A major sticking point of College Football Playoff expansion talks this offseason was the difference between the Big Ten and SEC conference schedules. The Big Ten, which has produced the last two national champions and plays nine conference games a year, has taken issue with the idea of the SEC getting the same number of automatic qualifiers into a proposed 16-team format because the league only plays eight conference games.
Now, with that pressure being applied, the SEC is reportedly getting closer to adopting a nine-game conference slate for future seasons. This could be a step towards seemingly inevitable CFP expansion. The CFP committee itself is another likely factor impacting this decision.
In meetings this week, SEC executives moved closer to adopting a nine-game conference football schedule, sources tell @YahooSports. A decision remains with presidents, who are expected to meet soon on the issue.
— Ross Dellenger (@RossDellenger) August 21, 2025
SEC football moving closer to adopting a nine-game conference schedule
On Wednesday, it was announced that the College Football Playoff committee will be using a new enhanced metric called “record strength” in its evaluation process. The metric has the intention of incentivizing teams to play tougher schedules as it rewards wins over high-quality opponents and minimizes the negative impact of losses to those teams.
Likewise, record strength will also be less impacted by wins over lower-quality teams and penalize those bad losses.
Separate of an expanded conference schedule, the record strength metric should help the SEC, which only sent three teams to the inaugural 12-team CFP last season because of the general quality of teams in the league, especially compared to the Big 12 and ACC. So, if the committee is willing to put a three-loss team in the CFP over a team like SMU that had 10 wins last season, but very few against quality opponents, it could push this change across the finish line.
Though the committee is doing what it can to incentivize programs to schedule quality opponents out of conference, there is a potential downside to nine-game expansion. It could be difficult for teams to maintain out-of-conference rivalries with Power Conference opponents if they’re asked to play an additional SEC game each year.
This season, Alabama has both Florida State and Wisconsin on the schedule, but if a late-season Eastern Illinois matchup were replaced with, let’s say, Florida, for example, it’s tough to imagine the Tide playing 11 Power Conference games. Luckily for Alabama, that won’t devastate traditional rivalries, but it could end Kentucky’s yearly matchup with Louisville or South Carolina’s date with Clemson in the final week of the regular season.
Additional SEC games is good for TV, and if it won’t keep the SEC from missing out on the CFP because of metrics like record strength, this decision will become a no-brainer for the league.