UT football team plays at S. Carolina on Sept. 26
The Alabama-Tennessee game remained on Oct. 24 and the Alabama-Auburn game remained on Nov. 28 in the adjusted Southeastern Conference football schedule released Monday night.
There were, however, plenty of rivalry games that moved significantly as the result of the SEC’s delayed 10-game schedule consisting solely of league contests that has resulted from the COVID-19 pandemic. The Auburn-Georgia matchup will now be played on Oct. 3, which is the second Saturday of this year’s season, while Tennessee will conclude its regular season by hosting Florida on Dec. 5.
The Gators and Volunteers last played in a season finale back in 2001, when Tennessee prevailed 34-32 in a riveting contest at Gainesville that had to be rescheduled due to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
“It will be a tough 10 games, and you’ll have to be at your best every week,” Volunteers coach Jeremy Pruitt said Monday night on a Zoom call. “You’ll have to sustain and stay healthy, and obviously this will be the first time any of us will have experienced this. It will be a great challenge that we’re looking forward to.”
Tennessee will open at South
Carolina on Sept. 26 before hosting Missouri on Oct. 3 and then travelling to Georgia on Oct. 10. The league’s most anticipated matchup — Georgia at Alabama — was originally set to occur on Sept. 19 but will now take place Oct. 17.
The SEC managed to maintain Thanksgiving week rivalries such as Alabama-Auburn, Arkansas-Missouri, LSU-Texas A&M, Ole Miss-Mississippi State and Tennessee-Vanderbilt, but that is the penultimate weekend of this year’s season. The week after the Iron Bowl, Alabama will travel to Arkansas while Auburn will host Texas A&M, and Georgia will end its season against Vanderbilt after opening last year against the Commodores.
“This is a year about adjusting,” Auburn coach Gus Malzahn said Monday afternoon. “The teams that adjust will have an advantage. Usually going into preseason camp, you have the first three opponents broken down, so we’ll be playing catch-up, as will everyone else in our league.
“This isn’t a time for tradition.”