SNAFU
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This was a great historical read that I did not know about.
It wasn’t until the late 1960s that the conference finally agreed on some semblance of rotating: two permanent opponents and rotating everyone else. Before that and without regulations about the number conference opponents teams should play every year, some teams played as few as four SEC games, while others played as many as seven. In 1952 when the conference stepped in with new regulations – every team had to play at least six – there was a loophole: All six didn’t need to be against teams actually in the conference.
"While the SEC assigned the years that teams would play each other, it was up to the schools to negotiate the dates and locations of those games. “We had some controversies,” said Roy Kramer, the former SEC commissioner and Vanderbilt athletic director. “On one or two of those occasions the conference had to step in and say, ‘You’re going to play on this date.’” One of those was Georgia and Tennessee, when told to work out a home-and-home for the 1980-81 season. They couldn’t come to an agreement, and then-SEC commissioner Boyd McWhorter called Kramer.
“We’re putting together a brand new scheduling committee, and we’d like you to be on it,” McWhorter told him. Kramer agreed, but never heard back. So he called back McWhorter, who provided an update.
“Roy, you’re the committee,” he said. “We have an issue between Georgia and Tennessee, you’re brand new and kind of neutral in all this, I’ll let you talk to them and work it out.”
Georgia’s AD was Joel Eaves, and Tennessee’s AD was Bob Woodruff. They weren’t on speaking terms at the time, and privately complained to Kramer about the other. When Kramer looked at each team’s schedule, there was only one available weekend they could play in 1980: the opening week of the season. Kramer called each separately.
“Is this the conference telling us to do this?” Woodruff asked. “Yes,” Kramer replied, only slightly twisting the truth. “Well, I’ll do it if the conference is telling me to do it,” Woodruff said. “But I’m not doing it because Georgia’s asking me to do it.”
The result of that game was UGA winning 16-15- Herschel's freshman year when UGA won the NC.
Summary from Seth Emmerson's article in The Athletic
It wasn’t until the late 1960s that the conference finally agreed on some semblance of rotating: two permanent opponents and rotating everyone else. Before that and without regulations about the number conference opponents teams should play every year, some teams played as few as four SEC games, while others played as many as seven. In 1952 when the conference stepped in with new regulations – every team had to play at least six – there was a loophole: All six didn’t need to be against teams actually in the conference.
"While the SEC assigned the years that teams would play each other, it was up to the schools to negotiate the dates and locations of those games. “We had some controversies,” said Roy Kramer, the former SEC commissioner and Vanderbilt athletic director. “On one or two of those occasions the conference had to step in and say, ‘You’re going to play on this date.’” One of those was Georgia and Tennessee, when told to work out a home-and-home for the 1980-81 season. They couldn’t come to an agreement, and then-SEC commissioner Boyd McWhorter called Kramer.
“We’re putting together a brand new scheduling committee, and we’d like you to be on it,” McWhorter told him. Kramer agreed, but never heard back. So he called back McWhorter, who provided an update.
“Roy, you’re the committee,” he said. “We have an issue between Georgia and Tennessee, you’re brand new and kind of neutral in all this, I’ll let you talk to them and work it out.”
Georgia’s AD was Joel Eaves, and Tennessee’s AD was Bob Woodruff. They weren’t on speaking terms at the time, and privately complained to Kramer about the other. When Kramer looked at each team’s schedule, there was only one available weekend they could play in 1980: the opening week of the season. Kramer called each separately.
“Is this the conference telling us to do this?” Woodruff asked. “Yes,” Kramer replied, only slightly twisting the truth. “Well, I’ll do it if the conference is telling me to do it,” Woodruff said. “But I’m not doing it because Georgia’s asking me to do it.”
The result of that game was UGA winning 16-15- Herschel's freshman year when UGA won the NC.
Summary from Seth Emmerson's article in The Athletic