At least one SEC team was featured in six ESPN College GameDay events last season, including four of the first six. There are at least three unique matchups to start the campaign this season involving Florida State, Notre Dame and the Dallas Cowboys’ stadium in Arlington, Texas.

While the College GameDay crew has diversified its destinations and mixes in small conference, Ivy League and military academy matchups, here are the most likely games the show will attend each week, including plenty from the SEC.

Week 1

Lee Corso made the announcement confirming what many had expected for weeks and months: It’ll be Alabama vs. Florida State in Atlanta. It officially gives the green light to this memorable Jimbo Fisher quote: “The SEC didn’t invent football.”

This will be the debut of the new stadium built primarily for the Atlanta Falcons, Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Both teams are expected to be ranked at least in the top five to start the season, and there will be plenty of talk about a potential rematch in the College Football Playoff.

They have combined to win or play for a national championship in five of the past six years. The conference chatter will begin early and often as Jimbo Fisher is 9-1 against the SEC as Florida State’s head coach.

Alabama has won 40 of its 44 games in three seasons and four of the past eight national championships.

Week 2

This week has several enticing matchups including Auburn-Clemson, Georgia-Notre Dame and Oklahoma-Ohio State. It shapes up to be the first pressurized environment for Jarrett Stidham as Auburn looks to end a three-game losing streak against Clemson. GameDay also has the option to be in Clemson in November for the Florida State game.

But if nostalgic story lines are factored in with a grainy footage feature from Tom Rinaldi or Gene Wojciechowski, look for a big story on the 1981 Sugar Bowl when Herschel Walker was the MVP in the win over Notre Dame.

On the field, this should go a long way toward figuring if Notre Dame’s 4-8 season in 2016 was a trend or aberration. Georgia, meanwhile, has its own questions to answer, even at quarterback, where Jacob Eason is settling into his second season. Notre Dame made a host of staff changes, while Georgia has off-the-field questions starting with Trenton Thompson.

Week 3

The best SEC matchups are Tennessee at Florida and LSU at Mississippi State, but with The Streak over in Knoxville and Gainesville, and no word of a duck pulling a truck, ESPN will likely go elsewhere.

That brings us to two of the glamour brands in college football, Texas and Southern Cal. Other options are Clemson at Louisville and Miami at Florida State.

The rematch of the 2005 Rose Bowl, one of the best games in college football history, and plenty of intrigue on the coaching staffs makes this seem like the clear choice here.

Southern Cal gained momentum and national attention last year with nine straight wins, and has a star quarterback in Sam Darnold. Tom Herman inherits a quality roster from Charlie Strong, who couldn’t seem to translate the talent to wins. This could be an early barometer of the national scene and whether Texas can compete for the Big 12 title.

Week 4

A rematch of the 2016 Pac-12 Championship could be the pick here as ESPN again looks to spread the attention around the country.

Washington and Colorado each have interesting storylines, with the Huskies trip to the College Football Playoff last year and the return of Jake Browning, and Colorado’s surprising resurgence last season. The Buffaloes won 10 games and clinched their first division title since winning the Big 12 North in 2005. But now they must do it with a new quarterback.

The best SEC matchup is Arkansas-Texas A&M, where the Aggies have won five straight, all since they joined the SEC. Two questions will be answered by the buzzer in this one: Can A&M sustain a hot start for the fourth consecutive season, and can Bret Bielema fend off hot-seat chatter without a win?

Week 5

Ole Miss-Alabama and Clemson-Virginia Tech are among the best matchups alongside Georgia-Tennessee.

Georgia-Tennessee could easily be a decider for the SEC East following the Hail Mary last year in Athens, which made it two straight for the Vols following five straight wins by Georgia. The losing coach in this game will have a tough row to hoe with the radio call-in shows and message boards. Georgia fans will no doubt squawk about knee injuries on the Neyland Stadium turf in recent years to Nick Chubb, Keith Marshall and Justin Scott-Wesley, while Tennessee fans will wonder if Butch Jones will go dancing once more.

But look for an off-the-board matchup in Fargo, North Dakota, a popular ESPN destination in recent years as North Dakota State plays host to Missouri State.

