The Southeastern Conference (SEC) is a collegiate athletic conference whose member institutions are located primarily in the South Central and Southeastern United States. Its 16 members include the flagship public universities of 12 states, 3 additional public land-grant universities, and 1 private research university. The conference is headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama. The SEC participates in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I in sports competitions. In football, it is part of the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), formerly known as Division I-A.

The SEC was established in 1932 by 13 members of the Southern Conference. Three charter members left by the late 1960s, but additions in 1990 and 2012 grew the conference to 14 member institutions. The conference expanded to 16 members with the addition of the University of Oklahoma and the University of Texas in 2024.

In 1992, the SEC was the first NCAA Division I conference to have a championship game for football and was one of the founding member conferences of the Bowl Championship Series (BCS). The conference sponsors team championships in nine men's sports and 13 women's sports. The conference distributed $721.8 million to its 14 schools in 2022.

Member universities

Current members

The SEC consists of 16 member institutions located in the U.S. states of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas.

The SEC was formerly divided into East and West Divisions, although the divisional alignment was not strictly geographic, with Missouri in the East Division while being farther west than all West Division schools except Arkansas and Texas A&M, and Auburn in the West Division despite being located farther east than East Division schools Missouri and Vanderbilt. These divisional groupings were applied only in football, men's basketball (prior to 2011–12), baseball, and women's soccer both for scheduling and standings purposes. In football, the winner of each division met in the SEC Championship Game. The SEC eliminated its divisional groupings when Oklahoma and Texas joined in 2024.

InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeEnrollment (fall 2023)Endowment (billions – FY24)NicknameJoinedColors
University of AlabamaTuscaloosa, Alabama1831Public39,622$2.379 (system-wide)Crimson Tide1932
University of ArkansasFayetteville, Arkansas1871Public32,140$1.666Razorbacks1991
Auburn UniversityAuburn, Alabama1856Public33,015$1.187Tigers1932
University of FloridaGainesville, Florida1853Public54,814$2.454Gators1932
University of GeorgiaAthens, Georgia1785Public41,615$2.056Bulldogs1932
University of KentuckyLexington, Kentucky1865Public32,703$1.979Wildcats1932
Louisiana State University (LSU)Baton Rouge, Louisiana1860Public39,418$1.138 (system-wide)Tigers1932
University of Mississippi (Ole Miss)University, Mississippi1848Public24,043$0.925Rebels1932
Mississippi State UniversityMississippi State, Mississippi1878Public22,657$0.895Bulldogs1932
University of MissouriColumbia, Missouri1839Public31,013$2.411 (system-wide)Tigers2012
University of OklahomaNorman, Oklahoma1890Public29,145$2.95Sooners2024
University of South CarolinaColumbia, South Carolina1801Public36,579$1.044Gamecocks1991
University of TennesseeKnoxville, Tennessee1794Public36,304$1.766 (system-wide)Volunteers1932
University of Texas at AustinAustin, Texas1883Public53,082$47.465 (system-wide)Longhorns2024
Texas A&M UniversityCollege Station, Texas1876Public76,633$20.381 (system-wide)Aggies2012
Vanderbilt UniversityNashville, Tennessee1873Nonsectarian13,456$10.248Commodores1932

Notes

Membership map

Map

Former members

Three schools have left the SEC, all charter members:

  • The University of the South ("Sewanee") developed an elite college football program around the turn of the 20th century, with some observers opining that the 1899 "Iron Tigers" were the most dominant squad in history. However, after helping to establish the SEC in the early 1930s, it became clear that the small private institution's athletic teams could no longer compete with those from large state universities. Sewanee Tigers football squads never won a conference game, going 0–36 in league play over eight seasons while enjoying much more success against non-conference foes from comparably-sized institutions. As such, Sewanee opted to leave the SEC after the 1940 season and transitioned its athletic programs to the lower divisions of intercollegiate play. The school is currently a member of the Southern Athletic Association (SAA).
  • Georgia Tech left the SEC in 1964 due to controversy over the conference's regulation of recruiting and scholarships. Georgia Tech athletic director and head football coach Bobby Dodd had lobbied the league to establish rules prohibiting several practices, particularly the oversigning of players by Alabama coach Bear Bryant and others. When league members voted against tightening the rules, Dodd withdrew the Yellow Jackets from the SEC. The school played as an independent for several years until 1978, when Georgia Tech joined the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).
  • Tulane left the SEC in 1966. Although the school's athletic squads were competitive in the conference's early days, the private institution's programs struggled to compete against large state universities. This was particularly true in football, where the Green Wave were SEC champions in 1949 but never again posted a winning record in conference play. Tulane left the SEC in 1966 and subsequently considered dropping to lower levels of NCAA competition or ending its football program to focus on academics. However, the school has remained in Division I and is currently in the American Conference.
InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeNicknameJoinedLeftColorsCurrent conference
Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)Atlanta, Georgia1885PublicYellow Jackets19321964Atlantic Coast (ACC)
Sewanee: The University of the SouthSewanee, Tennessee1857EpiscopalTigers19321940Southern (SAA)
Tulane UniversityNew Orleans, Louisiana1834NonsectarianGreen Wave19321966American

Notes

History

Founding

The SEC was established December 8 and 9, 1932, in Knoxville, Tennessee, at the Farragut Hotel, when the thirteen members of the large Southern Conference located west and south of the Appalachian Mountains left to form their own conference. Ten of the thirteen founding members have remained in the conference since its inception: the University of Alabama, Auburn University, the University of Florida, the University of Georgia, the University of Kentucky, Louisiana State University ("LSU"), the University of Mississippi ("Ole Miss"), Mississippi State University, the University of Tennessee, and Vanderbilt University. The SEC had no formal headquarters during its first eight years of existence, but in 1940, former Governor of Mississippi Martin "Mike" Conner was named the conference's first president, with the league establishing its first corporate headquarters on the 13th floor of the Standard Life Building in downtown Jackson, Mississippi. The SEC office remained there until 1948, when it moved to Birmingham, Alabama, where it remains. The three founding members that have since left the conference are Sewanee, who left after the 1940 season to drop all athletic scholarships and become a D-III Independent; Georgia Tech, who left after the 1963 season and became a D-I Independent; and Tulane, who left after the 1965 season and became a D-I Independent.

In 1935, the SEC became the first conference to legalize athletic scholarships.

Racial integration

Bobby Grier playing against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in 1955

White southerners committed to maintaining segregation created controversy preceding the 1956 Sugar Bowl, when the Pitt Panthers, with African-American fullback Bobby Grier on the roster, met the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. White southern segregationists created controversy by claiming that Grier should be barred from the game due to his race, and whether Georgia Tech should even play at all due to Georgia's Governor Marvin Griffin's opposition to racial integration. After Griffin publicly sent a telegram to the state's Board of Regents requesting Georgia Tech not to engage in racially integrated events, Georgia Tech's president Blake R. Van Leer rejected the request and threatened to resign. The game went on as planned.

The 1959 Mississippi State men's basketball team, led by all-American Bailey Howell, finished its season 24–1, winning the conference title. They did not participate in the NCAA tournament as school and state officials would not permit the team to play against Black players from northern schools. Four years later, in 1963, Loyola, with four black starters, played Mississippi State in the "Game of Change".

It was not until 1966 that African Americans first participated in an SEC athletic contest, and the first black scholarship athletes did not play in the SEC until the 1967–68 school year.

The first African American to compete in the SEC was Stephen Martin, who walked on to the Tulane baseball team in that school's final SEC season of 1966. In August of that same year, Kentucky enrolled Nate Northington and Greg Page on football scholarships, and Vanderbilt enrolled Godfrey Dillard and Perry Wallace on basketball scholarships. At the time, the NCAA did not allow freshmen to compete on varsity teams, which meant that these pioneers could not play until 1967. Page died from complications of a spinal cord injury suffered during a football practice before ever playing a game, while Dillard suffered a career-altering injury before getting a chance to play for Vanderbilt's varsity and transferred to Eastern Michigan. The remaining two both played in the 1967–68 school year. Northington made his overall debut against Indiana on September 23, 1967 and his SEC debut against Ole Miss the following week on September 30 (the day after Page's death), while Wallace made his varsity debut later that year.

1990 expansion

In 1990, the SEC expanded from ten to twelve member universities with the addition of the Arkansas Razorbacks and the South Carolina Gamecocks. The two new members began SEC competition with the 1991–1992 basketball season.

At the same time, the SEC organized competition for some sports into two divisions. The Western Division comprised six of the seven member schools in the Central Time Zone, while the Eastern Division comprised the five member schools in the Eastern Time Zone plus Vanderbilt, which is in the Central Time Zone but was placed in the Eastern Division to preserve its rivalry with Tennessee. Initially, the divisional format was used in football, baseball, and men's basketball. The divisional format was dropped for men's basketball following the 2011–2012 season.

Following expansion, the SEC was the first conference to receive permission from the NCAA to sponsor an annual football championship game that did not count against NCAA limits on regular-season contests, featuring the winners of the conference's Eastern and Western divisions. The 1992 and 1993 championship games were held at Legion Field in Birmingham, and all championship games from 1994 onward have been held in Atlanta—first at the Georgia Dome until its closure and demolition after the 2016 season, and since 2017 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

2012 expansion

On September 25, 2011, the SEC Presidents and Chancellors, acting unanimously, announced that Texas A&M University would join the SEC effective July 1, 2012, to begin competition in nineteen of the twenty sports sponsored by the SEC during the 2012–13 academic year. On November 6, 2011, the SEC commissioner announced that the University of Missouri would also join the SEC on July 1, 2012. For football, Texas A&M was scheduled to compete in the Western Division, and Missouri in the Eastern Division. Texas A&M and Missouri both left the Big 12 Conference.

2024 expansion

On July 27, 2021, Oklahoma and Texas formally notified the SEC they were seeking "an invitation for membership." In a joint letter, Texas president Jay Hartzell and Oklahoma president Joseph Harroz Jr. wrote, "We believe that there would be mutual benefit to the Universities on the one hand, and the SEC on the other hand, for the Universities to become members of the SEC." On July 29, 2021, the presidents of the current 14 schools of the SEC voted unanimously to extend an offer of admission to Oklahoma and Texas. The boards of regents for both institutions on July 30, 2021, accepted conference membership, and the schools were tentatively scheduled to join the league in 2025.

On February 9, 2023, the Big 12, Texas, and Oklahoma announced they had reached a buyout agreement that allowed the schools to join the SEC in 2024. The Texas Longhorns and Oklahoma Sooners athletic teams thus began league play during the 2024–25 academic year.

Membership timeline

Full members Full members (non-football) Other Conference Other Conference

Commissioners

The office of Commissioner was created in 1940.

YearsCommissioners
1940–1946Martin S. Conner
1948–1965Bernie Moore
1966–1971A. M. "Tonto" Coleman
1972–1985H. Boyd McWhorter
1986–1989Harvey W. Schiller
1990–2001Roy F. Kramer
2002–2015Michael Slive
2015–presentGreg Sankey

SEC Academic Network

In 2005, the member institutions of the Southeastern Conference formed the SEC Academic Consortium (SECAC), a collaborative endeavor designed to promote research, scholarship, and achievement amongst the universities.

In 2011, the SEC Academic Consortium relocated from its original home on the campus of the University of Arkansas to the SEC headquarters in Birmingham, Alabama and was renamed SECU. The SECU rebranded its mission to better serve as a means through which the collaborative academic endeavors and achievements of Southeastern Conference universities would be promoted and advanced. The SECU's goals included highlighting the endeavors and achievements of SEC faculty, students, and its universities; advancing the academic reputation of SEC universities; identifying and preparing future leaders for high-level service in academia; increasing the amount and type of study abroad opportunities available for students; and providing opportunities for collaboration among SEC university personnel. The Big Ten Conference, since 1958, has had a similar program, now called the Big Ten Academic Alliance.

The SEC Symposium component of SECU was crafted by Vanderbilt University Chancellor Nicholas S. Zeppos, who at the time was the Vice President of the SEC Executive Committee and liaison to SECU. In an interview with Dr. Zeppos about the formation of the SECU he noted, "that the member institutions of the Southeastern Conference are committed to a shared mission of fostering research, scholarship, and achievement. The SEC Symposium represents a platform to connect, collaborate and promote a productive dialogue that will span disciplinary and institutional boundaries and allow us to work together for the betterment of society."

The SEC Academic Network was created in 2009 in partnership with ESPN. The SEC Academic Network was an online library of institutionally produced videos featuring academic initiatives and stories from all Southeastern Conference institutions. The SEC Academic Network was officially merged into the SECU operation.

Academics

The following table shows National University rank by U.S. News & World Report as of 2026.

Also indicated is membership in the Association of American Universities.

InstitutionNational University RankAAU Member
Vanderbilt University17Yes
University of Florida30Yes
University of Texas at Austin30Yes
University of Georgia46No
Texas A&M University51Yes
Auburn University102No
University of Missouri102Yes
University of Tennessee102No
University of Oklahoma102No
University of South Carolina126No
University of Kentucky143No
University of Alabama169No
University of Mississippi169No
Louisiana State University169No
University of Arkansas183No
Mississippi State University208No

Athletic department revenue by school

Total revenue includes ticket sales, contributions and donations, rights and licensing, student fees, school funds and all other sources including TV income, camp income, concessions, and novelties.

Total expenses includes coach and staff salaries, scholarships, buildings and grounds, maintenance, utilities and rental fees, recruiting, team travel, equipment and uniforms, conference dues, and insurance.

The following table shows institutional reporting to the United States Department of Education as shown on the DOE Equity in Athletics website for the 2023–24 academic year.

Institution2023–24 Total Revenue from Athletics2023–24 Total Expenses on Athletics
University of Texas at Austin$320,312,665$237,475,591
University of Alabama$243,096,720$243,096,720
University of Georgia$241,843,474$182,882,099
Texas A&M University$231,773,287$223,847,369
Louisiana State University$220,281,227$218,545,643
University of Tennessee$204,906,178$204,906,178
University of Kentucky$193,967,575$193,915,782
Auburn University$193,417,486$182,486,390
University of Oklahoma$188,933,196$188,623,620
University of South Carolina$183,652,273$183,652,273
University of Florida$180,556,616$180,556,616
University of Arkansas$170,608,754$170,011,614
University of Missouri$157,734,870$157,734,870
University of Mississippi$145,401,658$145,401,658
Vanderbilt University$140,707,218$140,707,218
Mississippi State University$125,114,437$125,114,437

The following table shows revenue specifically from NCAA / Conference Distributions, Media Rights, and Post-Season Football reported by the Knight Commission for the 2021–22 academic year.

