ESPN’s first preseason look at 2026 has the SEC stacked again, but the order of finish comes with a few familiar names at the top and a few programs trying to claw their way out of the bottom.
The SEC has spent the last three years away from the national championship stage, and with the league now playing nine conference games after an historic change, the road to the College Football Playoff looks even rougher. ESPN’s power index model has already started sorting through the chaos, and the early projection paints a clear picture of where each team stands heading into the fall.
At the top, Georgia is picked to keep rolling. The reigning back-to-back SEC champions are chasing a third straight crown with Gunner Stockton back to lead the offense, Nate Frazier returning as the featured runner, and eight starters back on defense. That unit was stingy last season, holding opponents under 18 points per game.
Texas is right there in the mix, too. Arch Manning opened last season slowly before finishing as one of the most efficient passers in college football, and the Longhorns are banking on that late surge carrying over. He’ll have help on offense and up front, while Will Muschamp takes over a defense that allowed just 20 points per game and brings back edge rusher Colin Simmons.
Alabama lands near the top as well, but the pressure is obvious. The Crimson Tide played for the SEC title a year ago, then got flattened 38-3 by Indiana in the playoff, a loss that only sharpened the spotlight on Kalen DeBoer. He’s replacing his quarterback, rebuilding the run game, and trying to preserve a strong defense while keeping Alabama’s standard intact.
Texas A&M gets a chance to answer the doubters after critics argued the Aggies’ 11-win season and playoff berth came against an easy schedule. This year’s slate is tougher, and Marcel Reed is back at quarterback with a talented receiver group around him.
Ole Miss is another team ESPN sees as dangerous. Lane Kiffin is walking into the brightest spotlight in college football, and every result will be magnified in his debut. Still, the roster gives him plenty to work with, including No. 1 transfer quarterback Sam Leavitt, a blue-chip skill rotation, and a defense that returns just five starters but still carries a high floor.
Oklahoma is in the conversation, too, after Brent Venables took over the defense himself and helped produce a 10-win season and a playoff appearance. The next step has to come from quarterback John Mateer, the rushing attack, and a blocking unit that needs to be much better.
Missouri has firepower, but also some uncertainty. Ahmad Hardy was the SEC’s best back and arguably the best in the country a year ago, though his injury after a shooting this offseason could impact his playing time.
The Tigers are also breaking in new pieces at quarterback with Austin Simmons, while Chip Lindsey is now calling plays. The defense, meanwhile, returns no starters from last season.
Florida is another program under pressure to produce quickly. Jon Sumrall takes over a roster that has had talent in recent years without matching it on the field, and he’ll lean on skill players like Jadan Baugh in the backfield and Dallas Wilson at receiver. The defense gave up 28 points per game.
Tennessee has a major defensive addition in Jim Knowles, who comes in two years after guiding Ohio State to a national championship. Even so, the Vols are still dealing with questions in the secondary and up front after allowing 34 points per game in SEC play, and there’s a huge opening to fill at quarterback.
South Carolina is looking to bounce back after falling from a possible College Football Playoff position two years ago to a 4-8 finish last season. LaNorris Sellers returns at quarterback as the Gamecocks reset on offense, while Dylan Stewart has to be the tone-setter on defense.
Arkansas starts over with Ryan Silverfield in charge, and the challenge is steep. He inherits a 2-10 team with major structural issues and another punishing SEC schedule ahead. The defense allowed 37 points per game last season, so there’s plenty to fix.
Kentucky gets a slight boost from ESPN’s model, which ranks the Wildcats 40th nationally and gives first-year coach Will Stein a small edge. The offense is loaded with transfers, but the bigger issue is a defense that gave up four touchdowns per game to SEC opponents.
Mississippi State has shown some offensive life under Jeff Lebby, who more than doubled his win total in Year Two after a 5-8 finish, but the Bulldogs have won only one SEC game in two seasons. The defense has struggled against conference opponents, and the offense will now start a new quarterback in 2026.
Vanderbilt rounds out the projection with plenty of questions after the program’s best two-year stretch in more than a decade, a run that produced 17 wins. Diego Pavia is gone, along with almost every other offensive starter, and five-star quarterback Jared Curtis arrives after flipping from Georgia.
The question now is how quickly he can settle in. South Florida transfer quarterback Byrum Brown is also in the picture, while Alex Golesh takes over as head coach.
At the bottom, LSU is the team ESPN sees bringing up the rear. Ryan Silverfield steps into the top job with the Razorbacks with plenty of confidence but a long road ahead to make this program a contender, coming off a 2-10 mark and inheriting a roster with serious structural questions and facing another brutal SEC schedule. This defense allowed 37 points per game last season.
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