Don't believe Big Ten has really passed the SEC? Watch 2026 NFL Draft | Opinion
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We’re less than two weeks away from the final tell, the statement that could send shockwaves through the mighty SEC.
The NFL draft. And more specifically, the SEC’s unassailable place in it.
No other conference produces NFL talent like the SEC. No other conference has more players on NFL rosters.
And now here comes the surging Big Ten, with its three consecutive national championships from three teams, primed for another red flag shift at the top of college football.
If Michigan, Ohio State and Indiana winning the past three national titles didn’t do it for you, if the SEC missing the past three national title games didn’t clearly underscore a massive shift at the top of the sport, the NFL draft will leave no doubt.
For 19 years, the SEC has had more players drafted than any conference, a near two decade run that coincides with its dominance on the field. LSU started the conference’s run of 14 national titles this century with a win over Oklahoma in the 2003 national title game.
The dominance on the field and in the draft has been unrivaled. Until now.
Until the era of NIL and free player movement changed everything. Until the Big Ten, with its deep-pocket alumni bases and (as important) significant upgrades at the head coach and assistant coach positions, has blown by the SEC in the passing lane.
All the way to the top of college football.
It’s not just the national titles, it’s bowl games and head-to-head matchups over the past three seasons, too. Since 2023, the Big Ten is 11-4 in the College Football Playoff, the SEC is 5-8.
But the NFL draft is the final frontier. The SEC held a slim 77-71 edge in total selections over the Big Ten last year. The last and final move of this remarkable paradigm shift within the power structure of the sport could play out later this month.
It won’t take long to see where this is headed. Day 1 of the draft could pull back the curtain.
The SEC holds the record for most first-round selections in a single season with 15 (2020 and 2025), and has led or tied for the most first round picks in 14 of the past 15 years — including a whopping 170 since 2010.
In his latest mock draft for USA TODAY Sports, Nate Davis predicts 12 Big Ten players will be selected in the first round and seven for the SEC.
But like every draft, the projected 33-43 picks are also first-round worthy, so the Big Ten’s number could still increase depending on how the first round shakes out. That puts the league within striking distance of the record of 15, an opening salvo in what could be a generational change in the draft.
So the SEC can ignore the three national titles in a row. It can ignore the 2024 postseason, when it pushed for South Carolina and Alabama to make the CFP — and both were beaten by Big Ten schools (Illinois and Michigan, respectively) in bowl games.
It can ignore last year, when Vanderbilt and Texas were the two teams that were “left out” of the CFP, and Vanderbilt lost to Iowa in a bowl game (Texas beat Michigan).
It can ignore Southern California and Oregon at Nos. 1 and 2 in the 247Sports composite recruiting rankings for the class of 2026, and the Big Ten with five of the first 12 in the rankings and eight of the top 30. While that’s still a long way from the 13 of the SEC’s 16 programs in the top 30, the fact we’re even talking about the inroads made by the Big Ten in high school recruiting is a massive red flag.
Recruiting leads to player development, player development leads to championships. And championship play leads to an increased presence in the NFL draft.
Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza will be the first player selected in the draft. Ohio State could have as many as five selections in the first 10 picks. And that’s just the beginning of what could be a glorious Big Ten affair at the NFL’s annual player procurement party.
Deny it all you want, SEC honks. The Big Ten is the new king of college football.
The official crown will be placed on its head after the NFL draft.
Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Big Ten vs SEC: 2026 NFL Draft is about to deliver the verdict
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