Institution2021–22 Distribution (Millions of dollars)
University of Alabama$75.61
University of Kentucky$75.24
Auburn University$67.75
University of Florida$65.13
Louisiana State University$61.63
University of Georgia$58.62
University of Arkansas$56.18
University of Tennessee$55.17
University of South Carolina$54.62
Mississippi State University$59.88
University of Mississippi$59.28
University of Missouri$53.63
Texas A&M University$51.11
Vanderbilt UniversityNot Reported

Key personnel

SchoolAthletic directorFootball coachMen's basketball coachWomen's basketball coachBaseball coachSoftball coachVolleyball coachWomen's soccer coach
AlabamaGreg ByrneKalen DeBoerNate OatsPauline LoveRob VaughnPatrick MurphyRashinda ReedWes Hart
ArkansasHunter YurachekRyan SilverfieldJohn CalipariKelsi MusickDave Van HornCourtney DeifelJason WatsonColby Hale
AuburnJohn CohenAlex GoleshSteven PearlLarry VickersButch ThompsonChris Malveaux & Kate MalveauxBrent CrouchJames Armstrong
FloridaScott StricklinJon SumrallTodd GoldenTammi ReissKevin O'SullivanTim WaltonRyan ThiesNick Zimmerman
GeorgiaJosh BrooksKirby SmartMike WhiteAyla GuzzardoWes JohnsonTony BaldwinTom BlackKeidane McAlpine
KentuckyMitch BarnhartWill SteinMark PopeKenny BrooksNick MingioneRachel LawsonCraig SkinnerTroy Fabiano
LSUVerge AusberryLane KiffinWill WadeKim MulkeyJay JohnsonBeth TorinaTonya JohnsonSian Hudson
Ole MissKeith CarterPete GoldingChris BeardYolett McPhee-McCuinMike BiancoJamie TrachselBre HenryTodd Shulenberger
Mississippi StateZac SelmonJeff LebbyChris JansSam PurcellBrian O'ConnorSamantha RickettsJulie DartyKevin O'Brien
MissouriLaird VeatchEliah DrinkwitzDennis GatesKellie HarperKerrick JacksonLarissa AndersonDawn SullivanStefanie Golan
OklahomaRoger DennyBrent VenablesPorter MoserJennie BaranczykSkip JohnsonPatty GassoAaron MansfieldMatt Mott
South CarolinaJeremiah DonatiShane BeamerLamont ParisDawn StaleyMonte LeeAshley ChastainTom MendozaShelley Smith
TennesseeDanny WhiteJosh HeupelRick BarnesKim CaldwellJosh ElanderKaren WeeklyEve RackhamJoe Kirt
TexasChris Del ConteSteve SarkisianSean MillerVic SchaeferJim SchlossnagleMike WhiteJerritt ElliottMargueritte Bates
Texas A&MTrev AlbertsMike ElkoBucky McMillanJoni TaylorMichael EarleyTrisha FordJamie MorrisonBobby Shuttleworth
VanderbiltCandice Storey LeeClark LeaMark ByingtonShea RalphTim CorbinNo teamAnders NelsonDarren Ambrose

Facilities

SchoolFootball stadiumCapacityBasketball arenaCapacityBaseball stadiumCapacity
AlabamaSaban Field at Bryant-Denny Stadium100,077Coleman Coliseum15,383Sewell-Thomas Stadium8,500
ArkansasDonald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium76,212Bud Walton Arena19,368Baum-Walker Stadium10,737
AuburnPat Dye Field at Jordan-Hare Stadium88,043Neville Arena9,121Plainsman Park6,300
FloridaBen Hill Griffin Stadium88,548O'Connell Center10,136Condron Ballpark7,000
GeorgiaDooley Field at Sanford Stadium93,033Stegeman Coliseum10,523Foley Field3,633
KentuckyKroger Field61,000Rupp Arena Memorial Coliseum20,545 6,250Kentucky Proud Park5,000
LSUTiger Stadium102,321Pete Maravich Assembly Center13,215Alex Box Stadium10,326
Ole MissVaught-Hemingway Stadium64,038The Sandy and John Black Pavilion at Ole Miss9,500Swayze Field11,477
Mississippi StateDavis Wade Stadium at Scott Field60,311Humphrey Coliseum9,100Dudy Noble Field15,000
MissouriFaurot Field at Memorial Stadium62,621Mizzou Arena15,061Taylor Stadium3,031
OklahomaGaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium80,126Lloyd Noble Center10,967Kimrey Family Stadium3,180
South CarolinaWilliams-Brice Stadium77,559Colonial Life Arena18,000Founders Park8,242
TennesseeNeyland Stadium101,915Thompson-Boling Arena21,678Lindsey Nelson Stadium5,548
TexasDarrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium100,119Moody Center10,000UFCU Disch-Falk Field6,649
Texas A&MKyle Field102,733Reed Arena12,989Blue Bell Park6,100
VanderbiltFirstBank Stadium35,000Memorial Gymnasium14,316Hawkins Field3,700

Sports

The Southeastern Conference sponsors championship competition in nine men's and thirteen women's NCAA sanctioned sports. Under SEC conference rules reflecting the large number of male scholarship participants in football and attempting to address gender equity concerns (see also Title IX), each member institution is required to provide two more women's varsity sports than men's. A similar rule was recently adopted by the NCAA for all of DivisionI.

Teams in SEC conference competition
SportMen'sWomen's
Baseball16
Basketball1616
Cross country1416
Equestrian4
Football16
Golf1616
Gymnastics9
Rowing4
Soccer16
Softball15
Swimming & diving1113
Tennis1516
Indoor track & field1516
Outdoor track & field1516
Volleyball16

Men's sponsored sports by school

SchoolBaseballBasket­ballCross countryFootballGolfSwimming and divingTennisTrack and field (indoor)Track and field (outdoor)Total SEC Sports
AlabamaYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
ArkansasYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYes8
AuburnYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
FloridaYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
GeorgiaYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
KentuckyYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
LSUYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
Mississippi StateYesYesNoYesYesNoYesYesYes7
MissouriYesYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYes8
OklahomaYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYes8
Ole MissYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYes8
South CarolinaYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYes8
TennesseeYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
TexasYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
Texas A&MYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
VanderbiltYesYesYesYesYesNoYesNoNo6
Totals161614161611151515116

Men's varsity sports not sponsored by the Southeastern Conference which are played by SEC schools:

SchoolGymnasticsRifleSoccerWrestling
KentuckyNoGARCSun BeltNo
MissouriNoNoNoBig 12
OklahomaMPSFNoNoBig 12
South CarolinaNoNoSun BeltNo

Women's sponsored sports by school

SchoolBasketballCross countryEques­trianGolfGym­nasticsRowingSoccerSoftballSwimming and divingTennisTrack and field (indoor)Track and field (outdoor)VolleyballTotal SEC sports
AlabamaYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes12
ArkansasYesYesNoYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes11
AuburnYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes12
FloridaYesYesNoYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes11
GeorgiaYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes12
KentuckyYesYesNoYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes11
LSUYesYesNoYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes11
Mississippi StateYesYesNoYesNoNoYesYesNoYesYesYesYes9
MissouriYesYesNoYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes11
OklahomaYesYesNoYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYesYes11
Ole MissYesYesNoYesNoNoYesYesNoYesYesYesYes9
South CarolinaYesYesYesYesNoNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes11
TennesseeYesYesNoYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes11
TexasYesYesNoYesNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes11
Texas A&MYesYesYesYesNoNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes11
VanderbiltYesYesNoYesNoNoYesNoYesYesYesYesYes9
Totals16164169416151316161616153

Women's varsity sports not sponsored by the Southeastern Conference which are played by SEC schools:

SchoolBeach volleyballBowlingLacrosseRifleStunt
FloridaNoNoBig 12NoNo
KentuckyNoNoNoGARCIndependent
LSUMPSFNoNoNoNo
Ole MissNoNoNoPRCNo
South CarolinaBig 12NoNoNoNo
TexasMPSFNoNoNoNo
VanderbiltNoCUSAAmericanNoNo
  • In addition to the above, Kentucky lists its coeducational cheerleading squad and its all-female dance team as varsity teams on its athletics website.

Conference champions

The Southeastern Conference sponsors nine men's sports and 13 women's sports, and awards a conference championship in every one of them.

Current champions

  • (RS) indicates regular-season champion
  • (T) indicates tournament champion
  • Champions from the previous academic year are indicated with the year of their title.
SeasonSportMen's championWomen's champion
Fall 2025Cross countryAlabamaFlorida
FootballGeorgia
SoccerArkansas (RS)Vanderbilt (T)
VolleyballKentucky (RS & T)
Winter 2025–26BasketballFlorida (RS)Florida (T, 2025)South Carolina (RS)Texas (T)
EquestrianSouth Carolina (2025)
GymnasticsLSU & Oklahoma (RS, 2025)LSU (T, 2025)
Swimming and divingTexasTexas
Track and field (indoor)ArkansasFlorida
Spring 2025BaseballTexas (RS)Vanderbilt (T)
SoftballOklahoma (RS)Oklahoma & Texas A&M (T)
GolfFloridaSouth Carolina
RowingTexas
TennisTexas (RS & T)Texas A&M (RS)Georgia (T)
Track and field (outdoor)ArkansasGeorgia

Source: SECSports.com.

Football

2026 Southeastern Conference football season For the upcoming season, see 2026 Southeastern Conference football season.

Scheduling

SEC teams did not play a uniform number of conference games until 1974. Prior to that, the number of conference games teams played ranged from four to eight, but most played a 6- or 7- game schedule. The league adopted a uniform 6-game schedule from 1974 to 1987, and added a seventh conference game from 1988 to 1991. Through this period and through the earlier years each SEC school had five permanent opponents, developing some traditional rivalries between schools, and the other games rotated around the other members of the conference.

After expansion to twelve programs in 1992, the SEC went to an 8-game conference schedule, with each team playing the five other teams in their division and three opponents from the other division. The winners of the two divisions would then meet in the SEC Championship Game.

From 1992 through 2002, each team had two permanent inter-divisional opponents, allowing many traditional rivalries from the pre-expansion era (such as Florida vs. Auburn, Kentucky vs. LSU, and Vanderbilt vs. Alabama) to continue. However, complaints from some league athletic directors about imbalance in the schedule (for instance, Auburn's two permanent opponents from the East were Florida and Georgia – two of the SEC's stronger football programs at the time – while Mississippi State played Kentucky and South Carolina every year) led to the SEC reducing the number of permanent inter-division opponents to one starting in the 2003 season. The TV networks televising SEC games were also pressuring for the change so attractive match-ups between non-traditional opponents would happen twice every five years instead of twice every eight years.

1992–2011 Divisional Rival1992–2002 Divisional Rival
East
GeorgiaAuburnOle Miss
FloridaLSUAuburn
KentuckyMississippi StateLSU
South CarolinaArkansasMississippi State
TennesseeAlabamaArkansas
VanderbiltOle MissAlabama
West
AlabamaTennesseeVanderbilt
ArkansasSouth CarolinaTennessee
AuburnGeorgiaFlorida
LSUFloridaKentucky
Mississippi StateKentuckySouth Carolina
Ole MissVanderbiltGeorgia

Under the format used from 2012 to 2023 when the SEC had 14 teams, each school played a total of eight conference games, consisting of the other six teams in its division, one school from the other division on a rotating basis, and one school from the other division that it plays each year. Non-permanent cross-division opponents face each other in the regular season twice in a span of twelve years. The permanent cross-division matchups were: Alabama–Tennessee; Arkansas–Missouri; Auburn–Georgia; LSU–Florida; Mississippi State–Kentucky; Ole Miss–Vanderbilt; Texas A&M–South Carolina.

The then-current scheduling arrangement was originally set to expire after the 2015 season, but the SEC presidents voted 10–4 in April 2014 to keep the current format for an additional six to eight seasons beyond 2015. Additionally, since 2016, SEC teams have been required to schedule at least one opponent each season from the other so-called "Power Five" conferences (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, or Pac-12); games against select football independent schools also qualify, including Army (which no longer counts as of 2024 due to it joining the American Athletic Conference, a Group of Five conference), BYU (before it joined the Big 12 in 2023), and Notre Dame.

In 2023, the SEC announced the divisional split would be scrapped when Oklahoma and Texas join in 2024. The conference schedule will remain at 8 games in the 2024 and 2025 seasons while the SEC determines its long-term football scheduling format. Teams will play the same opponents in both seasons on a home-and-home basis. Each of the 14 members in the conference in 2023 will play either Oklahoma or Texas in 2024 and '25, but not both. The requirement of scheduling at least one Power Four (the Pac-12 lost all but two of its members, Oregon State and Washington State, before the 2024 season; the Beavers have meetings with Ole Miss scheduled in 2027 and 2030, while the Cougars are slated to face Mississippi State in 2030 and '31) team or Notre Dame remains in place. The championship game will feature the top two teams in the conference standings, with tiebreakers as needed.

Starting in 2026, the SEC will schedule nine conference games (up from eight) per school in a bid to increase its members' chances at the College Football Playoff. Each school will play three annual opponents and each team's remaining six games will rotate among the remaining conference schools. Under this format every school will play every other school at least once in two years and twice (home and away) in four years. In addition the SEC announced that teams must annually schedule at least one high-quality non-conference opponent from the ACC, Big Ten or Big 12 conferences or Notre Dame every year.

