OriginalTickets logo
Sports

Big Ten, SEC Teams Face Brutal Stretches on 2026 College Football Playoff Paths

Several Big Ten and SEC teams encounter multi-game gauntlets this season as they vie for a spot in the College Football Playoff picture.

·Jun 1, 2026·via CBS Sports
Big Ten, SEC Teams Face Brutal Stretches on 2026 College Football Playoff Paths

Every college football season has a turning point -- and more often than not, it's not a single game, but a stretch of weeks where the sport's best programs are forced to survive collision-level schedules without relief. The 2026 season delivers no shortage of those moments across the Power Four, where title hopefuls will be pushed through three-game gauntlets that look more like postseason brackets than regular-season slates.

From the SEC's late-year heavyweight collisions to Big Ten road marathons that demand cross-country resilience, and ACC schedules that stack rivalry chaos back-to-back with playoff contenders, the separation between elite and merely good will come down to endurance as much as talent.

These stretches compress everything -- hostile environments, stylistic mismatches, and roster depth tests -- into rapid-fire succession, where one mistake can spiral into two losses before a team even regroups.

Big Ten post-spring intel: Breakout players, key QB battles, more buzz from across the league Matt Zenitz

For programs like Alabama , Michigan , LSU, Georgia , and others with national title aspirations, these are the weeks that define rankings, reshape playoff paths and expose which rosters can truly withstand November pressure. This is where seasons tilt, contenders fracture and champions start to separate themselves from the pack -- one brutal Saturday after another.

Let's begin with a team facing the most arduous three-game stretch of any and go from there.

1. Northwestern

This is one of the most unforgiving three-week runs in program history for the Wildcats, and it comes at a time when the physical wear of the Big Ten season is at its peak. A cross-country trip into one of the loudest venues in college football -- Autzen Stadium -- is up first. The Ducks have made their home digs a nightmare for visiting teams because of their pace, explosiveness and ability to overwhelm opponents early. For a Northwestern roster that traditionally wins with discipline and execution, chasing points on the road against Dan Lanning is a dangerous formula.

Then comes Iowa on Nov. 7, which sounds manageable until you remember what these games usually become: low-scoring, field-position battles decided in the fourth quarter. Iowa's physical style has historically tested Northwestern's depth and toughness in the trenches. And just when the Wildcats finally catch their breath, they head to Ohio State . That's one of the closers no Big Ten team wants -- especially against a national title contender loaded with NFL talent across the board.

- at Oregon , Oct. 31 - vs. Iowa, Nov. 7 - at Ohio State, Nov. 14

2. Iowa

There's almost no stylistic relief from week to week for Iowa's defense -- just three straight heavyweight fights against national brands we're projecting to be among conference title contenders . Iowa has to deal with one of the nation's most physical rosters in Ann Arbor to close September, before hosting Ohio State inside Kinnick Stadium. That gives Kirk Ferentz's squad a puncher's chance, but Ohio State's speed advantage creates matchup problems few teams can solve. Iowa's two wins over Ohio State since the turn of the century both came in Iowa City (2004, 2017). Iowa travels cross-country to face Washington after that, a difficult turnaround against a high-powered offense in Seattle, where crowd noise and travel fatigue become major factors by midseason.

- at Michigan, Sept. 26 - vs. Ohio State, Oct. 3 - at Washington, Oct. 9

3. LSU

If Lane Kiffin and the Tigers are in the College Football Playoff hunt exiting this gauntlet, they'll have earned every ounce of national respect by the end of it. A Year 1 barometer matchup for Kiffin, LSU hosts Alabama the first weekend of November as usual and looks to snap a three-game skid in the SEC rivalry. From there, the Tigers take on Texas for only the third time since 1963. Wrapping up, Neyland Stadium is a difficult place to survive, particularly against a Tennessee offense under Josh Heupel that's often capable of turning games into track meets in a hurry.

- vs. Alabama, Nov. 7 - vs. Texas, Nov. 14 - at Tennessee, Nov. 21

4. Mississippi State

There's no exiting October with ease for Jeff Lebby's Bulldogs, who face a three-game slate that stacks SEC physicality, schematic contrast and hostile environments in a way few programs can comfortably survive. Death Valley -- likely at night -- remains one of the sport's most punishing road tests. LSU's talent advantage could be noticeable early, given the Tigers' No. 1 transfer class this cycle.

A return home against Oklahoma in Starkville comes next week. The Sooners play a gritty brand of football under Brent Venables, a style opposing fans can respect inside Davis Wade Stadium. Even at home, Mississippi State has to match a skill advantage that can tilt quickly if the game becomes one-dimensional. The trip to Texas on Halloween against a program built for playoff contention, with elite depth and quarterback play, is the toughest of the bunch. It's the combination that makes this brutal: three straight weeks of top-tier athletes, zero recovery time and no soft landing in between.

- at LSU, Oct. 17 - vs. Oklahoma, Oct. 24 - at Texas, Oct. 31

5. Auburn

Welcome to college football's most competitive league, Alex Golesh. Facing a complete roster on the road is challenging , especially in rivalry mode between the hedges. Playing in Athens means Auburn has to survive an elite defensive front and avoid getting dragged into a possession-by-possession grind where mistakes are magnified, especially at quarterback.

Kiffin's arrival at Jordan-Hare Stadium will be rude for the visitors. LSU brings skill-position speed and offensive volatility that can turn a game in two drives, forcing Auburn to match explosiveness with a bevy of transfers. After that, Ole Miss and quarterback Trinidad Chambliss will stretch Auburn's defense horizontally and vertically. Three weeks, three completely different schematic challenges -- physicality, explosiveness, and tempo -- with no recovery window in between.

