
