Protected Rivalries
AlabamaAuburnTennesseeMississippi State
ArkansasLSUTexasMissouri
AuburnAlabamaGeorgiaVanderbilt
FloridaGeorgiaSouth CarolinaKentucky
GeorgiaFloridaAuburnSouth Carolina
KentuckyTennesseeFloridaSouth Carolina
LSUOle MissArkansasTexas A&M
Mississippi StateOle MissAlabamaVanderbilt
MissouriArkansasOklahomaTexas A&M
OklahomaTexasMissouriOle Miss
Ole MissMississippi StateLSUOklahoma
South CarolinaGeorgiaFloridaKentucky
TennesseeAlabamaKentuckyVanderbilt
TexasOklahomaTexas A&MArkansas
Texas A&MTexasLSUMissouri
VanderbiltTennesseeAuburnMississippi State

All-time school records (ranked according to winning percentage)

Through end of the 2023 season including SEC Championship Game. Records reflect official NCAA results, including any forfeits or win vacating.

#TeamWonLossTiedWin %Division ChampionshipsSEC ChampionshipsClaimed National Championships
1Alabama96533743.733163018
2Oklahoma94434153.725007
3Texas94839233.702004
4Tennessee86541453.6696136
5Georgia88142954.66613164
6LSU80643447.64510124
7Florida75844540.6261583
8Auburn79947147.625689
9Texas A&M77850448.603003
10Arkansas74053940.576301
11Ole Miss67554735.551063
12Missouri71159052.545200
13South Carolina63561244.509100
14Kentucky64364744.499021
15Mississippi State58660939.491110
16Vanderbilt61866550.482000

Notes:

  • Alabama's record reflects 21 wins being vacated (2005–2007) and eight wins and one tie forfeited (1993).
  • Kentucky's record reflects 10 vacated wins from 2021.
  • LSU's record reflects 37 wins being vacated (2012–2015) for major level-1 rule violations and playing with ineligible players.
  • Mississippi State's record reflects 18 wins and one tie being forfeited (1975–1977).
  • Ole Miss's record reflects 33 wins being vacated (2010–2016).
  • Tennessee's record reflects 11 wins being vacated (2019–2020) for 18 Level −1 violations encompassing more than 200 individual infractions and an additional four (4) Level-1 unethical conduct violations along with playing 16 ineligible players.
  • Two former members have also won conference titles, Georgia Tech five and Tulane three.
  • Vanderbilt has been awarded 6 National Championship titles, although the school does not claim them

Championship game

From its establishment in 1992 through 2023, the SEC Championship Game pitted the SEC West Division representative against the East Division representative in a game held after the regular season has been completed. Since 2024, when the SEC eliminated its football divisions, the game has featured the top two teams in the conference standings. The first two SEC Championship football games were held at Legion Field in Birmingham, Alabama. Since 1994, it has been played in Atlanta—first at the Georgia Dome through 2016, and since 2017 at its replacement, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, with the current hosting contract running through 2027. The "home team" designation alternated between the division champions during the divisional era, going to the East champion in even-numbered years and the West champion in odd-numbered years. The West led 19–13 in overall wins in the championship game against the East during the divisional era. As of 2024, the only members without a Championship Game appearance are Kentucky, Oklahoma, Ole Miss, Texas A&M, and Vanderbilt.

Bowl games

The post-season bowl game tie-ins for the SEC for the 2014–2019 seasons are:

PickNameLocationOpposing conferenceOpposing pickPayout
1^Sugar BowlNew Orleans, LouisianaBig 121$19M
2†Orange BowlMiami Gardens, FloridaACC1$18M
3Citrus BowlOrlando, FloridaBig TenACC°3/4/5 – 2$4.2M
4/5/6/7/8/9ReliaQuest BowlTampa, FloridaBig Ten3/4/5$3.5M
4/5/6/7/8/9Duke's Mayo BowlCharlotte, North CarolinaACC¤3/4/5/6/7$1.7M
10/11/12Las Vegas BowlParadise, NevadaPac-12¤$2.9M
4/5/6/7/8/9Texas BowlHouston, TexasBig 124$3.0M
4/5/6/7/8/9Liberty BowlMemphis, TennesseeBig 125$1.4M
4/5/6/7/8/9Gator BowlJacksonville, FloridaBig TenACC6/7/8 – 3/4/5/6/7$2.8M
4/5/6/7/8/9Music City BowlNashville, TennesseeBig TenACC6/7/8 – 3/4/5/6/7$2.8M
10/11/12Gasparilla BowlTampa, FloridaPool$1.1M
10/11/12Birmingham BowlBirmingham, AlabamaAmerican5$1.4M

Payout is per team for the 2014 season; if different for opposing conference, payout for the SEC team is shown. Each conference member, irrespective of bowl participation, also receives an equal split of a payout to the SEC conference.

^ The Sugar Bowl is contractually obligated to select the SEC champion if that team is not participating in the College Football Playoff. In years where the champion is unavailable the Playoff Committee will assign another SEC team to participate in the Sugar. Alternatively, in years where the Sugar hosts a playoff game the SEC Champion will be sent to the Fiesta, Cotton, or Peach Bowl if not selected for the playoff.

† The Big Ten and SEC will be eligible to face the ACC representative in the Orange Bowl at least three out of the eight seasons that it does not host a semifinal for the Playoff over a 12-year span. Notre Dame may be chosen the other two years if eligible.

° In years when the Big Ten places a team in the Orange Bowl, the Citrus Bowl will select from ACC teams remaining after the Playoff Committee and Orange Bowl make their selections.

‡ The Big Ten and ACC will switch between the Music City and Gator bowls on alternating years.

¤ For the 2020 through 2025 seasons, the Big Ten and SEC will alternate which conference sends a team to the Duke's Mayo Bowl or the Las Vegas Bowl. SEC will be in the Las Vegas Bowl during the even years and Duke's Mayo Bowl during the odd years.

Head coach compensation

The total pay of head coaches includes university and non-university compensation including base salary, income from contracts, foundation supplements, bonuses and media and radio pay as of the most recent 2024 season.

Conference pay rankInstitutionHead coach2024 total pay
1University of GeorgiaKirby Smart$13,282,580
2Louisiana State UniversityLane Kiffin$13,000,000
3University of TexasSteve Sarkisian$10,600,000
4University of AlabamaKalen Deboer$10,000,000
5University of KentuckyWill Stein$5,500,000
6University of MissouriEliah Drinkwitz$9,000,000
7University of TennesseeJosh Heupel$9,000,000
8University of OklahomaBrent Venables$8,152,000
9University of FloridaJon Sumrall$7,450,000
10Texas A&M UniversityMike Elko$7,000,000
11Auburn UniversityAlex Golesh$6,750,000
12University of ArkansasRyan Silverfield$6,500,000
13University of South CarolinaShane Beamer$6,401,996
14Mississippi State UniversityJeff Lebby$4,250,000
15Vanderbilt UniversityClark Lea$3,189,744

|- 16 | University of Mississippi | Interim head coach

Player awards

Each year, the conference selects various individual awards. In 1994, the conference began honoring former players from each school annually with the SEC Football Legends program.

50th anniversary All-Time SEC Team

In 1982, the SEC Skywriters, a group of media covering the Southeastern Conference, selected members of their All-Time SEC Team for the first fifty years (1933–82) of the SEC.

Coach: Paul "Bear" BryantOffense QB Archie Manning, Ole Miss 1968–70 HB Charley Trippi, Georgia 1942,45–46 HB Billy Cannon, LSU 1957–59 HB Herschel Walker, Georgia 1980–82 WR Don Hutson, Alabama 1932–34 WR Terry Beasley, Auburn 1969–71 TE Ozzie Newsome, Alabama 1974–77 OL John Hannah, Alabama 1970–72 OL Bruiser Kinard, Ole Miss 1935–37 OC Dwight Stephenson, Alabama 1977–79 OL Bob Suffridge, Tennessee 1938–40 OL Billy Neighbors, Alabama 1959–61 PK Fuad Reveiz, Tennessee 1981–84Defense DL Doug Atkins, Tennessee 1950–52 DL Bill Stanfill, Georgia 1966–68 DL Jack Youngblood, Florida 1968–70 DL Lou Michaels, Kentucky 1955–57 DL Gaynell Tinsley, LSU 1934–36 LB Lee Roy Jordan, Alabama 1960–62 LB Jack Reynolds, Tennessee 1967–69 LB D. D. Lewis, Miss. State 1965–67 DB Tucker Frederickson, Auburn 1962–64 DB Jake Scott, Georgia 1967–68 DB Tommy Casanova, LSU 1969–71 DB Don McNeal, Alabama 1977–79 DB Jimmy Patton, Ole Miss 1953–55 P Craig Colquitt, Tennessee 1975–77

Intra-conference football rivalries

The members of the SEC have longstanding rivalries with each other, especially on the football field. The following is a list of active rivalries in the Southeastern Conference with totals & records through the completion of the 2024 season.

TeamTeamRivalry NameTrophyMeetingsRecordSeries LeaderCurrent Streak
AlabamaAuburnIron BowlFoy, V-ODK Sportsmanship Trophy8951–37–1AlabamaAlabama won 5
AlabamaFloridaAlabama–Florida football rivalryNone4227–14AlabamaAlabama won 8
AlabamaGeorgiaAlabama–Georgia football rivalryNone7444–26–4AlabamaAlabama won 2
AlabamaLSUFirst Saturday in NovemberNone8957–27–5AlabamaAlabama won 2
AlabamaMississippi StateAlabama–Mississippi State football rivalryNone10886–18–3AlabamaAlabama won 16
AlabamaOle MissAlabama–Ole Miss football rivalryNone7155–10–2AlabamaAlabama won 8
AlabamaTennesseeThird Saturday in OctoberNone10759–40–7AlabamaTennessee won 1
ArkansasLSUArkansas–LSU football rivalryGolden Boot7043–23–2LSULSU won 3
ArkansasMissouriBattle Line RivalryBattle Line Trophy1612–4MissouriMissouri won 3
ArkansasOle MissArkansas–Ole Miss football rivalryNone7137–31–1ArkansasOle Miss won 2
ArkansasTexasArkansas–Texas football rivalryNone8057–23TexasTexas won 1
ArkansasTexas A&MArkansas–Texas A&M football rivalrySouthwest Classic Trophy8142–36–3ArkansasTexas A&M won 3
AuburnFloridaAuburn–Florida football rivalryNone8443–39–2AuburnFlorida won 1
AuburnGeorgiaDeep South's Oldest RivalryNone12965–56–8GeorgiaGeorgia won 8
AuburnLSUAuburn–LSU football rivalryNone5830–24–1LSULSU won 2
AuburnOle MissAuburn–Ole Miss football rivalryNone4835–12AuburnOle Miss won 2
AuburnTennesseeAuburn–Tennessee football rivalryNone5429–22–3AuburnAuburn won 1
FloridaGeorgiaFlorida–Georgia football rivalryOkefenokee Oar10256–44–2GeorgiaGeorgia won 4
FloridaKentuckyFlorida–Kentucky football rivalryNone7554–21FloridaFlorida won 1
FloridaLSUFlorida–LSU football rivalryNone7134–31–3FloridaFlorida won 1
FloridaTennesseeFlorida–Tennessee football rivalryNone5432–22FloridaTennessee won 1
GeorgiaSouth CarolinaGeorgia–South Carolina football rivalryNone7655–19–2GeorgiaGeorgia won 4
GeorgiaTennesseeGeorgia–Tennessee football rivalryNone5429–23–2GeorgiaGeorgia won 8
GeorgiaVanderbiltGeorgia–Vanderbilt football rivalryNone8361–20–2GeorgiaGeorgia won 6
KentuckyTennesseeKentucky–Tennessee football rivalryBeer Barrel12084–26–9TennesseeTennessee won 4
KentuckyVanderbiltKentucky–Vanderbilt football rivalryNone9748–44–4KentuckyVanderbilt won 1
LSUMississippi StateLSU–Mississippi State football rivalryNone11775–36–3LSULSU won 3
LSUOle MissMagnolia BowlMagnolia Bowl Trophy11364–42–4LSULSU won 1
LSUTexas A&MLSU–Texas A&M football rivalryNone6332–24–3LSUTexas A&M won 1
Mississippi StateOle MissEgg BowlGolden Egg12166–46–6Ole MissOle Miss won 2
MissouriOklahomaMissouri–Oklahoma football rivalryTiger–Sooner Peace Pipe9767–25–5OklahomaMissouri won 1
MissouriSouth CarolinaMayor's CupMayor's Cup159–6MissouriSouth Carolina won 1
OklahomaTexasRed River RivalryGolden Hat12064–51–5TexasTexas won 1
Ole MissVanderbiltOle Miss–Vanderbilt football rivalryNone9854–40–2Ole MissOle Miss won 5
South CarolinaTennesseeSouth Carolina–Tennessee football rivalryNone4227–11–2TennesseeTennessee won 1
TennesseeVanderbiltTennessee–Vanderbilt football rivalryNone11979–33–5TennesseeTennessee won 6
TexasTexas A&MTexas–Texas A&M football rivalryCotton Holdings Trophy11977–37–5TexasTexas won 2