- at Georgia, Oct. 17 - vs. LSU, Oct. 24 - at Ole Miss, Oct. 31

6. Michigan

The Wolverines' new-look defense under a first-year staff will be tested down the stretch this season. They'll have to deal with Heisman candidate Dante Moore and the Ducks in mid-November, before hosting UCLA in the home finale prior to the showdown at Ohio State. Expectations might be low nationally for Bob Chesney in his first campaign with the Bruins, but don't tell him that. He signed a top-25 portal class and welcomed nearly 60 newcomers to the roster.

The Buckeyes haven't beaten the Wolverines in Columbus since 2018, which is borderline difficult to fathom given the talent and elite finishes Ohio State has achieved over that stretch. Both of these programs have won national championships recently, and this one always has high stakes -- both for the Big Ten title race and CFP discussion.

- at Oregon, Nov. 14 - UCLA, Nov. 21 - at Ohio State, Nov. 28

7. Alabama

Alabama's contest with Georgia has essentially become the SEC's unofficial championship game preview. Georgia's roster depth and line-of-scrimmage power are designed to force Alabama into a four-quarter physical fight where every possession matters. The Third Saturday in October has not been kind to the Crimson Tide during their last two trips to Knoxville, both losses.

Alabama goes back to Tuscaloosa after that double-whammy with a tilt vs. Texas A&M between two programs coming off playoff appearances. Two weeks after the home bout with the Aggies, the Crimson Tide travels to Baton Rouge. It's a season-defining quartet of matchups for Kalen DeBoer's squad in the SEC as he hopes to silence the critics during his third campaign.

- vs. Georgia, Oct. 10 - at Tennessee, Oct. 17 - vs. Texas A&M, Oct. 24

8. Texas A&M

Every season in the SEC eventually narrows down to a handful of defining moments, and for Texas A&M in 2026, the final stretch of November delivers one of the most unforgiving sequences in league play. It's not just the quality of opponents -- it's the order, the timing and the accumulation of physical and emotional wear that turns this into a survival test.

It begins with Tennessee on Nov. 14, prior to a trip to Norman a week later. The Black Friday rivalry finale with Texas could, once again, determine a spot in the SEC Championship Game, along with enhanced CFP seeding. Last fall, the Aggies were leaking oil late despite being unbeaten, warts first shown during a miraculous second-half comeback against South Carolina , before losses to the Longhorns and Miami ended it.

- vs. Tennessee, Nov. 14 - at Oklahoma, Nov. 21 - vs. Texas, Nov. 27

9. Texas

Red River should be ultra-hot in 2026, given the placement of both programs in various post-spring rankings. This swing for Texas includes the emotions of a rivalry bout, a stylistic punch from a program under a new staff that won this matchup last fall and dealing with a scintillating 1-2 punch offensively, all in the span of three weeks.

The matchup with the Sooners rarely follows script, and momentum swings tend to decide them more than individual projections on paper. The Gators bring athleticism and defensive speed capable of disrupting Texas on Oct. 17. Even at home, Florida's ability to create chaos on defense, with a bunch of returning starters, makes this a tricky contrast test. Then comes Oct. 24 vs. Ole Miss, arguably the most dangerous offensive schematic challenge of the stretch. With Chambliss and Kewan Lacy , watch out for explosives, Will Muschamp.

- vs. Oklahoma (Dallas), Oct. 10 - vs. Florida, Oct. 17 - vs. Ole Miss, Oct. 24

10. South Carolina

Shocker -- another SEC team. The Gamecocks have zero margin for error against this trio, and the sequence might be the most revealing pocket of their SEC schedule. Tennessee's back on the slate after a two-year hiatus, and a trip to Oklahoma at the end of October should reveal South Carolina's placement in the CFP conversation. Then? The horror of playing Texas A&M. The Gamecocks held a four-touchdown lead in College Station last season, before the Aggies roared back to win. That's a blemish in Shane Beamer's tenure, and another loss like that warms his seat even more. Texas A&M has won 10 of 12 against the Gamecocks since entering the SEC in 2014.

- vs. Tennessee, Oct. 24 - at Oklahoma, Oct. 31 - vs. Texas A&M, Nov. 7

11. Indiana

Indiana's October stretch is graced with something it hasn't always had in past Big Ten seasons -- expectations that demand consistency -- and this three-game run is the kind that quickly reveals whether that progress is real or fragile. The Hoosiers should not have their hands full with Nebraska , but that game becomes tricky on the road if there's an early turnover or a messy defensive possession. Ohio State coming to Bloomington is the bigger circle, the type of tilt that compresses every flaw. The Buckeyes' speed, depth and explosive ability force opponents into near-perfect execution just to stay competitive for four quarters, even at home and coming after last year's win over Ryan Day in the Big Ten title game. Going to The Big House after Ohio State means playing two playoff-caliber programs in consecutive weeks.

- at Nebraska, Oct. 10 - vs. Ohio State, Oct. 17 - at Michigan, Oct. 24

12. USC

The Trojans were a difficult inclusion here primarily because there was a choice of multiple three-game stretches worthy of consideration. No team nationally returns more starters and overall production, and USC is going to need all of it. Oregon's pace and spacing force defenses to communicate perfectly snap after snap, and despite this being a veteran group for the Trojans, there are some new pieces in the secondary. Washington comes to Los Angeles after the Ducks, and then it's a traditional Big Ten road grind at Penn State and first-year coach Matt Campbe

_Originally reported by [CBS Sports](https://www.cbssports.com/college-football/news/college-football-rankings-toughest-schedule-stretches-2026-big-ten-sec-cfp/)._

Source Attribution

This story is summarized from coverage by CBS Sports.

Read full story →

Comments

Sign in to join the conversation.

Loading comments…