The SEC is moving up in the world.

Renovations to several stadiums have altered the ranking of the world’s 25 largest by capacity.

The SEC now has four of the nine largest, five of the top 15 and six of the top 20 — and that obviously doesn’t even include Bristol Motor Speedway, which might draw 150,000 fans for next season’s clash between Tennessee and Virginia Tech.

WORLD’S LARGEST STADIUMS RANKED BY CAPACITY

1. Rungrado May Day Stadium (Pyongyang, North Korea): 150,000
2. Michigan Stadium (Ann Arbor, Mich.): 109,601
3. Beaver Stadium (State College, Pa.): 107,282
4. Ohio Stadium (Columbus, Ohio): 104,944
5. Kyle Field (College Station, Texas): 102,512
6. Neyland Stadium (Knoxville, Tenn.): 102,455
7. Tiger Stadium (Baton Rouge, La.): 102,321
8. Bryant-Denny Stadium (Tuscaloosa, Ala.): 101,821
9. Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium (Austin, Texas): 100,119
10. Melbourne Cricket Ground (Melbourne, Australia): 100,024
11. Camp Nou (Barcelona, Spain): 99,354
12. Estadio Azteca (Mexico City, Mexico): 95,500
13. Soccer City (Johannesburg, South Africa): 94,713
14. Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum (Los Angeles, Calif.): 93,607
15. Sanford Stadium (Athens, Ga.): 92,746
16. Rose Bowl (Pasadena, Calif.): 92,542
17. Cotton Bowl (Dallas, Texas): 92,100
18. Memorial Stadium (Lincoln, Neb.): 91,471
19. Wembley Stadium (London, England): 90,000
20. Ben Hill Griffin Stadium (Gainesville, Fla.): 88,548
21. Gelora Bung Karno Stadium (Jakarta, Indonesia): 88,306
22. Jordan-Hare Stadium (Auburn, Ala.): 87,451
23. Bukit Jalil National Stadium (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia): 87,411
24. Borg El Arab Stadium (Alexandria, Egypt): 86,000
25. Azadi Stadium (Tehran): 84,412