The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
ALIFETOOBRIEF
SEC meetings adjourn with no agreement on 8- or 9-game models.
Eighty years ago, Anne Frank — who was in hiding with her family in the Netherlands from the Nazis who were running rampant across Europe — received a diary for her 13th birthday. The Frank family would eventually be found and sent to concentration camps, where Anne would die. But, via her diary, her words would live on to be cherished by millions.
Otto Frank ran a company in Amsterdam that made jam. Realizing the time may come that his family might need refuge, he quietly built a hidden attic apartment behind the factory. Frank, his wife and two daughters and another family hid there for two years, supplied with food, water clothing — and books — by Otto’s
loyal business associates.
Anne dreamed of becoming a journalist. She occupied herself with reading and by writing personal and insightful messages aimed at a fictional friend named Kitty in her diary. On March 28, 1944, the Frank family was listening to a Dutch-language broadcast from London when former Dutch Minister of Education Gerrit Bolkestein announced it would be important to preserve, for future generations, diaries and other papers documenting what Dutch citizens were going through under Nazi occupation. Anne’s family — and Anne herself — suddenly began looking at Anne’s writing in a whole different way. Anne began editing her diary, expanding on some entries and recopying some of them on loose sheets of paper. At one point, she told her family she’d like to turn her work into a novel called “The Secret Annex.”
She didn’t get a chance to do that before the Nazis and Dutch police burst into the annex on Aug. 4, 1944.
Otto Frank’s employees were detained but not imprisoned — they could have been executed for harboring Jews. Two of them, Jan and Miep Gies, returned to the annex, gathered Anne’s four bound diaries and the loose sheets of paper and saved them until Otto returned the next year.
Anne’s diary was published in the Netherlands on June 25, 1947, as “Het Achterhuis,” or “The Annex.” An English version titled “The Diary of a Young Girl” was published in 1952.
Modification of the SEC football schedule model is on hold after conference leadership exited annual spring meetings unable to reach an agreement.
SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey confirmed new eight-game and nine-game models involving the elimination of divisions remain the focus for 2025 scheduling and beyond but conceded, “You never know what could emerge as we dig deeper.”
Sankey indicated the SEC presidents and athletic directors are seeking clarity into issues that arose during the talks with hopes of a resolution by mid-fall.
The eight-game model, which would involve each team playing one annual opponent and rotating seven others, gained momentum during the week, according to people familiar with the closeddoor meetings.
The support came even though the eight-game model could mean
the end of traditional rivalries.
The nine-game model, which involves each team playing three annual opponents and rotating the other six, remains popular but presents different challenges.
Alabama coach Nick Saban, who traditionally has favored more conference games than currently played (eight), mentioned concerns about national “competitive balance” if the SEC were to add another league game.
“If we are going to play nine conference games, we’re going to end up playing five — minimal — top-15 teams in the country,” Saban said. “How is that going to compare to other conferences?
“You could have a great team and lose two games in our conference, but someone else gets in the playoff because they went undefeated — but they didn’t have the same opportunity, as many good games.”
The expansion of the College Football Playoff from four to 12 teams would ease some of those concerns, but no decision on that appears imminent.
“The CFP is a factor,” Sankey said in reference to SEC leaders wanting to learn the future of the playoff before determining a new SEC scheduling model. “(But) there’s no certainty that you’re going to have College Football Playoff information 12 months from now.”
The nine-game model also would affect teams that have scheduled aggressively into the future.
Georgia, for example, has scheduled four nonconference games for the 2026 season and would have to drop or move one of those games.
Georgia coach Kirby Smart said four years ago he favored a ninegame SEC schedule, but Tuesday he was noncommittal in Destin.
Smart advocated for an expanded league slate before the Bulldogs announced scheduled home-and-home series with Louisville (2026-27), Florida State (2027-28), Texas (2028-29), Clemson (2029-30) and Ohio State (2030-31). The additions of Texas and Oklahoma to the SEC in 2025 provide further complexities.
Sankey said both schools have been kept informed of the scheduling format discussions, but neither are voting members in respect to the model.
Some have suggested TV revenue might also be involved in the scheduling model decisions. Sankey debunked the notion that TV executives had any influence on the discussions while also declining to comment on whether ESPN is open to renegotiations on media rights, given the additions of Texas and Oklahoma and the possibility of a nine-game schedule.
“We have some more work to do,” Sankey said in his closing remarks from the SEC spring meetings Friday. “As we talked through Wednesday, it became clear that the right step was let’s just wait.
“We’ll have an outcome when the smoke rises from the chimney.”
Sankey likely will readdress the scheduling model challenges when the league arrives in Atlanta for the annual SEC media days July 18-21 at the College Football Hall of Fame.