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Breaking down the 2026 Big Ten schedule: The SEC factor, premier Saturdays, brutal back-to-backs and more

Big Ten football is on such a good roll, even snags morph into advantages.

Consider the demise — err, pause — in the USC-Notre Dame series, which is deeply unfortunate for both the conference and the sport.

The ancient rivals’ haggling over future matchups, and the eventual decision to cancel the 2026 game, forced the Trojans to find a 12th opponent. That, in turn, prompted a delay in the Big Ten’s schedule rollout by more than a month, to Tuesday — well after the SEC schedule was revealed in early December.

Knowing when the key SEC games landed on the calendar gave the Big Ten strategic insight it doesn’t usually possess when the two conferences announce their schedules at roughly the same time.

The SEC schedule didn’t fully drive Big Ten decisions. But when 50-50 situations arose — should Game X go here, or there? — the conference opted for windows that offered opportunities for maximum audience and attention. (USC still doesn’t have a 12th opponent, by the way.)

Two other factors helped inform the Big Ten’s placement and sequencing of games:

— The condensed calendar: Because Labor Day falls on the latest date possible (Sept. 7), there are just 13 Saturdays for 12 games: one bye week per team.

— The quality depth: Fresh off its third consecutive national championship, the Big Ten enters the 2026 offseason with at least seven, and perhaps eight or nine teams that should be ranked when the regular season begins.

The array of ranked teams, when combined with the single bye week and the unprecedented insight into the SEC lineup, created an ideal confluence for the Big Ten’s schedule makers and network partners.

Granted, they were not working with a blank slate. The opponents for each team, for example, were set three years ago. Also, there are a bevy of requests and restrictions at the campus level. And the Big Ten was wary of overloading any single team with a dastardly sequence of games.

But to a greater extent than usual, the conference was able to craft a 10-week league season (nine games plus the bye) that is devoid of dud Saturdays and configured to optimize fan interest and media attention.

For example, the Big Ten set what is arguably the most anticipated matchup of the season, Ohio State at Indiana, for the middle Saturday of the middle month: Oct. 17 (Week 7).

What’s happening in the SEC that day? Glad you asked. There is just one high-level affair: Alabama at Tennessee, and the degree to which that game will command the sport’s attention is somewhat uncertain.

Otherwise, the pickings are unusually slim: Auburn-Georgia, Florida-Texas and Missouri-Mississippi would be considered the best of the rest based on early forecasts for 2026.

It was the perfect week for a mammoth game that might have been placed elsewhere if the Big Ten was flying blind with regard to the SEC schedule.

Other observations:

— As a result of the one-bye season, there are far fewer instances (relative to last year) in which Oregon, Washington, USC and UCLA face opponents that have extra rest.

In fact, there are just three occasions in which a West Coast team with normal rest faces an opponent that has an extra week to prepare. And two of those are home games: UCLA hosts Wisconsin and USC hosts Ohio State.

The unseemly road assignment falls to the Ducks, who host Nebraska, then visit ultra-fresh Illinois.

Additionally, and in keeping with precedent, none of the Big Ten’s West Coast teams play conference road games on consecutive weeks.

— For the second consecutive season, the Big Ten made sure to load the final Saturday of September with a marquee game.

In 2025, it was Oregon-Penn State. Next fall, the conference has the Ducks scheduled to visit USC on Sept. 26.

And as a secondary option that day, Michigan-Iowa more than clears the bar for a game with widespread appeal.

— No team faces more difficult logistics than Northwestern, which has a bye on Sept. 14, then plays 11 consecutive weeks.

Meanwhile, Indiana plays nine in a row before a Week 10 bye.

Everyone else has a bye in October.

— The sequencing of games worked out well for Washington.

The Huskies face USC the week after the Trojans play Oregon.

They face Iowa the week after the Hawkeyes play Ohio State.

They face Michigan State the week after the Spartans play Michigan.

And they face Indiana the week after the Hoosiers play Oregon.

— Speaking of Oregon:

The Ducks have a modest September, soft October, and rugged November with Ohio State (road), Michigan (home), Michigan State (road), and Washington (home).

— Notably, USC is the only West Coast school that makes four trips across the country (Rutgers, Penn State, Wisconsin and Indiana). Oregon, UCLA and Washington make three each.

But the Trojans are the only team in the conference with two byes, the result of playing on Week 0 against an opponent that has not been revealed. (It’s the replacement for Notre Dame.)

— Overall, the scheduling pain was distributed reasonably given disparities in the opponent rotation announced three years ago.

Iowa, Indiana and Oregon all play Ohio State and Michigan in back-to-back weeks, for example.

USC opens conference play with Oregon and Washington (both at home).

Nebraska faces Indiana and Oregon consecutively, as does Washington — in the final two games of the season.

There will be grumbling on every campus. It’s unavoidable. But all in all, the conference left its schools with little kindling for complaints.


*** Send suggestions, comments and tips (confidentiality guaranteed) to wilnerhotline@bayareanewsgroup.com or call 408-920-5716

*** Follow me on the social media platform X: @WilnerHotline

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