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Hayes: No Georgia at Texas A&M? Why? Break out the conspiracy theories

Matt Hayes

By Matt Hayes

Published:


There is no lottery system. There is no secret code.

Really, there isnโ€™t.

The SEC says thereโ€™s a formula, and it simply hasnโ€™t rotated to Georgia playing at Texas A&M since the Aggies joined the conference in 2012 โ€” despite the fact that every other league team has made the trip to College Station.

โ€œIโ€™ve given up trying to figure it out,โ€ an SEC coach texted me Tuesday night. โ€œWe played through a pandemic. We canโ€™t get Georgia at Texas A&M?โ€

SEC publicist Herb Vincent said there were 2 โ€œbridgeโ€ years when Texas A&M and Missouri joined the league, so the current opposite division, non-permanent rotation didnโ€™t technically begin until 2014.

The current SEC schedule includes 6 division games, and 1 permanent and 1 rotating crossover division game. The rotating crossover games are on a specific rotation, Vincent said.

โ€œThere are a number of games that havenโ€™t been played yet since 2014,โ€ Vincent said. โ€œBut there seems to be more focus on Georgia at Texas A&M.โ€

So thereโ€™s your official explanation. Now itโ€™s time dig deep.

Cue the conspiracy music and plop that tinfoil hat on your head. Here. We. Go.

While Iโ€™m sure the official explanation is buttoned-up, Iโ€™m not sure that sits well at Florida, which played at Texas A&M in 2012 and 2020, and will visit College Station again in November. It will be the Gatorsโ€™ 4th game against the Aggies, including a game in Gainesville in 2017.

Georgia, meanwhile, has played Texas A&M once (2019) since the Aggies joined the conference. In Athens.

The SEC response to that is straightforward: Floridaโ€™s 2012 game was during the โ€œbridgeโ€ seasons so it doesnโ€™t count. The 2020 game was during the COVID season, so it doesnโ€™t count, either. This yearโ€™s game at College Station is the official rotation.

The obvious question: Why didnโ€™t Georgia play in College Station in 2012-13, or during the COVID season?

Anyone else a little confused?

Good, because now weโ€™re going deeper down the rabbit hole. Only this conspiracy doesnโ€™t date all the way back to 2012.

This one began last week.

Not only does it make zero sense that Georgia hasnโ€™t played at Texas A&M despite 3 clear opportunities (2012-13, 2020) outside the rotation, it also makes zero sense that the SEC wouldn’t want to specifically showcase such a game.

Or โ€” hello, red flag โ€” why the SECโ€™s media partners, CBS and ESPN, wouldnโ€™t specifically ask for that game in any year, but certainly in 2023. The next step is so rich, itโ€™s devilishly devious to even mention it.

Under Conspiracy Theory, No. 2, the SEC โ€” in a gloriously petty move โ€” avoided Georgia at Texas A&M in 2023 because it didnโ€™t want to give CBS a mega ratings game in CBSโ€™ last year as the majority media rights holder.

If this sounds familiar, let me take you back to last week, when the SEC directed Tennessee and Georgia to postpone their upcoming nonconference series with Oklahoma, because โ€œthe transition of Oklahoma into the SEC will not allow for the involved institutions to fulfill their respective contractural nonconference home-and-home appearance obligations.โ€

That sounds well and good โ€” just like the โ€œrotationโ€ explanation for Georgia and Texas A&M โ€” but consider this conspiracy: the Alabama at Texas nonconference game earlier this month on Fox drew such a monster number (10.6 million viewers), the SEC didnโ€™t want Fox to get another mega game at the SEC’s expense when Georgia traveled to Oklahoma in 2023.

Conspiracy theorists claim those nonconference deals were made before OU and Texas decided to join the SEC, so the SEC knew from Day 1 when they accepted Texas and OU into the fold that those nonconference games would have to go.

So why announce it now? Why not announce it the day Texas and OU were officially invited?

Why, you ask? Because college football is expanding and aligning before our very eyes. Itโ€™s the SEC/ESPN vs. the Big Ten/Fox/CBS/NBC โ€” and theyโ€™re fighting for every last viewer.

You think the SEC is just going to gift Fox a game with what could be 2-time defending national champion Georgia? Or gift CBS the hype-filled and much anticipated Georgia at Texas A&M game?

Not on your life.

โ€œThatโ€™s a great theory,โ€ an industry source said. โ€œWould it surprise me? Not really. Would I blame either (the SEC or Big Ten) if they did that? Never. This is bare-knuckle fighting now.โ€

This is bigger than Georgia traveling to College Station, everyone. This is about protecting games and building brands and not inadvertently helping your rival do the same.

Besides, if the expanded Playoff doesnโ€™t happen in 2024 and Texas and Oklahoma donโ€™t leave the Big 12 early as part of the deal, that opposite division rotation will magically turn to โ€” tada! โ€” Georgia at Texas A&M.

Just in time for ESPNโ€™s first season as the exclusive media rights holder of the SEC.

Thereโ€™s no secret code to that.

Matt Hayes

Matt Hayes is a national college football writer for Saturday Down South. You can hear him daily from 12-3 p.m. on 1010XL in Jacksonville. Follow on Twitter @MattHayesCFB

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