When Oklahoma hired Bob Stoops away from Florida as defensive coordinator and made him the replacement for John Blake before the 1999 season, the Sooners stepped into a new stretch of consistency. Since then, OU has usually been one of the steadier programs in the sport, first under Stoops, then Lincoln Riley, and now Brent Venables, who took over in 2022 after long runs as Stoops’ defensive coordinator and in the same role at Clemson.
That kind of continuity is rare in college football. Across the SEC, the coaching carousel has spun plenty since 1999, with some programs barely changing and others cycling through head coaches, interim replacements, and fresh hires for 2026.
Arkansas has had a little of everything. Reggie Herring served as interim in 2007, then Bobby Petrino led the Razorbacks from 2008-2011 before John L.
Smith handled 2012. Bret Bielema followed from 2013-2017, Chad Morris took over from 2018-2019, Barry Lunney Jr. finished 2019 as interim, Sam Pittman coached from 2020-2025, and Bobby Petrino returned as interim in 2025.
Ryan Silverfield is set for his first season in 2026.
Auburn’s list is just as busy. Tommy Tuberville ran the program from 1999-2008, Gene Chizik followed from 2009-2012, and Guz Malzahn held the job from 2013-2020.
Kevin Steele was interim in 2020, Bryan Harsin coached from 2021-2022, Cadillac Williams stepped in as interim in 2022, Hugh Freeze led the Tigers from 2023-2025, and DJ Durkin served as interim in 2025. Alex Golesh takes over in 2026.
Florida’s coaching timeline stretches back to the tail end of Steve Spurrier’s run, which lasted from 1990-2001. Ron Zook coached from 2002-2004, with Charlie Strong serving as interim in 2004.
Urban Meyer followed from 2005-2010, then Will Muschamp from 2011-2014, with DJ Durkin going 1-0 as interim in 2014. Jim McElwain led the Gators from 2015-2017, Randy Shannon was interim in 2017, Dan Mullen coached from 2018-2021, Greg Knox went 1-0 as interim in 2021, Billy Napier handled 2022-2025, and Billy Gonzales was interim in 2025.
Jon Sumrall begins in 2026.
Georgia has been far steadier than most. Jim Donnan was there from 1996-2000, Mark Richt from 2001-2015, and Kirby Smart has been in charge since 2016.
Kentucky’s run since 1999 has gone through several hands as well. Hal Mumme coached through 2000, Guy Morriss from 2001-2002, Rich Brooks from 2003-2009, Joker Phillips from 2010-2012, and Mark Stoops from 2013-2025. Will Stein is the next man up in 2026.
LSU has had its own mix of long stretches and quick changes. Gerry DiNardo’s tenure ended in 1999, Hal Hunter served as interim that year, Nick Saban coached from 2000-2004, Les Miles from 2005-2016, Ed Orgeron from 2016-2021, and Brad Davis was interim in 2021.
Brian Kelly led the Tigers from 2022-2025, with Frank Wilson serving as interim in 2025. Lane Kiffin is set for 2026.
Mississippi State’s line includes Jackie Sherrill from 1991-2003, Sylvester Croom from 2004-2008, Dan Mullen from 2009-2017, Greg Knox as interim in 2017, Joe Moorhead from 2018-2019, Mike Leach from 2020-2022, Zach Arnett from 2022-2023, and Greg Knox again as interim in 2023.
Missouri has had a more stable stretch than many of its league peers. Larry Smith was in place through 2000, Gary Pinkel from 2001-2015, Barry Odom from 2016-2019, and Eliah Drinkwitz has been the head coach since 2020.
Ole Miss has moved through several eras too. David Cutcliffe coached from 1998-2004, Ed Orgeron from 2005-2007, Houston Nutt from 2008-2011, Hugh Freeze from 2012-2016, Matt Luke from 2017-2019, Lane Kiffin from 2020-2025, and Pete Golding has been there since 2025.
South Carolina’s sequence starts with Lou Holtz from 1999-2004, then Steve Spurrier from 2005-2015, Shawn Elliott as interim in 2015, Will Muschamp from 2016-2020, Mike Bobo as interim in 2020, and Shane Beamer from 2021-present.
Tennessee’s list includes Phillip Fulmer from 1992-2008, Lane Kiffin in 2009, Derek Dooley from 2010-2012, Jim Chaney as interim in 2012, Butch Jones from 2013-2017, Brady Hoke as interim in 2017, Jeremy Pruitt from 2018-2020, and Josh Heupel from 2012-present.
Texas has gone from Mack Brown’s long run from 1998-2013 to Charlie Strong from 2014-2016, Tom Herman from 2017-2020, and Steve Sarkisian from 2021-present.
Texas A&M has also cycled through several coaches since the late 1980s. R.C. Slocum coached from 1989-2002, Dennie Franchione from 2003-2007, Gary Darnell was interim in 2007, Mike Sherman from 2008-2011, Tim DeRuyter as interim in 2011, Kevin Sumlin from 2012-2017, Jeff Banks as interim in 2017, Jimbo Fisher from 2018-2023, Elijah Robinson as interim in 2023, and Mike Elko from 2024-present.
The SEC’s coaching history since 1999 tells the story plainly: a few programs have kept the seat warm for one man or two, while others have treated the head job like a revolving door.
In Other News...
Sooners Commit Cooper Hackett Is Suddenly At Center Of Recruiting Divide
Cooper Hacketts name is suddenly sitting at the center of a recruiting split, and for Oklahoma that makes him one of the more interesting commits in the 2027 class. Rivals kept the Fort Gibson offensive tackle in five-star territory, slotting him among the elite prospects in the country, while other services have taken a more cautious view as the offseason unfolds. For the Sooners, it is the kind of evaluation debate that can follow a high-upside lineman when the tape is still being weighed against long-term projection.
The tension around Hackett comes from how much his current standing is tied to what evaluators think he can become once he is fully healthy again. His talent and potential remain highly regarded, but the injury news has clearly influenced where he lands in the rankings conversation, and that leaves Oklahoma with a commitment whose ceiling is obvious even if the present-day picture is less settled. For a program building its future up front, the disagreement only adds to the intrigue. [Read more 🡒]
Oklahomas SEC Media Day Group Includes One Choice Fans Will Notice
Oklahomas trip to SEC Media Day on July 20 in Tampa will feature the kind of mix that usually tells you a little something about where a program thinks it is headed. Brent Venables will be joined by quarterback John Mateer, defensive end Taylor Wein and offensive lineman Eddy Pierre-Louis, giving the Sooners a four-man group that blends the face of the program with a few players who have helped shape the rosters next layer.
Mateer has already been through this stage before, but Wein and Pierre-Louis are set for their first appearances, which adds a fresh angle to Oklahomas day in front of the league. The Sooners have plenty to talk about after recent performances from those players and with the new season approaching, and the media session should offer another snapshot of how Venables wants his team presented as it settles deeper into SEC life. [Read more 🡒]
Jim Nagy Is Already Shaping Big Decisions At Oklahoma
Jim Nagys arrival as Oklahomas general manager has already given the Sooners a different kind of voice in the room, one shaped by years of NFL scouting and personnel work. After 17 seasons evaluating talent for pro teams and a run as executive director of the Senior Bowl from 2018 to 2025, Nagy brings a perspective the program can lean on as players sort through the next steps in their careers.
That kind of guidance matters most when a decision is not just about the draft, but about timing, development and fit. Wide receiver Isaiah Sategna is among the players who have already benefited from those conversations, and Oklahoma appears to be getting the kind of front-office help that can influence both the roster in the short term and the programs long-term NFL pipeline. [Read more 🡒]
