Kirby Smart sits alone at the top of USA Today’s SEC coaching rankings for the 2026 season, and it’s hard to argue with the choice.
Blake Toppmeyer put the Georgia coach No. 1 ahead of Texas’ Steve Sarkisian at No. 2, Alabama’s Kalen DeBoer at No. 3 and LSU’s Lane Kiffin at No.
- Smart is heading into his 11th season in Athens with a résumé that still towers over the league: a 117-21 record, two national championships and four SEC titles.
He has also reached the SEC Championship Game in eight of his 10 seasons.
That level of steady excellence stands out even more in a conference that has changed fast around him. No SEC team has played for a national championship in the last three seasons, and six programs are starting over with new head coaches this fall.
Georgia, meanwhile, keeps doing Georgia things. The Bulldogs have won three of the last four SEC championships, and per ESPN, they have produced more NFL first-round picks under Smart than losses - 20 first-rounders against 21 defeats. That kind of number says plenty about how well Smart has built and maintained the roster year after year.
His approach has not shifted much, even as other programs have leaned harder into the transfer portal. In a spring radio appearance, Smart laid out Georgia’s formula as to "recruit and develop high school football players, be the best coaching staff you can put out there, have continuity and retention, and then go do it better than other people."
That philosophy has also made Georgia a target in recruiting battles. Rival schools have used the Bulldogs’ spending restraint against them, and Smart pushed back on that in a conversation with Josh Pate: "I want you to earn it and work your way up. People hear it all the time in recruiting; they want to use this as a negative to us."
The portal numbers back up how little Georgia has changed its identity. The Bulldogs lost only 12 players to the portal this offseason, the fewest of any program, and they return nine players who have already spent at least three years in Athens. Smart also said he was glad the spring portal window is gone, explaining that it allows him to "just focus on your team" instead of constantly worrying about what might happen next.
Still, the coaches chasing him have plenty of runway left.
Kiffin is the clearest threat to climb. After going 55-19 in six seasons at Ole Miss, he arrives at LSU with a roster loaded with five-star signees and the nation’s top-ranked transfer portal class, led by former Arizona State quarterback Sam Leavitt.
On Tyrann Mathieu’s podcast, Kiffin told LSU fans that "we're going to win a national championship," and said his aim is to bring a fifth title to campus. Urban Meyer added on The Triple Option Podcast that Kiffin doesn’t have to win it all in Year 1, but that "he's got to be within a swing of it."
Sarkisian is in a different spot, but the pressure is just as real. Texas finished 10-3 and missed the playoff in Arch Manning’s first season as the starter, a result Toppmeyer described as underwhelming given the expectations. Sarkisian addressed the offensive line with five portal additions and also brought in Auburn transfer Cam Coleman at receiver, who ranks No. 24 in my list of the most important players in college football.
He has also been bullish on Manning’s response to last season, saying, "99 percent of kids would have melted last year if they had to endure what he endured, and all Arch did was get stronger."
So while Smart opens 2026 as the league’s standard-bearer, the season will still have plenty to say about whether his steady, development-heavy model can keep holding off the more aggressive roster-building approaches at LSU and Texas. Georgia begins the year against Tennessee State at Sanford Stadium on Saturday, Sept. 5 at 3 p.m. ET on SEC Network+.
In Other News...
Another Elite Georgia Defender Just Slipped Out Of State
Another elite Georgia defender has headed out of state, and this one stings for the programs that spent months trying to keep him home. DJ Jacobs, the five-star defensive end from Roswell, has committed to Ohio State, giving the Buckeyes the nations top-rated edge rusher in Rivals 2027 class and adding another marquee name to a recruiting haul that already includes in-state wide receiver Jamier Brown.
For Georgia, the miss is especially notable because Jacobs was one of the states premier priorities and drew heavy attention from the Bulldogs throughout the process, with Notre Dame also in the mix. Ohio State has made a habit of landing elite talent beyond its borders, and Jacobs fits that pattern as another blue-chip defender who left the Southeast for Columbus. [Read more 🡒]
Georgia Techs ACC Hopes May Ride On One Pressure-Filled Backfield
Georgia Techs offense is lining up to lean heavily on its running backs again, and the depth chart has a little of everything in it. Justice Haynes gives the room a high-end centerpiece, Malachi Hosley brings proven production, and J.P. Powell flashed enough this spring to suggest there are more than a few ways for the Yellow Jackets to keep defenses guessing. Add in Trelain Maddox for the dirty work, Chad Alexander as a potential mismatch option and Shane Marshall as another piece in the mix, and it starts to look like a backfield built to carry a lot of the load.
The bigger question is whether that group can hold together long enough to make the plan work. The staff appears to be building this offense around the backs more than quarterback runs, which only raises the stakes for a room that has to stay intact and stay productive over a full season. If the health piece cooperates, Georgia Tech has the kind of backfield that can shape games in the ACC. If it does not, the whole offensive picture gets a lot harder to trust. [Read more 🡒]
