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SEC Makes the Right Move by Taking Cupcake Games Off the Menu

The SEC’s move to eliminate late-November cupcake games is good for TV, fans, the playoff race and the sport.

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There’s nothing wrong with a cupcake every now and then. The real kind. The ones with too much frosting, unique toppings and a wrapper you peel off in one satisfying pull. Those cupcakes are great.

The SEC’s version of cupcakes? Not so much.

And starting in 2027, the league is finally tossing those off of the November menu.

Greg Sankey said Tuesday that SEC schools voted to turn the next‑to‑last weekend of the season into a full slate of conference games. No more late‑season breathers. No more FCS opponents showing up for a check and a polite beating.

“Our ADs voted that our schools will play a conference game in that next-to-last weekend beginning in 2027,” Sankey said at a news conference before having a tongue-in-cheek moment. “We have had a rotation that’s had four teams with non-conference games or even open dates in that next-to-last weekend. I think that’s the end of cupcake weekend in late November. We never got that one sponsored, though.”

This is a real change. For years, that weekend has been a parade of mismatches. This year, the final time we’ll see cupcake weekend, will see Mississippi State hosting Tennessee Tech, Ole Miss playing Wofford, Alabama rolling Chattanooga, and Auburn taking on Samford. It’s been the same story across the league, and the results have been exactly what you’d expect.

Last season alone, Samford went to Texas A&M, Eastern Illinois visited Alabama, Mercer played at Auburn and Charlotte went to Georgia. The last time Arkansas had a cupcake game in late November was in 2024 when it walloped Louisiana Tech, 35-14.

None of those games were competitive. None of them were meant to be.

But the sport is shifting. The playoff is expanding, maybe to 16 teams, maybe to 24. ESPN wants meaningful games in November. The SEC wants more control over its schedule. And fans want something better than a Saturday full of blowouts right before rivalry week.

This move checks every box.

Instead of four throwaway games, the league will now have two more conference matchups to sell, promote and build storylines around. That’s good for TV, good for the playoff race and good for the sport.

It also means teams won’t get a late‑season tune‑up before facing their biggest rival. Everyone plays someone who can punch back.

Will coaches love it? Probably not. They enjoy a cupcake as much as anyone. But the SEC isn’t in the business of making November easy. It’s in the business of making November matter.

And now, it finally will.

Cupcakes belong in bakeries, not on the schedule. The SEC got this one right.

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