SandhillshuskerW
Special Teams Player
SEC non conference schedule:
Alabama: West Virginia, Florida Atlantic, Southern Miss, West Carolina West Virginia is the only decent team
Arkansas: Nicholls State, Texas Tech, N. Illinois, UAB Texas Tech is a decent team
Auburn: San Jose State, Kansas State, Louisiana Tech, Samford Kanas State is a good team this year
Florida: Eastern Michigan, Eastern Kentucky, Florida State Florida State is obviously good
Georgia: Clemson, Troy, Charl. Southern, Georgia Tech Clemson is decent
Kentucky: UT Martin, Ohio, UL Monroe, Louisville Louisville isn't even all that good this year
LSU: Wisconsin, Sam Houston, UL Monroe, New Mexico State Wisconsin(I'm not sure how good they are)
Miss. St: Southern Miss, UAB, South Alabama, UT Martin No decent team there
Missouri: SD State, Toledo, UCF, Indiana Nobody to speak of, and they lost to Indiana
Ole Miss: Boise State, LA Lafayette, Memphis, Presbyterian Boise State isn't as good as they used to be, so nobody to speak of
South Carolina: East Carolina, Furman, South Alabama, Clemson East Carolina is decent and Clemson is decent
Tennessee: Utah State, Arkansas State, Oklahoma, Chatt. Oklahoma is a good team and they handly beath Tenn.
Texas A&M: Lamar, Rice, SMU, UL Monroe No decent teams there
Vanderbilt: Temple, UMass, Charl. Southern, Old Dominion Nobody good and they lost to Temple
The SEC is a combined 39-3 in their non-conference games so far. Most teams have played at least one decent team, but really no great teams except maybe Tennessee playing Oklahoma and Auburn playing Kansas State. Their non-conference doesn't look awesome, but most teams appear to do what most teams in the country do. Play two or three "easy", winable games and play one decent team. I would agree that I would like to see the SEC schedule more games with teams like UCLA, Oregon, Florida State, Ohio State and teams that are pretty consistent lately.
Alabama: West Virginia, Florida Atlantic, Southern Miss, West Carolina West Virginia is the only decent team
Arkansas: Nicholls State, Texas Tech, N. Illinois, UAB Texas Tech is a decent team
Auburn: San Jose State, Kansas State, Louisiana Tech, Samford Kanas State is a good team this year
Florida: Eastern Michigan, Eastern Kentucky, Florida State Florida State is obviously good
Georgia: Clemson, Troy, Charl. Southern, Georgia Tech Clemson is decent
Kentucky: UT Martin, Ohio, UL Monroe, Louisville Louisville isn't even all that good this year
LSU: Wisconsin, Sam Houston, UL Monroe, New Mexico State Wisconsin(I'm not sure how good they are)
Miss. St: Southern Miss, UAB, South Alabama, UT Martin No decent team there
Missouri: SD State, Toledo, UCF, Indiana Nobody to speak of, and they lost to Indiana
Ole Miss: Boise State, LA Lafayette, Memphis, Presbyterian Boise State isn't as good as they used to be, so nobody to speak of
South Carolina: East Carolina, Furman, South Alabama, Clemson East Carolina is decent and Clemson is decent
Tennessee: Utah State, Arkansas State, Oklahoma, Chatt. Oklahoma is a good team and they handly beath Tenn.
Texas A&M: Lamar, Rice, SMU, UL Monroe No decent teams there
Vanderbilt: Temple, UMass, Charl. Southern, Old Dominion Nobody good and they lost to Temple
The SEC is a combined 39-3 in their non-conference games so far. Most teams have played at least one decent team, but really no great teams except maybe Tennessee playing Oklahoma and Auburn playing Kansas State. Their non-conference doesn't look awesome, but most teams appear to do what most teams in the country do. Play two or three "easy", winable games and play one decent team. I would agree that I would like to see the SEC schedule more games with teams like UCLA, Oregon, Florida State, Ohio State and teams that are pretty consistent lately.