Week 6

The SEC has a decent shot to host this week between Alabama-Texas A&M and LSU-Florida.

The choice for LSU-Florida should come down to how Ed Orgeron and the Florida quarterbacks are doing by midseason. Both have plenty of questions and unknowns. Of course, there may be some residual storylines following last year’s dust-up with Jeremy Foley and Joe Alleva. Given the history of this cross-division rivalry, with multiple hurricane delays, Tim Tebow’s appearance and the fourth-down classic in 2007, it’s difficult to short-change the expectations.

Last year’s game was marked by the off-the-field back and forth by the administrations, but it really came down to a goal-line stand.

If the Worldwide Leader wants to go Big Ten, it has Wisconsin at Nebraska and Michigan State at Michigan.

Week 7

If Auburn and LSU are both undefeated by this point, this game has the potential to be one of the most hyped games in the series in recent memory. If that’s the case, it could easily be a top 10 matchup featuring Derrius Guice’s Heisman campaign vs. the Auburn’s punishing front seven. Both offenses have promised change. Which one will deliver?

Also this week, Ohio State will visit Nebraska, and the Red River Rivalry is in Dallas.

Week 8

As long as John Adams isn’t on the GameDay committee, the Tennessee-Alabama matchup will be in the running to not only be played, but be featured on Saturday morning. The “Third Saturday in October” again fits the game and the calendar for this annual showdown that’s been dominated by the Crimson Tide in the past 10 meetings.

If the Vols can pull the presumed upset, they no doubt would be in line for a possible rematch in Atlanta and berth in the College Football Playoff. The Vols haven’t won in Tuscaloosa since 2003, a team led by Casey Clausen, Cedric Houston and James Banks, which beat the likes of Brodie Croyle and the Crimson Tide coached by Mike Shula.

Week 9

Regional preferences could sway the decision this week as Penn State plays at Ohio State.  The Nittany Lions have one of the top backfields in college football in quarterback Trace McSorley and running back Saquon Barkley. Other big games include Oklahoma at Kansas State and Louisville at Florida State.

But the banks of the St. Johns River in Jacksonville should have plenty of intrigue as Georgia has the potential to enter 6-1 or 7-0. The SEC East could be decided by sunset in a series that’s recently seen Jim McElwain build some early equity in the series, while Georgia fans are a bit anxious given last year’s meeting and the carryover from the lackluster end to the Mark Richt era in Jacksonville.

Week 10

College GameDay is a frequent visitor to the LSU-Alabama game. The television show has been to the last six meetings of the Tigers and Crimson Tide.

It’s previewed a lopsided series as Alabama has won six straight and eight of 10. They’ve done it with defense, as the Crimson Tide has kept the Tigers relatively in check on offense. Eight of the past 10 games has seen LSU score fewer than 20 points.

Week 11

Georgia holds a three-game winning streak against Auburn, and the appeal of this contest will come down to Georgia being undefeated and Auburn being a legitimate threat in the West. The Tigers are 2-9 in the past 11 games against Georgia as the Bulldogs inched ahead in the all-time count at 57-55-8.

There’s some quality competition this week, including Notre Dame-Miami, Southern Cal-Colorado and Florida State-Clemson, which would be the likely favorite should Georgia or Auburn slip up earlier in the campaign.

Week 12

LSU and Tennessee haven’t met since 2011, but the Vols are part of fond memories for the Bayou faithful, including SEC Championship wins for LSU in 2001 and 2007.

LSU is 3-11-1 in Knoxville, and Tennessee owns the all-time lead at 20-9-3. This is the longest break in the series since 1993 and 2000.

To land GameDay, LSU-Tennessee would have to beat out a Big Ten heavyweight game in Michigan-Wisconsin, or UCLA-Southern Cal, Utah-Washington or Kansas State-Oklahoma State.

Week 13

Rivalry Week will feature the Iron Bowl as the Crimson Tide have enjoyed a three-game winning streak and won seven of the past nine. Something to consider: The winner will likely play three more games after this meeting. Resurgent rivalries like Florida State-Florida and Clemson-South Carolina as the “little brothers” have each made strides to close the gap.

Ohio State-Michigan is another option.