Interconference football rivalries

TeamsRivalry nameTrophyMeetingsRecordSeries leaderExisting streakOpposing conference
AlabamaClemsonAlabama–Clemson football rivalryNone1914–5AlabamaAlabama lost 1ACC
Georgia TechAlabama–Georgia Tech football rivalry5228–21–3AlabamaAlabama lost 1
Penn StateAlabama–Penn State football rivalry1510–5AlabamaAlabama won 2Big Ten
ArkansasTexas TechArkansas–Texas Tech football rivalry3830–8ArkansasArkansas won 1Big 12
AuburnClemsonAuburn–Clemson football rivalry5134–15–2AuburnAuburn lost 4ACC
Georgia TechAuburn–Georgia Tech football rivalry9247–41–4AuburnAuburn lost 2
TulaneAuburn–Tulane football rivalry3815–17–6TulaneAuburn won 2AAC
FloridaFlorida StateSunshine ShowdownMakala Trophy, Florida Cup6838–28–2FloridaFlorida won 1ACC
Miami (FL)Florida–Miami football rivalryFlorida Cup5727–30Miami (FL)Florida lost 1
GeorgiaClemsonClemson–Georgia football rivalryNone6644–18–4GeorgiaGeorgia won 2
Georgia TechClean, Old-Fashioned HateThe Governor's Cup11872–41–5GeorgiaGeorgia won 7
KentuckyCentreCentre–Kentucky rivalryNone3512–21–2CentreKentucky won 3SAA (D-III)
IndianaIndiana–Kentucky football rivalry3617–18–1IndianaKentucky lost 1Big Ten
LouisvilleGovernor's CupThe Governor's Cup3619–16KentuckyKentucky lost 1ACC
TransylvaniaBattle On BroadwayNone1912–6–1KentuckyKentucky lost 1Program defunct since 1941
LSUTulaneBattle for the RagTiger Rag/Victory Rag9869–22–7LSULSU won 18AAC
MissouriIllinoisArch RivalryNone2417–7MissouriMissouri won 6Big Ten
Iowa StateIowa State–Missouri football rivalryTelephone Trophy10461–34–9MissouriMissouri won 5Big 12
KansasBorder WarIndian War Drum12157–54–9MissouriMissouri won 3
NebraskaMissouri–Nebraska football rivalryVictory Bell10436–65–3NebraskaMissouri lost 2Big Ten
OklahomaNebraskaNebraska–Oklahoma football rivalryNone8847–38–3OklahomaOklahoma won 3
Oklahoma StateBedlam SeriesBedlam Bell11891–20–7OklahomaOklahoma lost 1Big 12
Ole MissMemphisMid-South RivalryNone6347–12–2Ole MissOle Miss lost 1AAC
TulaneOle Miss–Tulane football rivalry7343–28Ole MissOle Miss won 13
South CarolinaClemsonPalmetto BowlPalmetto Trophy12144–73–4ClemsonSouth Carolina won 1ACC
North CarolinaNorth Carolina–South Carolina football rivalryNone6020–36–4North CarolinaSouth Carolina lost 1
TennesseeGeorgia TechGeorgia Tech–Tennessee football rivalry4425–17–2TennesseeTennessee won 2
TexasBaylorBaylor–Texas football rivalry11381–28–4TexasTexas won 2Big 12
RiceRice–Texas football rivalry9775–21–1TexasTexas won 16AAC
TCUTCU–Texas football rivalry9465–28–1TexasTexas won 1Big 12
Texas TechTexas–Texas Tech football rivalryChancellor's Spurs7355–18TexasTexas won 1
Texas A&MBaylorBattle of the BrazosNone10868–31–9Texas A&MTexas A&M won 3
TCUTCU–Texas A&M football rivalry9256–29–7Texas A&MTexas A&M won 24
Texas TechTexas A&M–Texas Tech football rivalry7037–32–1Texas A&MTexas A&M won 3
VanderbiltGeorgia TechGeorgia Tech–Vanderbilt football rivalryGold Cowbell3916–20–3Georgia TechVanderbilt won 1ACC
SewaneeSewanee–Vanderbilt football rivalryNone5240–8–4VanderbiltVanderbilt won 1SAA (D-III)

Men's basketball

2025–26 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season For the current season, see 2025–26 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season.

Since the 2012–13 season, SEC teams have played an 18-game conference schedule, which includes two games (home and away) against each of three permanent rivals and single games against the remaining ten teams in the conference. Men's basketball formerly used the East/West divisional alignment for regular-season scheduling and seeding the conference tournament, but it no longer does.

Before expansion to 14 teams, the conference schedule was 16 games. Although the divisions were eliminated beginning with the 2011–12 season, that season's schedule was still set according to the divisional alignments, with each team facing each team from its own division twice and each team from the opposite division once. As part of the proposal by SEC head coaches that led to the scrapping of the divisional structure, a task force of four coaches and four athletic directors was set to discuss future conference scheduling. At that time, options included a revamped 16-game schedule, an 18-game schedule, or a full double round-robin of 22 conference games. However, these discussions came before Texas A&M and Missouri were announced in late 2011 as incoming members for the 2012–13 season, which required a format that could support 14 teams rather than twelve.

At the 2012 SEC spring meetings, league athletic directors adopted an 18-game conference schedule. Each school had one permanent opponent that it played home and away every season, and faced four other opponents in a home-and-home series during a given season, and then the remaining teams one each (four home, four away). The permanent opponents were Alabama–Auburn, Arkansas–Missouri, Florida–Kentucky, Georgia–South Carolina, LSU–Texas A&M, Ole Miss–Mississippi State, and Tennessee–Vanderbilt. The home-and-home opponents, apart from the permanent opponent, rotated each season.

The 2014 SEC spring meetings saw a further change to the scheduling format. While the athletic directors voted to stay with an 18-game conference schedule, they increased the number of permanent opponents for each school from one to three. Each school retained its permanent opponent from the 2012–2014 period while adding two others.

From 1966 to 1967, following Tulane's departure, through 1990–91, the year prior to the addition of Arkansas and South Carolina, teams played a double round-robin, 18-game conference schedule. No team was undefeated in this period, though three teams went 17–1 (Kentucky in 1970 and 1986, LSU in 1981; ironically, a loss to the Wildcats at Lexington in the regular season finale prevented the 1980–81 Tigers from an 18–0 conference record). During the period from 1992 to 2012 when the league slate was 16 games, Kentucky went undefeated in SEC play in 1996, 2003, and 2012 (although only the 2003 team went on to win the conference tournament).

Since the return to an 18-game conference schedule following the 2012 conference expansion, two teams have gone undefeated in SEC play: Florida in 2013–14 and Kentucky in 2014–15.

The scheduling format will change again with the arrival of Oklahoma and Texas in 2024. The conference schedule will remain at 18 games, but each team will play three opponents home and away—two permanent and one rotating. The remaining 12 games will be single games against all other conference members, evenly divided between home and away games.

Scheduling partners

The table below lists each school's permanent men's basketball-only scheduling partners starting with the 2024–2025 season.

SchoolPartner 1Partner 2
AlabamaAuburnMississippi State
ArkansasLSUMissouri
AuburnAlabamaOle Miss
FloridaGeorgiaSouth Carolina
GeorgiaFloridaSouth Carolina
KentuckyTennesseeVanderbilt
LSUArkansasTexas A&M
Ole MissAuburnMississippi State
Mississippi StateAlabamaOle Miss
MissouriArkansasOklahoma
OklahomaMissouriTexas
South CarolinaFloridaGeorgia
TennesseeKentuckyVanderbilt
TexasOklahomaTexas A&M
Texas A&MLSUTexas
VanderbiltKentuckyTennessee

National championships, Final Fours, and NCAA tournament appearances

Southeastern Conference basketball programs have combined to win 12 NCAA men's basketball championships as SEC members. Kentucky has won eight, Florida has won three, and Arkansas has won one national championship each as SEC members. Eleven teams have advanced to the Final Four at least once in their history. Nine SEC schools (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, LSU, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas) are among the national top 50 in all-time NCAA tournament appearances.

SchoolMen's NCAA ChampionshipsMen's NCAA Runner-UpMen's NCAA Final FoursMen's NCAA Elite EightsMen's NCAA Sweet SixteensMen's NCAA Tournament Appearances
Alabama1 (2024)3 (2004, 2024, 2025)11 (1976, 1982, 1985, 1986, 1990, 1991, 2004, 2021, 2023–25)25 (1975, 1976, 1982–86, 1989–92, 1994, 1995, 2002–06, 2012, 2018, 2021–25)
Arkansas1 (1994)1 (1995)6 (1941, 1945, 1978, 1990, 1994, 1995)11 (1941, 1945, 1949, 1978, 1979, 1990, 1991, 1994, 1995, 2021, 2022)15 (1958, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1990, 1991, 1993–96, 2021–23, 2025)36 (1941, 1945, 1949, 1958, 1977–85, 1988–91, 1992–96, 1998–2001, 2006–08, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2021–23, 2025)
Auburn2 (2019, 2025)3 (1986, 2019, 2025)6 (1985, 1986, 1999, 2003, 2019, 2025)14 (1984–88, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2018, 2019, 2022–25)
Florida3 (2006, 2007, 2025)1 (2000)6 (1994, 2000, 2006, 2007, 2014, 2025)10 (1994, 2000, 2006, 2007, 2011–14, 2017, 2025)11 (1994, 1999, 2000, 2006, 2007, 2011–14, 2017, 2025)23 (1989, 1994, 1995, 1999–2007, 2010–14, 2017–19, 2021, 2024, 2025)
Georgia1 (1983)1 (1983)2 (1983, 1986)11 (1983, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2008, 2011, 2015, 2025)
Kentucky8 (1948, 1949, 1951, 1958, 1978, 1996, 1998, 2012)4 (1966, 1975, 1997, 2014)17 (1942, 1948, 1949, 1951, 1958, 1966, 1975, 1978, 1984, 1993, 1996–98, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015)38 (1942, 1945, 1948, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1956–58, 1961, 1962, 1966, 1968, 1970, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1992, 1993, 1995–99, 2003, 2005, 2010–12, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019)49 (1942, 1945, 1948, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1955–59, 1961, 1962, 1964, 1966, 1968–73, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1980, 1983–86, 1992, 1993, 1995–99, 2001–03, 2005, 2010–12, 2014, 2015, 2017–19, 2025)62 (1942, 1945, 1948, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1955–59, 1961, 1962, 1964, 1966, 1968–73, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1980–87, 1992–2008, 2010–12, 2014–19, 2022–25)
LSU4 (1953, 1981, 1986, 2006)6 (1953, 1980, 1981, 1986, 1987, 2006)10 (1953, 1954, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1986, 1987, 2000, 2006, 2019)24 (1953, 1954, 1979–81, 1984–93, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2015, 2019, 2021, 2022)
Ole Miss2 (2001, 2025)10 (1981, 1997–99, 2001, 2002, 2013, 2015, 2019, 2025)
Mississippi State1 (1996)1 (1996)1 (1963, 1995, 1996)14 (1963, 1991, 1995, 1996, 2002–05, 2008, 2009, 2019, 2023–25)
Missouri4 (1944, 1976, 2002, 2009)6 (1976, 1980, 1982, 1989, 2002, 2009)29 (1944, 1976, 1978, 1980–83, 1986–90, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1999–2003, 2009–12, 2013, 2018, 2021, 2023, 2025)
Oklahoma2 (1947, 1988)5 (1939, 1947, 1988, 2002, 2016)9 (1939, 1943, 1947, 1985, 1988, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2016)11 (1979, 1985, 1987–89, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2015, 2016)34 (1939, 1943, 1947, 1979, 1983–90, 1992, 1995–2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2013–16, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2025)
South Carolina1 (2017)1 (2017)4 (1971–73, 2017)10 (1971–74, 1989, 1997, 1998, 2004, 2017, 2024)
Tennessee3 (2010, 2024, 2025)11 (1967, 1981, 2000, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2014, 2019, 2023–25)27 (1967, 1976, 1977, 1979–83, 1989, 1998–2001, 2006–11, 2014, 2018, 2019, 2021–25)
Texas3 (1943, 1947, 2003)8 (1939, 1943, 1947, 1990, 2003, 2006, 2008, 2023)11 (1960, 1963, 1972, 1990, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2023)39 (1939, 1943, 1947, 1960, 1963, 1972, 1974, 1979, 1989–92, 1994–97, 1999–2012, 2014–16, 2018, 2021–24, 2025)
Texas A&M6 (1951, 1969, 1980, 2007, 2016, 2018)17 (1951, 1964, 1969, 1975, 1980, 1987, 2006–11, 2016, 2018, 2023–25)
Vanderbilt1 (1965)6 (1965, 1974, 1988, 1993, 2004, 2007)16 (1965, 1974, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1997, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2016, 2017, 2025)

Seasons are listed by the calendar years in which they ended. Italics indicate honors earned before the school competed in the SEC.

Basketball tournament

The SEC men's basketball tournament (also known simply as the SEC tournament) is the competition that determines the SEC's automatic bid to the NCAA men's basketball tournament. Notably, it does not determine the SEC conference champion in men's basketball—the conference has awarded its championship to the team(s) with the best regular-season record since the 1950–51 season. It is a single-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records.

With the expansion to 14 members in 2012, the 2013 tournament was the first with a new format covering five days. The teams seeded eleven through fourteen play on the first day, with the winners advancing to play the No.5 and No.6 seeds on Thursday. The top four teams receive a "double bye" and do not play until the quarterfinals on Friday. The expansion to 16 teams in 2024 will result in two additional tournament games, but the top four teams will continue to receive "double byes" into the quarterfinals.

As of the 2022–23 season, the tournament has most often been held at two venues that have each hosted twelve times. Louisville Gardens in Louisville, Kentucky, served as the regular host from 1941 until the tournament was discontinued after the 1952 edition. The Georgia Dome in Atlanta first hosted the tournament in 1995 and most recently hosted in 2014. Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee, is now the regular host, with that venue hosting the tournament from 2015 through 2030, except in 2018 and 2022 (years in which it instead hosted the SEC women's basketball tournament). Sometimes, the tournament will take place at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans, or Benchmark International Arena in Tampa, Florida. The 2018 tournament was held at Scottrade Center, now Enterprise Center, in St. Louis, Missouri, and the 2022 tournament was at Amalie Arena.

Prior to moving to the Georgia Dome, the tournament (during its modern, post-1979 era) was most often contested at the venue now known as Legacy Arena in Birmingham, Alabama, home of the SEC's headquarters and centrally located prior to the addition of Arkansas and South Carolina. Other sites to host include on-campus arenas at LSU, Tennessee, and Vanderbilt; Rupp Arena in Lexington; and the Orlando Arena.

NCAA tournament champions, runners-up and locations

† denotes overtime games. Multiple †'s indicate more than one overtime.

