SEC History

#1

D-Vols

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#1
WHO KNEW Kentucky WAS a football school?

The first football game in the Southeast was played April 9, 1880, on the ground now called Old Stoll Field at the University of Kentucky. Kentucky A&M (now UK) organized a team and in November 1881, played Transylvania College in a three-game series. By 1895, 11 current SEC members were playing football.

The 13 members west and south of the Appalachian Mountains reorganized as the Southeastern Conference at the annual SC meeting of Dec. 8-9, 1932, in Knoxville. The 10 coast members remained in the Southern Conference. Dr. Frank L. McVey of Kentucky was elected president of the new conference whose charter members were: Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Louisiana State, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Sewanee, Tennessee, Tulane and Vanderbilt. (Sewanee withdrew Dec. 13, 1940, Georgia Tech on June 1, 1964 and Tulane on June 1, 1966). McVey held an informal meeting of the school presidents in Birmingham Feb. 16, 1933, then the first full meeting in Atlanta Feb. 27.

Faced with the task of conference realignment after competing with 10 members since 1966, the SEC welcomed the University of Arkansas on Aug. 1, 1990, and the University of South Carolina on Sept. 25, 1990. Both joined the SEC on July 1, 1991.

Fully incorporated into conference competition by 1992, Arkansas and South Carolina participated in SEC championships for all sports except football during the 1991-92 academic year. The SEC was again at the forefront, introducing football, basketball and baseball divisional play and the nation's first-ever Division I football championship game.

 
#2
#2
Kentucky and Vandy were both the real deal back in the earliest days of the conference. Heh.

But so were Tennessee and Bama. And the difference is, we and the Tide have stayed relevant through most* of those 130+ years, while KY and Vandy...not so much.

Go Vols!



* minus a couple of dark ages for each team.
 
#4
#4
Kentucky and Vandy were both the real deal back in the earliest days of the conference. Heh.

But so were Tennessee and Bama. And the difference is, we and the Tide have stayed relevant through most* of those 130+ years, while KY and Vandy...not so much.

Go Vols!



* minus a couple of dark ages for each team.
Priorities. Hard to maintain.
 
#5
#5
Thank goodness someone has something non-opinionated to share.. This place has been miserable with all the football experts coming to share game breakdown and playoffs projections. Oh, don’t want to leave out NFL draft predictions.
Give it 30 minutes or so, someone will be along to blame Tim Banks for this shortly.
 
#11
#11
Kentucky and Vandy were both the real deal back in the earliest days of the conference. Heh.

But so were Tennessee and Bama. And the difference is, we and the Tide have stayed relevant through most* of those 130+ years, while KY and Vandy...not so much.

Go Vols!



* minus a couple of dark ages for each team.
In 1926, Nathan Dougherty promoted Robert Neyland to Head Coach and Athletic Director to do one thing - beat Vanderbilt !!!
 
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