Everyone wants to see SEC football in two months. We all hope it happens. Football is very precious and significant, but as much as we treasure it as a foundational aspect of our culture and the source of our sweetest childhood memories.
College football still isn’t the most important part of our lives. A pandemic and over 130,000 lives lost put a sport — a game — in perspective. Yet, for all the suffering and economic hardship being felt throughout the country, it remains that we would certainly love to have college football around as a needed distraction and respite from all the bad things happening in the United States and many of our localities.
Having something fun to turn to isn’t a careless embrace of bread and circuses while the house burns down. It isn’t a misplaced love or an excessive display of affection. It is a simple, honest desire to take a break from negativity and remind ourselves that life — for all its responsibilities and burdens — is meant to be enjoyed, too. Having three and a half or four hours (for one game) on Saturday, or a full wall of games on an entire Saturday, is something we would cherish with particular consciousness and intentionality if we are blessed enough to get an SEC football season.
We hope it happens.
Yet, we have to account for the possibility that it might not happen. We hope it’s not the reality we will inhabit in September, but it’s possible.
If we are going to consider the absence of a season, we have to consider which SEC football team would take the biggest hit.
I don’t think there is a lot of debate on this one: The Florida Gators have the most to lose if there is no SEC football season this year, or if the season is stopped before it can run its course.
When analyzing a college football schedule, a basic point of wisdom regularly applies: The most favorable schedule for a team which hopes to contend for a Power Five conference championship is a slate in which the tough conference games are at home and the easier ones are on the road. Why waste a home date on a bottom-tier conference opponent if that opponent can be subdued away from home? Save the home dates for the opponents where a home crowd might make a crucial difference.
In 2020, Florida has the schedule lined up just right.
This will be a good — not great, but good — year to visit Tennessee, with the Vols loading up on quality recruits but not being ready just yet to put all the pieces together. Florida goes to Knoxville. It’s a lot better than hosting the Vols this year and then having to face a loaded Tennessee team in 2021. The Gators have the schedule rotation where they want it.
Florida visits Vanderbilt this year and hosts LSU. That’s what an ideal schedule — in a tough conference — looks like. The 2020 rotation works in the Gators’ favor.
Beyond the schedule itself, Georgia is heading into 2020 without Jake Fromm. True, Fromm wasn’t spectacular, but he was certainly very solid for Kirby Smart. He wasn’t a game-changer, but he also wasn’t a game-loser. No, the Gators don’t have an equation-shifting quarterback just yet; this is what Dan Mullen needs to find before too long in Gainesville. Mullen needs his own version of Danny Wuerffel for Steve Spurrier, or Tim Tebow for Urban Meyer. The Gators’ ceiling remains limited precisely because they haven’t found a capital-A “Answer” at quarterback just yet.
As noted above, Tennessee is beginning to recruit at a high level. If Jeremy Pruitt can coach ’em up in Knoxville, the Vols could soon mount a real challenge to Georgia. Mullen has to knock off the Dawgs before the Vols do, and 2020 gives him that opening. If there is no 2020 season, the Vols can stockpile recruits and Pruitt can spend more time teaching his concepts to his incoming ballplayers. Mullen’s window would shrink, and Florida might encounter a much more complicated situation in 2021.
We all want football back in the SEC. We all want Saturdays in the fall to crackle with excitement on television, even if fans won’t be in the stands. We want to see an SEC champion crowned in Atlanta in early December.
If one SEC school wants football more than the other 13 members of the conference, however, the answer clearly resides in Gainesville.
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