YearChampionRunner-upVenue and city
1947Holy Cross58Oklahoma47Madison Square GardenNew York City, New York
1948Kentucky58Baylor42Madison Square GardenNew York City, New York
1949Kentucky (2)46Oklahoma A&M36Hec Edmundson PavilionSeattle, Washington
1951Kentucky (3)68Kansas State58Williams ArenaMinneapolis, Minnesota
1958Kentucky (4)84Seattle72Freedom HallLouisville, Kentucky
1966Texas Western72Kentucky65Cole Field HouseCollege Park, Maryland
1975UCLA (10)92Kentucky85San Diego Sports ArenaSan Diego, California
1978Kentucky (5)94Duke88The CheckerdomeSt. Louis, Missouri
1988Kansas (2)83Oklahoma79Kemper ArenaKansas City, Missouri
1994Arkansas76Duke72Charlotte ColiseumCharlotte, North Carolina
1995UCLA (11)89Arkansas78KingdomeSeattle, Washington
1996Kentucky (6)76Syracuse67Continental Airlines ArenaEast Rutherford, New Jersey
1997Arizona84Kentucky79RCA DomeIndianapolis, Indiana
1998Kentucky (7)78Utah69AlamodomeSan Antonio, Texas
2000Michigan State (2)89Florida76RCA DomeIndianapolis, Indiana
2006Florida73UCLA57RCA DomeIndianapolis, Indiana
2007Florida (2)84Ohio State75Georgia DomeAtlanta, Georgia
2012Kentucky (8)67Kansas59Mercedes-Benz SuperdomeNew Orleans, Louisiana
2014UConn (4)60Kentucky54AT&T StadiumArlington, Texas
2025Florida (3)65Houston63AlamodomeSan Antonio, Texas

Awards

The SEC Men's Basketball Player of the Year is awarded to the player who has proven himself, throughout the season, to be the most exceptional talent in the Southeastern Conference. Various other awards, such as the best tournament player in the SEC tournament and all conference honors are given out throughout the year.

Baseball

Starting in 2025 with the addition of Oklahoma and Texas, schools play a 30–game league schedule (10 three-game series), with two permanent opponents and eight rotating opponents. Between 1996 and 2012, the SEC consisted of two divisions, where schools played all five teams within their division and five schools from the opposite division, resulting in only one missed opponent in any given season. From 2012 to 2024, with the addition of Missouri and Texas A&M, schedules consisted of games played against all six other divisional opponents and four opponents from the opposite division, meaning three missed opponents in a given season.

Since 1990, the SEC has become the most successful conference on the college baseball diamond. That year, Georgia captured the conference's first national championship at the Men's College World Series (MCWS). Following that, LSU won six of the next 19 titles, including five of ten between 1991 and 2000 and its sixth title in 2009. This was followed by South Carolina winning back-to-back titles in 2010 and 2011, Vanderbilt winning its first title in 2014, Florida winning its first title in 2017, Vanderbilt winning again in 2019, Mississippi State claiming its first title in 2021, Ole Miss winning its first title in 2022, LSU winning again in 2023, Tennessee winning its first title in 2024, and LSU winning again in 2025. During that same span, 13 teams have also been runners-up at the MCWS. The MCWS final series featured two SEC teams in 1997, 2011, 2017, 2021, 2023, and 2024, and the 2022 final involved a current member and a future member. The 2022 MCWS featured four current members, all from the SEC West, and both future members. Every current member has appeared at least 5 times except Kentucky, which made its first MCWS appearance in 2024. The only pre-2024 SEC member that has not appeared in the MCWS as an SEC member is Missouri, which has yet to make the NCAA tournament as an SEC member, although it made six MCWS appearances in the 1950s and 1960s while in the Big Eight Conference. Both Georgia Tech and Tulane have made appearances in the MCWS after leaving the SEC. One of the two newest SEC members, Texas, leads all schools in MCWS appearances with 38, and its 6 titles trail only USC (12 titles) and LSU (8). The other new member, Oklahoma, has two titles from 11 MCWS appearances.

SEC teams have also become leaders in total and average attendance over the years. In 2022, the top seven programs in average home attendance and the top eight programs in total home attendance were all SEC members, with the exception of future SEC member Texas. The only SEC members to place outside the top 30 in both measures of attendance were Kentucky and Missouri, with the latter being the only one outside the top 50.

The NCAA automatic berth is given to the winner of the SEC Baseball Tournament, which was first started in 1977. The 2025 tournament, the first after the addition of Oklahoma and Texas, was the first to include all conference members, and also the first to use a single-elimination format throughout. Previously, at least some rounds used a double-elimination format. Regardless of the format, seeding is based on regular-season records. Since 1998, the tournament has been held at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama. The winner receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I baseball tournament.

SEC presidents and athletic directors voted to expand the SEC Tournament to ten teams starting in 2012. The division winners received a bye on the first day of competition, and the tournament became single-elimination after the field is pared to four teams.

With the addition of Missouri and Texas A&M for the 2013 baseball season, the tournament was expanded to 12 teams. The top four seeds receive a bye on the first day, with seeds 5–12 playing single elimination. The tournament is double-elimination for the next three days, then reverts to single elimination when four teams are remaining.

Because of the arrival of Oklahoma and Texas for the 2025 baseball season, the tournament was expanded to a 16-team, single elimination tournament. The top 4 seeds earn a double-bye to the quarterfinals, and seeds 5–8 earn a bye to the second round.

In addition to the winner of the SEC Baseball Tournament, the Southeastern Conference usually gets several at-large bids to the NCAA tournament. Many teams have qualified for the NCAA tournament despite failing to win a game in the SEC Tournament. Three of these reached the MCWS despite going 0–2 in the SEC Tournament — Mississippi State in 2007 and 2021, and Texas A&M in 2024, with Texas A&M reaching the MCWS championship series and Mississippi State outright winning the 2021 MCWS.

National championships, Men's College World Series, and NCAA tournament appearances

Southeastern Conference baseball programs have combined to win 16 NCAA baseball championships as SEC members. LSU has won eight, South Carolina and Vanderbilt have won two, and Florida, Georgia, Ole Miss, Mississippi State and Tennessee have won one national championship each as SEC members. Texas has won six, Oklahoma has won two, and Missouri has won one championship prior to joining the SEC. Every SEC team has advanced to the Men's College World Series at least once in its history, and only Kentucky has made fewer than five MCWS appearances. Twelve SEC schools (Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, LSU, Mississippi State, Missouri, South Carolina, Oklahoma, Texas, Texas A&M, Vanderbilt) are among the national top 50 in all-time NCAA tournament appearances.

SchoolNCAA ChampionshipsNCAA Runner-UpNCAA College World Series AppearancesNCAA Regional ChampionsNCAA Tournament Appearances
Alabama2 (1983, 1997)5 (1950, 1983, 1996, 1997, 1999)8 (1950, 1983, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2006, 2010, 2023)26 (1950, 1955, 1968, 1983, 1986, 1991, 1995–2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008–11, 2013, 2014, 2021, 2023–25)
Arkansas2 (1979, 2018)12 (1979, 1985, 1987, 1989, 2004, 2009, 2012, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2025)15 (1979, 1985, 1987, 1989, 2002, 2004, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2025)36 (1973, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1985–90, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2002–15, 2017–19, 2021–25)
Auburn6 (1967, 1976, 1994, 1997, 2019, 2022)8 (1976, 1994, 1997, 1999, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2025)25 (1963, 1967, 1976, 1978, 1987, 1989, 1993–95, 1997–2003, 2005, 2010, 2015, 2017–19, 2022, 2023, 2025)
Florida1 (2017)3 (2005, 2011, 2023)14 (1988, 1991, 1996, 1998, 2005, 2010–12, 2015–18, 2023, 2024)16 (1988, 1991, 1996, 1998, 2004, 2005, 2009–12, 2015–18, 2023, 2024)40 (1958, 1960, 1962, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1996–98, 2000–05, 2008–19, 2021–25)
Georgia1 (1990)1 (2008)6 (1987, 1990, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2008)7 (1987, 1990, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2024)17 (1953, 1954, 1987, 1990, 1992, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2024, 2025)
Kentucky1 (2024)3 (2017, 2023, 2024)10 (1988, 1993, 2006, 2008, 2012, 2014, 2017, 2023–25)
LSU8 (1991, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2009, 2023, 2025)1 (2017)39 (1986, 1987, 1989–91, 1993, 1994, 1996–98, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2013, 2015, 2017, 2023, 2025)39 (1986, 1987, 1989–91, 1993, 1994, 1996–2004, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2015–17, 2019, 2021, 2023, 2025)50 (1975, 1985–87, 1989–2005, 2008–10, 2012–19, 2021–25)
Ole Miss1 (2022)6 (1956, 1964, 1969, 1972, 2014, 2022)8 (2005–07, 2009, 2014, 2019, 2021, 2022)26 (1956, 1964, 1969, 1972, 1977, 1995, 1999, 2001, 2003–10, 2012–16, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2025)
Mississippi State1 (2021)1 (2013)12 (1971, 1979, 1981, 1985, 1990, 1997, 1998, 2007, 2013, 2018, 2019, 2021)16 (1979, 1981, 1985, 1990, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2007, 2011, 2013, 2016–19, 2021)39 (1965, 1966, 1970, 1971, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1983–85, 1987–93, 1996–2001, 2003–07, 2011–14, 2016–19, 2021, 2024, 2025)
Missouri1 (1954)3 (1952, 1958, 1964)6 (1952, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1963, 1964)1 (2006)22 (1952, 1954, 1958, 1962–65, 1976, 1978, 1980, 1981, 1988, 1991, 1996, 2003–09, 2012)
Oklahoma2 (1951, 1994)1 (2022)11 (1951, 1972–76, 1992, 1994, 1995, 2010, 2022)10 (1975, 1976, 1992, 1994, 1995, 2006, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2022)41 (1947, 1951, 1955, 1956, 1972–77, 1979, 1982, 1984–89, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004–06, 2008–13, 2017, 2018, 2022–2024, 2025)
South Carolina2 (2010, 2011)4 (1975, 1977, 2002, 2012)11 (1975, 1977, 1981, 1982, 1985, 2002–04, 2010–12)19 (1975, 1977, 1981, 1982, 1985, 2000–04, 2006, 2007, 2010–13, 2016, 2018, 2023)35 (1974–77, 1980–86, 1988, 1992, 1993, 1998, 2000–14, 2016, 2018, 2021, 2023, 2024)
Tennessee1 (2024)1 (1951)7 (1951, 1995, 2001, 2005, 2021, 2023, 2024)8 (1995, 2001, 2005, 2021–25)15 (1951, 1993–97, 2001, 2004, 2005, 2019, 2021–25)
Texas6 (1949, 1950, 1975, 1983, 2002, 2005)6 (1953, 1984, 1985, 1989, 2004, 2009)38 (1949, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1957, 1961–63, 1965, 1966, 1968–70, 1972–75, 1979, 1981–85, 1987, 1989, 1992, 1993, 2000, 2002–05, 2009, 2011, 2014, 2018, 2021, 2022)24 (1975, 1979, 1981–85, 1987, 1989, 1992, 1993, 2000, 2002–05, 2009–11, 2014, 2018, 2021–23)64 (1947, 1949, 1950, 1952–54, 1957, 1958, 1960–63, 1965–76, 1979–96, 1999–2008, 2009–11, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2021–24, 2025)
Texas A&M1 (2024)8 (1951, 1964, 1993, 1999, 2011, 2017, 2022, 2024)11 (1993, 1999, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2015–17, 2022, 2024)38 (1951, 1955, 1959, 1964, 1975–78, 1984, 1986–89, 1991–93, 1995, 1997–99, 2003, 2004, 2007–12, 2013–19, 2022–24)
Vanderbilt2 (2014, 2019)2 (2015, 2021)5 (2011, 2014, 2015, 2019, 2021)10 (2004, 2010, 2011, 2013–15, 2017–19, 2021)23 (1973, 1974, 1980, 2004, 2006–19, 2021–25)

Seasons are listed by the calendar years in which they ended. Italics indicate honors earned before the school competed in the SEC.

Men's College World Series champions, runners-up, and scores

Note: Teams in bold are current SEC members who advanced to the MCWS while in the conference. Teams in bold italics are current SEC members who were either in another conference or an independent at the time of their appearance.

YearChampionRunner-upScore(s)Venue
1949TexasWake Forest10–3Lawrence–Dumont StadiumWichita, Kansas
1950Texas (2)Washington State3–0Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1951OklahomaTennessee3–2Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1952Holy CrossMissouri7–3, 8–4Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1953MichiganTexas7–5Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1954MissouriRollins4–1Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1958Southern California (2)Missouri7–0, 8–7 (12)Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1964Minnesota (3)Missouri5–1Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1975Texas (3)South Carolina5–1Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1977Arizona State (4)South Carolina2–1Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1979Cal State FullertonArkansas2–1Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1983Texas (4)Alabama4–3Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1984Cal State Fullerton (2)Texas3–1Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1985Miami (FL) (2)Texas2–1, 10–6Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1989Wichita StateTexas5–3Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1990GeorgiaOklahoma State2–1Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1991LSUWichita State6–3Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1993LSU (2)Wichita State8–0Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1994Oklahoma (2)Georgia Tech13–5Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1996LSU (3)Miami (FL)9–8Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
1997LSU (4)Alabama13–6Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
2000LSU (5)Stanford6–5Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
2002Texas (5)South Carolina12–6Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
2004Cal State Fullerton (4)Texas6–4, 3–2Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
2005Texas (6)Florida4–2, 6–2Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
2008Fresno StateGeorgia6–7, 19–10, 6–1Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
2009LSU (6)Texas7–6 (11), 1–5, 11–4Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
2010South CarolinaUCLA7–1, 2–1 (11)Rosenblatt StadiumOmaha, Nebraska
2011South Carolina (2)Florida2–1 (11), 5–2TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2012Arizona (4)South Carolina5–1, 4–1TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2013UCLAMississippi State3–1, 8–0TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2014VanderbiltVirginia9–8, 2–7, 3–2TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2015VirginiaVanderbilt1–5, 3–0, 4–2TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2017FloridaLSU4–3, 6–1TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2018Oregon State (3)Arkansas1–4, 5–3, 5–0TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2019Vanderbilt (2)Michigan4–7, 4–1, 8–2TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2021Mississippi StateVanderbilt2–8, 13–2, 9–0TD Ameritrade Park OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2022Ole MissOklahoma10–3, 4–2Charles Schwab Field OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2023LSU (7)Florida4–3 (11), 4–24, 18–4Charles Schwab Field OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2024TennesseeTexas A&M5–9, 4–1, 6–5Charles Schwab Field OmahaOmaha, Nebraska
2025LSU (8)Coastal Carolina1-0, 5-3Charles Schwab Field OmahaOmaha, Nebraska

Rivalries

Several baseball rivalries have developed in the SEC:

Historically these schools were arch-rivals in all sports, but following Tulane's decades-long de-emphasis of sports, including its exit from the SEC in 1966, baseball is the only sport in which the two schools are relatively evenly matched. On several occasions match-ups between the two have drawn national record-setting attendances. Tulane reached its first College World Series in 2001 by defeating LSU in three games in the NCAA Super Regional. In 2002, the Tigers and Green Wave drew an NCAA regular season record crowd of 27,673 to the Louisiana Superdome.

