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ATLANTA ā In a rare moment of Iron Bowl unity, Auburnās Gus Malzahn is joining Alabamaās Nick Saban as an advocate for the Southeastern Conference to play nine conference games.
āIāve changed my tune,ā Malzahn said. āI think Nick has been the only one for it. But nine, Iām to that point now. Nine I think is best for us moving forward to make the schedules more equal across the conference.ā
The SEC plays eight conference games. Malzahn said he does not think any other SEC coaches have the same view. But the addition of his voice to Sabanās could be significant; two of the leagueās most successful coaches are now publicly pushing for an additional conference game.
Among Power Five conferences, only the SEC and ACC play an eight-game conference schedule. The Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac-12 all play nine. Coaches and administrators from those leagues have contended that all leagues should play the same amount of conference games for overall consistency, especially as it relates to evaluating strength of schedule when choosing teams for the College Football Playoff. But Malzahn said he hasnāt considered the bigger picture.
āI just know our league and itās what I think is fair,ā he said.
With 14 teams, the SEC currently plays six games vs. divisional opponents and two vs. opponents from the other division, with one permanent cross-divisional rival.
Malzahn wonāt say so, but his concern is likely tied to the Iron Bowl rivalry and what he sees as an imbalance in the scheduling related to permanent rivals. Auburnās permanent SEC East rival is Georgia, while Alabamaās is a Tennessee program that has struggled for more than a decade. Malzahn has also harped recently on the scheduling quirk that has Auburn playing both Georgia and Alabama on the road or at home each November.
āIāve kind of done a 180, just recently,ā he said, ā(after) looking at our conference and everything that goes with it: East, West, two new teams added to the league. My big thing is for the equity within the conference, the strength of schedule and trying to be fair.ā
On Monday, SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey noted the eight-game schedule, as well as the format with one permanent and one rotating cross-division opponent, was āthe clear preferenceā of the leagueās members when they last reviewed options in 2014. He said it had been good for the league, which has placed teams in 11 of the last 12 national title games and won nine, and placed 10 teams in bowls for four consecutive seasons (from 2013-16). In 2016, the league required its members to play at least one Power Five nonconference opponent.
Sankey also said Monday he didnāt anticipate change in the scheduling philosophy, but expected āhealthy and continued dialogue both now and in the future among our leadership.ā With Iron Bowl leaders united, perhaps the conversation will begin to change.
Auburn's Gus Malzahn and Alabama's Nick Saban agree: SEC should play nine conference games
āIāve changed my tune,ā Malzahn said. āI think Nick has been the only one for it. But nine, Iām to that point now. Nine I think is best for us moving forward to make the schedules more equal across the conference.ā
The SEC plays eight conference games. Malzahn said he does not think any other SEC coaches have the same view. But the addition of his voice to Sabanās could be significant; two of the leagueās most successful coaches are now publicly pushing for an additional conference game.
Among Power Five conferences, only the SEC and ACC play an eight-game conference schedule. The Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac-12 all play nine. Coaches and administrators from those leagues have contended that all leagues should play the same amount of conference games for overall consistency, especially as it relates to evaluating strength of schedule when choosing teams for the College Football Playoff. But Malzahn said he hasnāt considered the bigger picture.
āI just know our league and itās what I think is fair,ā he said.
With 14 teams, the SEC currently plays six games vs. divisional opponents and two vs. opponents from the other division, with one permanent cross-divisional rival.
Malzahn wonāt say so, but his concern is likely tied to the Iron Bowl rivalry and what he sees as an imbalance in the scheduling related to permanent rivals. Auburnās permanent SEC East rival is Georgia, while Alabamaās is a Tennessee program that has struggled for more than a decade. Malzahn has also harped recently on the scheduling quirk that has Auburn playing both Georgia and Alabama on the road or at home each November.
āIāve kind of done a 180, just recently,ā he said, ā(after) looking at our conference and everything that goes with it: East, West, two new teams added to the league. My big thing is for the equity within the conference, the strength of schedule and trying to be fair.ā
On Monday, SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey noted the eight-game schedule, as well as the format with one permanent and one rotating cross-division opponent, was āthe clear preferenceā of the leagueās members when they last reviewed options in 2014. He said it had been good for the league, which has placed teams in 11 of the last 12 national title games and won nine, and placed 10 teams in bowls for four consecutive seasons (from 2013-16). In 2016, the league required its members to play at least one Power Five nonconference opponent.
Sankey also said Monday he didnāt anticipate change in the scheduling philosophy, but expected āhealthy and continued dialogue both now and in the future among our leadership.ā With Iron Bowl leaders united, perhaps the conversation will begin to change.
Auburn's Gus Malzahn and Alabama's Nick Saban agree: SEC should play nine conference games