Two teams from the SEC are featured in CBS Sports’ ‘Five Most Disrespected Programs in College Football’ including a two-time division champion that wasn’t shown much love this week at SEC Media Days.

Headlining Tom Fornelli’s list is Mizzou, a program that seems to embrace the harsh reality nationally. The Tigers are 28-12 since entering college football’s toughest league three years and have finished the past two seasons ranked fifth and 14th, respectively.

RELATED: Fox Sports calls Ole Miss an underachiever

Also included in the top five was Mississippi State, a team coming off one of its best seasons in school history. Coach Dan Mullen said this week that being picked last in the SEC West during media days is “kind of like a tradition” despite last season’s run to No. 1 that highlighted a 10-win campaign.

The return of Heisman candidate and senior quarterback Dak Prescott didn’t mean much in Hoover as the Bulldogs were picked to finish seventh in their own division, again.

5 most disrespected programs in CFB

  1. Mizzou
  2. Kansas State
  3. Georgia Tech
  4. BYU
  5. Mississippi State

Here’s what CBS Sports had to say about Mississippi State and Mizzou:

On MSU: There were so many teams I was stuck choosing between for this fifth spot, but I gave Mississippi State the edge. I fully admit that there’s likely some recency bias at play here. I can’t sit here and tell you the Bulldogs have been underappreciated for decades. This year, though? This year is a bit different.

Last year, it was widely assumed that the Bulldogs would finish last in the SEC West, maybe sixth. Instead, Mississippi State went out and finished the year 10-3 after starting 9-0. They spent five weeks ranked No. 1 in the AP Poll and were ranked No. 1 in the first edition of the College Football Playoff rankings (there’s a trivia question for you in 20 years).

On Mizzou: It wasn’t all that difficult to figure out who my No. 1 team would be. It was always going to be Missouri. Whether in the Big 12, or now in the SEC, this is just a team that plenty of people just assume is due for a relapse of sorts. It’s just, aside from a hiccup here and there, it doesn’t happen.

Since 2007, the Tigers have won 10 games or more five times in eight seasons. When Missouri joined the SEC in 2012, it went 5-7 and everybody was gladly telling anyone within earshot about what a mistake it was for the Tigers to leave the Big 12 for the big, bad, SEC, where it would serve as nothing but cannon fodder for years to come.