Before the arrival of Skip Bertman as LSU's baseball coach in 1984, Mississippi State had long dominated the conference in baseball, with most of that success coming under coach Ron Polk, who returned to coach the Bulldogs in 2002 after retiring in 1997. When Bertman arrived in Baton Rouge, LSU's long-dormant program took off, winning eleven SEC championships and five College World Series championships between 1984 and 2001.

This instate rivalry is an intense local affair, with the Gamecocks and Tigers meeting each regular season, and has gained national prominence as both teams are often ranked in the top ten nationally. The highlights of the rivalry include the 2002 and 2010 meetings in the final four of the College World Series. Each time, South Carolina emerged from the losers bracket to beat Clemson twice and advance to the national championship series.

The Gamecocks and Tar Heels met five times in the NCAA tournament between 2002 and 2013, including the 2002 NCAA Regional, 2003 NCAA Super Regional, 2004 NCAA Regional and 2013 NCAA Regional, with the Gamecocks holding a 3–2 edge.

Women's basketball

The SEC has historically been a strong conference in women's basketball. Since the 2009–10 season, teams have played a 16-game conference schedule with a single league table; prior to that time the conference schedule was 14 games, again in a single table. Like SEC men's basketball, women's basketball used the divisional alignment for scheduling purposes through the 2011–12 season; however, the women's scheduling format was significantly different from the men's. Each team played home-and-home games against five schools—one permanent opponent, two teams from the same division, and two teams from the opposite division; the non-permanent home-and-home opponents rotated every two years. The remaining games were single games against the six other schools in the conference, with three at home and three away.

The league voted to keep a 16-game league schedule even after the addition of Missouri and Texas A&M. Arkansas and LSU are no longer permanent opponents, with the Razorbacks picking up Missouri and the Lady Tigers picking up Texas A&M. The other permanent opponents are the same as men's basketball, except for Florida-Georgia and Kentucky-South Carolina (both pairs had been permanent women's basketball opponents before the 2012 expansion). Each school plays two others home-and-home during a given season and the other ten once each. The divisional alignments no longer play any role in scheduling.

The conference schedule will remain at 16 games after the 2024 arrival of Oklahoma and Texas. Each team will play home and away against one permanent opponent, with single games against all other teams, evenly divided between home and away games.

SEC women's basketball was historically dominated by Tennessee, who won regular-season and/or conference tournament championships in 25 seasons through 2015, as well as eight national championships since 1987. In more recent times, the dominant team has been South Carolina, winning eight regular-season and eight tournament titles since 2014, as well as national titles in 2017, 2022 and 2024. In the 28 seasons the NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament has been held, SEC schools have reached the Final Four 32 times, more than twice as often as any other conference.

National championships, Final Fours, and NCAA tournament appearances

Southeastern Conference basketball programs have combined to win 12 NCAA women's basketball championships as SEC members. Tennessee has won eight, South Carolina has won three, and LSU has won one national championship each as SEC members. Texas and Texas A&M have won championships prior to joining the conference. Twelve teams have advanced to the Final Four at least once in their history. Eleven SEC schools (Auburn, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Ole Miss, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Texas A&M, and Vanderbilt) are among the national top 50 in all-time NCAA tournament appearances.

SchoolWomen's NCAA ChampionshipsWomen's NCAA Runner-UpWomen's NCAA Final FoursWomen's NCAA Elite EightsWomen's NCAA Sweet SixteensWomen's NCAA Tournament Appearances
Alabama1 (1994)1 (1994)6 (1984, 1994–98)14 (1984, 1988, 1992–99, 2021–25)
Arkansas1 (1998)2 (1990, 1998)3 (1990, 1991, 1998)9 (1990, 1991, 1995, 1998, 2001–03, 2012, 2015)
Auburn3 (1988–90)3 (1988–90)6 (1987–91, 1996)7 (1986–91, 1996)22 (1982, 1983, 1985–91, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2024)
Florida1 (1997)2 (1997, 1998)16 (1993–99, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2009, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2022)
Georgia2 (1985, 1996)5 (1983, 1985, 1995, 1996, 1999)11 (1983–85, 1991, 1995–97, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2013)20 (1983–88, 1991, 1995–97, 1999, 2000, 2003–07, 2010, 2011, 2013)36 (1982–91, 1993, 1995–2014, 2016, 2018, 2021–23)
Kentucky4 (1982, 2010, 2012, 2013)6 (1982, 2010, 2012–14, 2016)18 (1982, 1983, 1986, 1991, 1999, 2006, 2010–17, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2025)
LSU1 (2023)6 (2004–08, 2023)11 (1986, 2000, 2003–08, 2023–25)17 (1984, 1986, 1989, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2003–08, 2013, 2014, 2023–25)30 (1984, 1986–91, 1997, 1999–2010, 2012–15, 2017, 2018, 2022–25)
Ole Miss5 (1985, 1986, 1989, 1992, 2007)12 (1983–90, 1992, 2007, 2023, 2025)21 (1982–92, 1994–96, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2022–25)
Mississippi State2 (2017, 2018)2 (2017, 2018)3 (2017–19)5 (2010, 2016–19)13 (1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2010, 2015–19, 2023, 2025)
Missouri2 (1982, 2001)13 (1982–86, 1994, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2016–19)
Oklahoma1 (2002)3 (2002, 2009, 2010)3 (2002, 2009, 2010)11 (1986, 2000–02, 2006, 2007, 2009–11, 2013, 2025)25 (1986, 1995, 2000–18, 2022–24, 2025)
South Carolina3 (2017, 2022, 2024)1 (2025)7 (2015, 2017, 2021–25)9 (2002, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2021–25)15 (1982, 1990, 2002, 2012, 2014–19, 2021–25)21 (1982, 1986, 1988–91, 2002, 2003, 2012–19, 2021–25)
Tennessee8 (1987, 1989, 1991, 1996–98, 2007, 2008)5 (1984, 1995, 2000, 2003, 2004)18 (1982, 1984, 1986–89, 1991, 1995–98, 2000, 2002–05, 2007, 2008)28 (1982–84, 1986–91, 1993, 1995–2000, 2002–08, 2011–13, 2015, 2016)37 (1982–2008, 2010–16, 2022, 2023, 2025)43 (1982–2019, 2021–25)
Texas1 (1986)4 (1986, 1987, 2003, 2025)13 (1983, 1984, 1986–90, 2003, 2016, 2021, 2022, 2024, 2025)19 (1983–90, 2002–04, 2015–18, 2021, 2022, 2024, 2025)37 (1983–94, 1996, 1997, 1999–2005, 2008–12, 2014–19, 2021–24, 2025)
Texas A&M1 (2011)1 (2011)3 (2008, 2011, 2014)9 (1994, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2018, 2019, 2021)18 (1994, 1996, 2006–11, 2012–19, 2021, 2024)
Vanderbilt1 (1993)5 (1992, 1993, 1996, 2001, 2002)14 (1990–97, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009)29 (1986, 1987, 1989–98, 2000–14, 2024, 2025)

Seasons are listed by the calendar years in which they ended. Italics indicate honors earned before the school competed in the SEC.

Basketball tournament

The SEC women's basketball tournament is currently held a week before the men's basketball tournament. Like the men's version, it is a single-elimination tournament involving all conference members, with seeding based on regular season records. With the expansion to 14 schools, the bottom four teams in the conference standings play opening-round games, and the top four receive "double byes" into the quarterfinals. The winner earns the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA women's basketball tournament. Also paralleling the men's tournament, the women's tournament does not determine the SEC champion; that honor has been awarded based on regular-season record since the 1985–86 season. The expansion to 16 teams will result in the addition of two extra games, but the top four teams in the conference standings will continue to receive "double byes" into the quarterfinals.

The tournament, inaugurated in 1980, was originally held on campus sites; the first tournament to take place at a neutral site was in 1987. The three most frequent sites for the tournament have been McKenzie Arena in Chattanooga, Tennessee (seven times), the Albany Civic Center in Albany, Georgia (six times), and Bridgestone Arena in Nashville (six times). However, the only one of these venues to have hosted the tournament in the 21st century is Bridgestone Arena. Because demand for women's tournament tickets is generally lower than for the men's tournament, it is typically played in a smaller venue than the men's tournament in the same season. The most frequent venues since 2000 have been Bridgestone Arena, Gas South Arena at Duluth, Georgia (four), and Simmons Bank Arena in North Little Rock, Arkansas (four).

NCAA tournament champions, runners-up and locations

† denotes overtime games. Multiple †'s indicate more than one overtime.

Teams in bold represented the SEC at the time of their championship appearance. Teams in bold italics made their appearances before joining the SEC.

YearChampionRunner-upVenue and city
1984USC (2)72Tennessee61Pauley PavilionLos Angeles, California
1985Old Dominion70Georgia65Frank Erwin CenterAustin, Texas
1986Texas97USC81Rupp ArenaLexington, Kentucky
1987Tennessee67Louisiana Tech44Frank Erwin CenterAustin, Texas
1988Louisiana Tech (2)56Auburn54Tacoma DomeTacoma, Washington
1989Tennessee (2)76Auburn70Tacoma DomeTacoma, Washington
1990Stanford88Auburn81Thompson–Boling ArenaKnoxville, Tennessee
1991Tennessee (3)70Virginia67Lakefront ArenaNew Orleans, Louisiana
1995Connecticut70Tennessee64Target CenterMinneapolis, Minnesota
1996Tennessee (4)83Georgia65Charlotte ColiseumCharlotte, North Carolina
1997Tennessee (5)68Old Dominion59Riverfront ColiseumCincinnati, Ohio
1998Tennessee (6)93Louisiana Tech75Kemper ArenaKansas City, Missouri
2000Connecticut (2)71Tennessee52First Union CenterPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
2003Connecticut (4)73Tennessee68Georgia DomeAtlanta, Georgia
2004Connecticut (5)70Tennessee61New Orleans ArenaNew Orleans, Louisiana
2007Tennessee (7)59Rutgers46Quicken Loans ArenaCleveland, Ohio
2008Tennessee (8)64Stanford48St. Pete Times ForumTampa, Florida
2011Texas A&M76Notre Dame70Conseco FieldhouseIndianapolis, Indiana
2017South Carolina67Mississippi State55American Airlines CenterDallas, Texas
2018Notre Dame61Mississippi State58Nationwide ArenaColumbus, Ohio
2022South Carolina (2)64UConn49Target CenterMinneapolis, Minnesota
2023LSU102Iowa85American Airlines CenterDallas, Texas
2024South Carolina (3)87Iowa75Rocket Mortgage FieldHouseCleveland, Ohio
2025UConn (12)82South Carolina59Amalie ArenaTampa, Florida

Rivalries

The Lady Vols have historically been one of the nation's dominant programs in that sport. Starting in the mid-1990s, UConn has emerged as Tennessee's main rival for national prominence. The Huskies won four national titles between 2000 and 2004; in three of those years, their opponent in the NCAA final was Tennessee. Connecticut also defeated Tennessee in the 1995 Championship game, the Huskies' first-ever title. The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame brokered a deal that saw the teams renew their rivalry with a home-and-home series in 2020 and 2021, and both schools extended the series through 2023.

Softball

National championships, Women's College World Series, and NCAA tournament appearances

Southeastern Conference softball programs have combined to win four NCAA softball championships as SEC members. Florida has won two, and Alabama and Texas have won one national championship each as SEC members. Oklahoma has won eight and Texas A&M has won two championships prior to joining the SEC. Twelve SEC teams have advanced to the Women's College World Series at least once in their history. Fourteen SEC schools (Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi State, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Texas A&M) are among the national top 50 in all-time NCAA tournament appearances.

SchoolWomen's NCAA ChampionshipsWomen's NCAA Runner-UpWomen's NCAA College World Series AppearancesWomen's NCAA Super Regional AppearancesWomen's NCAA Tournament Appearances
Alabama1 (2012)1 (2014)15 (2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2014–16, 2019, 2021, 2023, 2024)19 (2005–19, 2021, 2023–25)26 (1999–2019, 2021–25)
Arkansas4 (2018, 2021, 2022, 2025)15 (2000, 2002, 2008–10, 2012, 2013, 2017–19, 2021–25)
Auburn1 (2016)2 (2015, 2016)3 (2015, 2016, 2017)20 (2002, 2004–06, 2008–12, 2014–19, 2021–25)
Florida2 (2014, 2015)3 (2009, 2011, 2017)13 (2008–11, 2013–15, 2017–19, 2022, 2024, 2025)16 (2007–11, 2013–19, 2021, 2022, 2024, 2025)25 (1998, 2000, 2001, 2003–19, 2021–25)
Georgia5 (2009, 2010, 2016, 2018, 2021)14 (2005, 2008–12, 2014–16, 2018, 2021, 2023–25)23 (2002–19, 2021–25)
Kentucky1 (2014)8 (2011, 2013–15, 2017–19, 2021)16 (2009–19, 2021–25)
LSU6 (2001, 2004, 2012, 2015–17)10 (2006, 2007, 2012, 2015–19, 2021, 2024)26 (1998–2004, 2006–19, 2021–25)
Ole Miss1 (2025)3 (2017, 2019, 2025)9 (2016–19, 2021–25)
Mississippi State1 (2022)19 (2000, 2002–05, 2007–09, 2012–15, 2017–19, 2021, 2022, 2024, 2025)
Missouri6 (1983, 1991, 1994, 2009, 2010, 2011)10 (2008–12, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2021, 2024)27 (1982, 1983, 1991, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2003–05, 2007–12, 2013–19, 2021–24)
Oklahoma8 (2000, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2021–24)2 (2012, 2019)25 (2000–04, 2011–14, 2016–19, 2021–24, 2025)20 (2005, 2007, 2008, 2010–19, 2021–24, 2025)31 (1994–2019, 2021–24, 2025)
South Carolina3 (1983, 1989, 1997)3 (2007, 2018, 2025)25 (1982, 1983, 1988, 1989, 1994–96, 1997, 1999–2004, 2007, 2013–19, 2023–25)
Tennessee2 (2007, 2013)9 (2005–07, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2023, 2025)14 (2005–07, 2010, 2012–15, 2017–19, 2023–25)22 (1999, 2004–19, 2021–25)
Texas1 (2025)2 (2022, 2024)7 (1998, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2013, 2022, 2024, 2025)10 (2005, 2006, 2012, 2013, 2019, 2021–24, 2025)25 (1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2005–19, 2021–24, 2025)
Texas A&M2 (1983, 1987)3 (1984, 1986, 2008)8 (1983, 1984, 1986–88, 2007, 2008, 2017)8 (2005, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2013, 2017, 2018, 2024)35 (1983–88, 1990, 1991, 1994, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2002–12, 2013–19, 2021–25)

Seasons are listed by the calendar years in which they ended. Italics indicate honors earned before the school competed in the SEC.

