ESPN Is Pushing The SEC Again And Ohio State Can Answer

Despite ESPN's metrics suggesting otherwise, Ohio State and the Big Ten continue to outshine the SEC's inflated schedules as they aim for another national championship.

ESPN’s preseason numbers are making a familiar case for the SEC, but Ohio State sits right in the middle of the argument.

According to ESPN’s strength-of-schedule metric, the seven hardest schedules in the country all belong to SEC teams. The conference also accounts for 14 of the top 15 toughest schedules, with Ohio State the lone non-SEC team in that group at No.

  1. That’s the kind of preseason setup that once again gives the SEC a massive edge in the eyes of ESPN’s models.

The Buckeyes, meanwhile, enter the season ranked first in ESPN’s FPI. Even with that top spot, the schedule numbers still tilt heavily toward the SEC, reinforcing the long-running criticism that ESPN’s preseason metrics tend to boost the conference too much.

That skepticism only grows when looking back at last season. The SEC did not have a team in the national championship, and its bowl record finished at 5-9, CFP games included. For critics of the conference, that only makes the preseason respect look even more inflated.

Ohio State has a chance to make its own statement early. The Buckeyes face Texas in Week 2 for the third straight year, and another win over the Longhorns would only strengthen the case for the Big Ten.

The Big Ten has won the last three national championships, including Ohio State’s 2024 title, and that run is being used as evidence that the conference has overtaken the SEC. If the Buckeyes can beat Texas and then push toward another national championship, it would add more fuel to that argument.

Ohio State has been the Big Ten’s most dominant program over the last decade or so, and another title would only underline that point. For the Buckeyes, though, the bigger goal is simpler: be the best team, period.

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