Women's College World Series champions, runners-up, and scores

Note: Teams in bold are current SEC members who advanced to the WCWS while in the conference. Teams in bold italics are current SEC members who were either in another conference or an independent at the time of their appearance.

YearChampionRunner-upScore(s)Venue
1983Texas A&MCal State Fullerton2–0 (12)Seymour Smith ParkOmaha, Nebraska
1984UCLA (2)Texas A&M1–0, 1–0 (13)Seymour Smith ParkOmaha, Nebraska
1986Cal State FullertonTexas A&M3–0Seymour Smith ParkOmaha, Nebraska
1987Texas A&M (2)UCLA1–0, 4–1Seymour Smith ParkOmaha, Nebraska
2000OklahomaUCLA3–1ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2007Arizona (8)Tennessee0–3, 1–0 (10), 5–0ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2008Arizona StateTexas A&M3–0, 11–0ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2009WashingtonFlorida8–0, 3–2ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2011Arizona State (2)Florida14–4, 7–2ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2012AlabamaOklahoma1–4, 8–6, 5–4ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2013Oklahoma (2)Tennessee5–3 (12), 4–0ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2014FloridaAlabama5–0, 6–3ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2015Florida (2)Michigan3–2, 0–1, 4–1ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2016Oklahoma (3)Auburn3–2, 7–11 (8), 2–1ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2017Oklahoma (4)Florida7–5 (17), 5–4ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2019UCLA (12)Oklahoma16–3, 5–4ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2021Oklahoma (5)Florida State0–8, 6–2, 5–1USA Softball Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2022Oklahoma (6)Texas16–1, 10–5USA Softball Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2023Oklahoma (7)Florida State5–0, 3–1USA Softball Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2024Oklahoma (8)Texas8–3, 8–4Devon ParkOklahoma City, Oklahoma
2025TexasTexas Tech2–1, 3–4, 10–4Devon ParkOklahoma City, Oklahoma

Other sports

Besides football, basketball, and baseball, there are a number of other sports in which the Southeastern Conference actively competes.

Rivalries

These two storied programs have often butted heads for not only SEC titles, but NCAA titles as well. Georgia has won ten national championships to Alabama's six. For decades the rivalry was dominated by two long-standing coaches, Suzanne Yoculan at Georgia and Sarah Patterson at Alabama. Yoculan and Patterson have since retired, bringing their personal rivalry to an end.

These two nationally acclaimed softball programs have proven to be the elite of the SEC and the nation. While consistently being ranked in the nation's Top Ten, both teams find their way to the SEC Tournament Finals and often clash once more in the Women's College Softball World Series.

One of the youngest rivalries featuring an SEC team, the Tigers and Texas Longhorns are the two most successful swimming and diving programs in the country. The two have combined for 17 NCAA National Titles since 1981 (nine for Texas, eight for Auburn) and between 1999 and 2007 won every national title awarded. The two regularly face off in a meet during the regular season, Auburn's men own a 12–9 record over the Longhorns. The women just recently began an annual series, with the Tigers winning the series so far 3–1. Texas was the only team to beat the Auburn men between 2001 and 2007.

National team championships

Since the SEC's founding in December 1932, the varsity athletic teams of its current 14 members have won 264 (38 in addition are current SEC teams that weren't SEC teams when they won a national championship) national team sports championships.

The following is the list of the national team championships claimed by current SEC member schools, including those tournament championships currently or formerly sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The NCAA has never sponsored a tournament championship for major college football, the championship game for which is currently part of the College Football Playoff (CFP) system. Prior to 1992, championships for major college football were determined by a "consensus" of major polling services, including the Associated Press and United Press International college football polls. Recognized women's championships from 1972 to 1982 were administered by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW), not the NCAA. There was a one-year overlap period during the 1981–82 school year, when both the AIAW and the NCAA operated women's championship tournaments; since 1982, only the NCAA has sponsored women's championship tournaments. National equestrian tournament championships are currently sponsored by the National Collegiate Equestrian Association (NCEA), not the NCAA. Those national championships dating from before 1933 predate the founding of the SEC in December 1932; championships won by Arkansas and South Carolina before the 1992–93 school year predate their membership in the SEC; championships won by Missouri and Texas A&M before the 2012–13 school year predate their membership in the SEC; championships won by Oklahoma and Texas before the 2024–25 school year predate their membership in the SEC.

Football (53): 1919 – Texas A&M* 1925 – Alabama* 1926 – Alabama* 1927 – Texas A&M* 1930 – Alabama* 1934 – Alabama 1938 – Tennessee 1939 – Texas A&M* 1940 – Tennessee 1941 – Alabama 1942 – Georgia 1950 – Oklahoma* 1951 – Tennessee 1955 – Oklahoma* 1956 – Oklahoma* 1957 – Auburn 1958 – LSU 1959 – Ole Miss 1960 – Ole Miss 1961 – Alabama 1962 – Ole Miss 1963 – Texas* 1964 – Arkansas* 1965 – Alabama 1967 – Tennessee 1969 – Texas* 1970 – Texas* 1973 – Alabama 1974 – Oklahoma* 1975 – Oklahoma* 1978 – Alabama 1979 – Alabama 1980 – Georgia 1985 – Oklahoma* 1992 – Alabama 1996 – Florida 1998 – Tennessee 2000 – Oklahoma* 2003 – LSU 2005 – Texas* 2006 – Florida 2007 – LSU 2008 – Florida 2009 – Alabama 2010 – Auburn 2011 – Alabama 2012 – Alabama 2015 – Alabama 2017 – Alabama 2019 – LSU 2020 – Alabama 2021 – Georgia 2022 – GeorgiaBaseball (23): 1949 – Texas* 1950 – Texas* 1951 – Oklahoma* 1954 – Missouri* 1975 – Texas* 1983 – Texas* 1990 – Georgia 1991 – LSU 1993 – LSU 1994 – Oklahoma* 1996 – LSU 1997 – LSU 2000 – LSU 2002 – Texas* 2005 – Texas* 2009 – LSU 2010 – South Carolina 2011 – South Carolina 2014 – Vanderbilt 2017 – Florida 2019 – Vanderbilt 2021 – Mississippi State 2022 – Ole Miss 2023 – LSU 2024 – Tennessee 2025 – LSUMen's basketball (13): 1935 – LSU 1948 – Kentucky 1949 – Kentucky 1951 – Kentucky 1958 – Kentucky 1978 – Kentucky 1994 – Arkansas 1996 – Kentucky 1998 – Kentucky 2006 – Florida 2007 – Florida 2012 – Kentucky 2025 – FloridaWomen's basketball (14): 1986 – Texas* 1987 – Tennessee 1989 – Tennessee 1991 – Tennessee 1996 – Tennessee 1997 – Tennessee 1998 – Tennessee 2007 – Tennessee 2008 – Tennessee 2011 – Texas A&M* 2017 – South Carolina 2022 – South Carolina 2023 – LSU 2024 – South CarolinaWomen's bowling (3): 2007 – Vanderbilt 2018 – Vanderbilt 2023 – VanderbiltBoxing (1): 1949 – LSUMen's cross country (12): 1972 – Tennessee 1984 – Arkansas* 1986 – Arkansas* 1987 – Arkansas* 1990 – Arkansas* 1991 – Arkansas* 1992 – Arkansas 1993 – Arkansas 1995 – Arkansas 1998 – Arkansas 1999 – Arkansas 2000 – ArkansasWomen's cross country (2): 1986 – Texas* 1988 – KentuckyWomen's equestrian (19): 2002 – Texas A&M* 2003 – Georgia 2004 – Georgia 2005 – South Carolina 2006 – Auburn 2007 – South Carolina 2008 – Georgia 2009 – Georgia 2010 – Georgia 2011 – Auburn 2012 – Texas A&M* 2013 – Auburn 2014 – Georgia 2015 – South Carolina 2016 – Auburn 2017 – Texas A&M 2018 – Auburn 2019 – Auburn 2025 – GeorgiaMen's golf (22): 1940 – LSU 1942 – LSU 1947 – LSU 1955 – LSU 1968 – Florida 1971 – Texas* 1972 – Texas* 1973 – Florida 1989 – Oklahoma* 1993 – Florida 1999 – Georgia 2001 – Florida 2005 – Georgia 2009 – Texas A&M* 2012 – Texas* 2013 – Alabama 2014 – Alabama 2015 – LSU 2017 – Oklahoma* 2022 – Texas* 2023 – Florida 2024 – AuburnWomen's golf (5): 1985 – Florida 1986 – Florida 2001 – Georgia 2012 − Alabama 2021 − Ole MissWomen's gymnastics (29): 1982 – Florida (AIAW) 1987 – Georgia 1988 – Alabama 1989 – Georgia 1991 – Alabama 1993 – Georgia 1996 – Alabama 1998 – Georgia 1999 – Georgia 2002 – Alabama 2005 – Georgia 2006 – Georgia 2007 – Georgia 2008 – Georgia 2009 – Georgia 2011 – Alabama 2012 – Alabama 2013 – Florida 2014 – Florida / Oklahoma* (tie) 2015 – Florida 2016 – Oklahoma* 2017 – Oklahoma* 2019 – Oklahoma* 2022 – Oklahoma* 2023 – Oklahoma* 2024 – LSU 2025 – OklahomaMen's gymnastics (12): 1977 – Oklahoma* 1978 – Oklahoma* 1991 – Oklahoma* 2002 – Oklahoma* 2003 – Oklahoma* 2005 – Oklahoma* 2006 – Oklahoma* 2008 – Oklahoma* 2015 – Oklahoma* 2016 – Oklahoma* 2017 – Oklahoma* 2018 – Oklahoma*Rifle (4): 2011 – Kentucky 2018 – Kentucky 2021 – Kentucky 2022 – KentuckyWomen's Rowing (3): 2021 – Texas* 2022 – Texas* 2024 – Texas*Women's soccer (1): 1998 – FloridaSoftball (15): 1982 – Texas A&M (AIAW)* 1983 – Texas A&M* 1987 – Texas A&M* 2000 – Oklahoma* 2012 – Alabama 2013 – Oklahoma* 2014 – Florida 2015 – Florida 2016 – Oklahoma* 2017 – Oklahoma* 2021 – Oklahoma* 2022 – Oklahoma* 2023 – Oklahoma* 2024 – Oklahoma* 2025 – TexasMen's swimming (27): 1978 – Tennessee 1981 – Texas* 1983 – Florida 1984 – Florida 1988 – Texas* 1989 – Texas* 1990 – Texas* 1991 – Texas* 1996 – Texas* 1997 – Auburn 1999 – Auburn 2000 – Texas* 2001 – Texas* 2002 – Texas* 2003 – Auburn 2004 – Auburn 2005 – Auburn 2006 – Auburn 2007 – Auburn 2009 – Auburn 2010 – Texas* 2015 – Texas* 2016 – Texas* 2017 – Texas* 2018 – Texas* 2021 – Texas* 2026 – TexasWomen's swimming (24): 1979 – Florida (AIAW) 1981 – Texas* (AIAW) 1982 – Texas* (AIAW) 1982 – Florida 1984 – Texas* 1985 – Texas* 1986 – Texas* 1987 – Texas* 1988 – Texas* 1990 – Texas* 1991 – Texas* 1999 – Georgia 2000 – Georgia 2001 – Georgia 2002 – Auburn 2003 – Auburn 2004 – Auburn 2005 – Georgia 2006 – Auburn 2007 – Auburn 2010 – Florida 2013 – Georgia 2014 – Georgia 2016 – GeorgiaMen's tennis (8): 1985 – Georgia 1987 – Georgia 1999 – Georgia 2001 – Georgia 2007 – Georgia 2008 – Georgia 2019 – Texas* 2021 – FloridaWomen's tennis (16): 1992 – Florida 1993 – Texas* 1995 – Texas* 1994 – Georgia 1996 – Florida 1998 – Florida 2000 – Georgia 2003 – Florida 2011 – Florida 2012 − Florida 2015 – Vanderbilt 2017 – Florida 2021 – Texas* 2022 – Texas* 2024 – Texas A&M 2025 – GeorgiaMen's indoor track (31): 1965 – Missouri* 1984 – Arkansas* 1985 – Arkansas* 1986 – Arkansas* 1987 – Arkansas* 1988 – Arkansas* 1989 – Arkansas* 1990 – Arkansas* 1991 – Arkansas* 1992 – Arkansas* 1993 – Arkansas 1994 – Arkansas 1995 – Arkansas 1997 – Arkansas 1998 – Arkansas 1999 – Arkansas 2000 – Arkansas 2001 – LSU 2002 – Tennessee 2003 – Arkansas 2004 – LSU 2005 – Arkansas 2006 – Arkansas 2010 – Florida 2011 – Florida 2012 − Florida 2013 – Arkansas 2017 – Texas A&M 2018 – Florida 2019 – Florida 2022 – Texas* 2023 – Arkansas 2026 – ArkansasWomen's indoor track (26): 1986 – Texas* 1987 – LSU 1988 – Texas* 1989 – LSU 1990 – Texas* 1991 – LSU 1992 – Florida 1993 – LSU 1994 – LSU 1995 – LSU 1996 – LSU 1997 – LSU 1998 – Texas* 1999 – Texas* 2002 – LSU 2003 – LSU 2004 – LSU 2005 – Tennessee 2006 – Texas* 2009 – Tennessee 2015 – Arkansas 2018 – Georgia 2019 – Arkansas 2021 – Arkansas 2022 – Florida 2023 – Arkansas 2026 – GeorgiaMen's outdoor track (27): 1933 – LSU 1974 – Tennessee 1985 – Arkansas* 1989 – LSU 1990 – LSU 1991 – Tennessee 1992 – Arkansas* 1993 – Arkansas 1994 – Arkansas 1995 – Arkansas 1996 – Arkansas 1997 – Arkansas 1998 – Arkansas 1999 – Arkansas 2001 – Tennessee 2002 – LSU 2003 – Arkansas 2009 – Texas A&M* 2010 – Texas A&M* 2011 – Texas A&M* 2012 − Florida 2013 − Florida / Texas A&M (tie) 2016 − Florida 2017 – Florida 2021 – LSU 2022 – Florida 2023 – Florida 2024 – Florida 2025 – Texas A&MWomen's outdoor track (30): 1981 – Tennessee (AIAW) 1982 – Texas* (AIAW) 1986 – Texas* 1987 – LSU 1988 – LSU 1989 – LSU 1990 – LSU 1991 – LSU 1992 – LSU 1993 – LSU 1994 – LSU 1995 – LSU 1996 – LSU 1997 – LSU 1998 – Texas* 1999 – Texas* 2000 – LSU 2002 – South Carolina 2003 – LSU 2005 – Texas* 2006 – Auburn 2008 – LSU 2009 – Texas A&M* 2010 – Texas A&M* 2011 – Texas A&M* 2014 – Texas A&M 2016 – Arkansas 2019 – Arkansas 2022 – Florida 2023 – Texas* 2024 – Arkansas 2025 – GeorgiaWomen's volleyball (7): 1981 – Texas* (AIAW) 1988 – Texas* 2012 – Texas* 2020 – Kentucky 2022 – Texas* 2023 – Texas* 2025 – Texas A&MMen's wrestling (7): 1936 – Oklahoma* 1951 – Oklahoma* 1952 – Oklahoma* 1957 – Oklahoma* 1960 – Oklahoma* 1963 – Oklahoma* 1974 – Oklahoma*

* A championship marked by an asterisk (*) indicates that the institution was not a member of the SEC at the time of the championship.

National team titles claimed by current SEC institutions

The sixteen members of the Southeastern Conference claim over 200 national team championships in sports currently or formerly sponsored by conference members. The following totals include national team championships sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) from 1906 to present, the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) from 1972 to 1982, and, in football, the Bowl Alliance, Bowl Coalition, Bowl Championship Series (BCS) and College Football Playoff (CFP) since 1992, as well as consensus national championships determined by the major football polls prior to 1992.

  • Texas – 68
  • LSU – 53
  • Arkansas – 51
  • Florida – 49
  • Oklahoma – 45
  • Georgia – 36
  • Alabama – 28
  • Tennessee – 22
  • Auburn – 18
  • Texas A&M – 18
  • Kentucky – 14
  • South Carolina – 6
  • Vanderbilt – 5
  • Ole Miss – 5
  • Missouri – 2
  • Mississippi State – 1

NCAA and AIAW national tournament team titles won by current SEC institutions

The following totals include national team tournament championships sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) from 1906 to the present and the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) from 1972 to 1982. The NCAA did not sponsor tournament championships in women's sports before the 1981–82 academic year, and the NCAA has never sponsored a national championship playoff or tournament in major college football. To date, the fourteen members of the SEC have won 216 NCAA and four AIAW championships:

  • Texas – 64
  • LSU – 59
  • Arkansas – 55
  • Florida – 39
  • Oklahoma – 38
  • Georgia – 32
  • Tennessee – 17
  • Auburn – 15
  • Kentucky – 13
  • Texas A&M – 14
  • Alabama – 10
  • South Carolina – 6
  • Vanderbilt – 5
  • Missouri – 2
  • Ole Miss – 2
  • Mississippi State – 1

Broadcasting and media rights

SEC sports are televised exclusively by the ESPN family of networks, which includes ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, SEC Network, ESPN+, and SEC+.

For football scheduling, the SEC designates start windows (either Noon–1 EST, 3:30–4:30 EST, 3:30–8 EST, or 6–8 EST) before the season begins and schedules start times as the season progresses. ABC serves as the primary broadcaster of SEC football games with three possible broadcast windows available to air games: noon, 3:30 EST, and 7:30 EST. Every week, ABC designates its 3:30 EST window for an SEC game, carrying on the SEC's traditional window from its previous media rights agreement with CBS. However, unlike with CBS, the marquee game of the week does not necessarily air at 3:30 EST. The marquee game can air in any of the three windows that maximizes exposure, which is usually ABC's Saturday Night Football window at 7:30 EST. There is no limit to the maximum number of SEC games that can be designated for Saturday Night Football. This allows for ABC to air as many SEC doubleheaders, or tripleheaders in some weeks, as they would like throughout the season (compared to a limit of two doubleheaders per season with CBS that included one game at noon in one week and one game in primetime in the other week). ABC broadcasts are presented under the SEC on ABC banner. ABC also broadcasts the SEC Championship Game.

Remaining football games are assigned to ESPN and its other networks. Each season, one football game and a few men's basketball games for each team are broadcast on ESPN+ and SEC+, the online component of the SEC Network. Most other sports are broadcast on the SEC Network or on SEC+.

All SEC schools broadcast their radio play-by-play through Sirius XM, and the conference carries its own full-time radio network on satellite channel 374, and via Sirius XM Online.

History

The SEC created the College Football Association in 1977 with other major conferences to negotiate contracts for broadcasting college football games.

Jefferson Pilot Sports began syndicated television coverage of men's basketball games in 1986 and football games in 1992, which were picked after the CFA allocated games for its national contract.

In 1994, the SEC became the first conference to leave the CFA when it announced a deal with CBS to televise one game each week. CBS paid about $17 million per season for the right to show the best game of the week. The network was required to televise each team at least once per season. The Conference soon reached a deal with ESPN to broadcast games in primetime.

In August 2008, the SEC announced an unprecedented 15-year television contract with CBS worth an estimated $55 million a year. This continued the previous deal that made CBS the exclusive over-the-air broadcaster of SEC sports. In the same month, the league also announced another landmark television contract with ESPN worth $2.25 billion or $150 million a year for fifteen years. The ESPN deal replaced the syndicated contract and ensured that all SEC football games would be televised nationally. The deal also committed ESPN and the conference to the creation of the SEC Network, which was finally created in 2014 and allowed for a significant increase in television coverage of SEC sports. Together, these contracts helped make the SEC one of the most nationally televised and visible conferences in the country.

In 2020, the SEC announced a new deal that made ESPN the sole televisor of SEC sports starting in 2024. The ten-year contract was reported to be about $300 million per year and will allow ESPN to broadcast the SEC on ABC as well as rights to the SEC Championship Game.

SEC Network

The SEC Network is a television and multimedia network that features exclusively Southeastern Conference content through a partnership between ESPN and the SEC. The network launched on August 14, 2014, with the first live football game scheduled for two weeks later between Texas A&M and South Carolina on Thursday, August 28 in Columbia, South Carolina.

The network is part of a deal between the Southeastern Conference and ESPN which is a 20-year agreement, beginning in August 2014 and running through 2034. The agreement served to create and operate a new multiplatform television network and accompanying digital platform in the hope of increasing revenue for member institutions and expanding the reach of the Southeastern Conference.

Awards and honors

Athlete of the Year

The conference has presented athlete of the year awards in men's sports since 1976 and women's sports since 1984. The award has officially been known as the Roy F. Kramer Athlete of the Year Award since 2004.

List of Roy F. Kramer SEC Athlete of the Year winners
YearMen's winnersSchoolSportWomen's winnersSchoolSport
1976Harvey GlanceAuburnTrack and field—N/a
1977Larry SeiversTennesseeFootball
1978Jack GivensKentuckyBasketball
1979Reggie KingAlabamaBasketball
1980Kyle MacyKentuckyBasketball
1981Rowdy GainesAuburnSwimming
1982Buck BelueGeorgiaFootball / baseball
1983Herschel WalkerGeorgiaFootball / track and field
1984Terry HoageGeorgiaFootballTracy CaulkinsFloridaSwimming
1985Will ClarkMississippi StateBaseballPenney HauschildAlabamaGymnastics
1986Bo JacksonAuburnFootballJennifer GillomOle MissBasketball
1987Cornelius BennettAlabamaFootballLillie LeatherwoodAlabamaTrack and field
1988Will PerdueVanderbiltBasketballDara TorresFloridaSwimming
1989Derrick ThomasAlabamaFootballBridgette GordonTennesseeBasketball
1990Alec KesslerGeorgiaBasketballDee FosterAlabamaGymnastics
1991Shaquille O'NealLSUBasketballDaedra CharlesTennesseeBasketball
1992Shaquille O'NealLSUBasketballVicki GoetzeGeorgiaGolf
1993Jamal MashburnKentuckyBasketballNicole HaislettFloridaSwimming
1994Corliss WilliamsonArkansasBasketballNicole HaislettFloridaSwimming
1995Todd HeltonTennesseeBaseballJenny HansenKentuckyGymnastics
1996Danny WuerffelFloridaFootballSaudia RoundtreeGeorgiaBasketball
1997Danny WuerffelFloridaFootballTrinity JohnsonSouth CarolinaSoftball
1998Peyton ManningTennesseeFootballChamique HoldsclawTennesseeBasketball
1999Tim CouchKentuckyFootballChamique HoldsclawTennesseeBasketball
2000Kip BouknightSouth CarolinaBaseballKristy KowalGeorgiaSwimming
2001Matías BoekerGeorgiaTennisAmy Yoder BegleyArkansasCross country running
2002Walter LewisLSUTrack and fieldAndree' PickensAlabamaGymnastics
2003Alistair CraggArkansasCross country runningLaToya ThomasMississippi StateBasketball
2004Alistair CraggArkansasCross country runningJeana RiceAlabamaGymnastics
2005Ryan LochteFloridaSwimmingKirsty CoventryAuburnSwimming
2006Xavier CarterLSUTrack and fieldSeimone AugustusLSUBasketball
2007David PriceVanderbiltBaseballMonica AbbottTennesseeSoftball
2008Tim TebowFloridaFootballCandace ParkerTennesseeBasketball
2009Tim TebowFloridaFootballCourtney KupetsGeorgiaGymnastics
2010Mark Ingram IIAlabamaFootballSusan JacksonLSUGymnastics
2011John-Patrick SmithTennesseeTennisKayla HoffmanAlabamaGymnastics
2012Anthony DavisKentuckyBasketballBrooke PancakeAlabamaGolf
2013Johnny ManzielTexas A&MFootballAllison SchmittGeorgiaSwimming
2014A. J. ReedKentuckyBaseballHannah RogersFloridaSoftball
2015Andrew BenintendiArkansasBaseballLauren HaegerFloridaSoftball
2016Jarrion LawsonArkansasTrack and fieldBridget SloanFloridaGymnastics
2017Brent RookerMississippi StateBaseballKendell WilliamsGeorgiaTrack and field
2018Caeleb DresselFloridaSwimmingA'ja WilsonSouth CarolinaBasketball
2019Grant HollowayFloridaTrack and fieldMaría FassiArkansasGolf
2020Joe BurrowLSUFootballTyasha HarrisSouth CarolinaBasketball
2021DeVonta SmithAlabamaFootballMadison LilleyKentuckyVolleyball
2022Bryce YoungAlabamaFootballAliyah BostonSouth CarolinaBasketball
2023Dylan CrewsLSUBaseballTrinity ThomasFloridaGymnastics
2024Jayden DanielsLSUFootballParker ValbyFloridaTrack and field
2025Walter Clayton Jr.FloridaBasketballDarja VidmanováGeorgiaTennis

NACDA Learfield Sports Directors' Cup rankings

The NACDA Learfield Sports Directors' Cup is an annual award given by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics to the U.S. colleges and universities with the most success in collegiate athletics.

Institution2023– 242022– 232021– 222020– 212019– 202018– 192017– 182016– 172015– 162014– 1510-yr Average
Alabama Crimson Tide912227N/A311424362520
Arkansas Razorbacks181378N/A231622231616
Auburn Tigers33363250N/A371832353234
Florida Gators4555N/A335544
Georgia Bulldogs1671910N/A21813151414
Kentucky Wildcats3218912N/A141711262218
LSU Tigers1391615N/A112723191516
Ole Miss Rebels38392022N/A563839496641
Mississippi State Bulldogs60577659N/A444257445255
Missouri Tigers55505748N/A513331434246
Oklahoma Sooners24231024N/A332516162121
South Carolina Gamecocks30333742N/A222619314632
Tennessee Volunteers361326N/A253545343825
Texas Longhorns1211N/A4510995
Texas A&M Aggies6242519N/A151014121716
Vanderbilt Commodores57566656N/A455567585157
UniversityCup WinsTop 10 rankings
Texas324
Florida30
Georgia12
LSU7
Texas A&M7
Tennessee4
Oklahoma3
Arkansas2
Kentucky2
Alabama2

2023–24 Capital One Cup standings

The Capital One Cup is an award given annually to the best men's and women's Division I college athletics programs in the United States. Points are earned throughout the year based on final standings of NCAA Championships and final coaches' poll rankings.

InstitutionMen's RankingWomen's Ranking
Alabama834
Arkansas3011
Auburn22NR
Florida123
Georgia2234
Kentucky5654
LSUNR12
Ole Miss6944
Mississippi StateNRNR
Missouri6384
Oklahoma495
South CarolinaNR7
Tennessee2622
Texas101
Texas A&M5526
Vanderbilt6959

See also

External links