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Watershed SEC games since 2000

Posted on 7/11/17 at 12:59 pm
Posted by MizzouTrue
Member since Jun 2016
3843 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 12:59 pm
Here are my top 4

2001 SECCG: LSU-31, Tenn-20
Game seemed to send programs in opposite directions. In the 90s LSU was a laughingstock and Tennessee was a title contender. Proved that LSU had arrived as a relevant program

2006 BCS title game; UF-41, OSU-14
How could underdog Florida stop Troy Smith and the high octane Buckeyes? Florida went on a 41-7 run and proved to America that the SEC was the best conference, and they responded with 7 straight title wins. This game gave the SEC a ton of credibility, and the SEC backed it all up.

2009 SECCG: Bama-32, UF-13
Game was beginning of Alabama dominance. Before the game, Florida and Alabama were seen as equal powers. This game was the start of the Sabah dynasty

2011 BCS title game: Bama-21, LSU-0
Alabama toppled LSU and claimed the title as the unquestioned best program in the SEC
This post was edited on 7/11/17 at 1:01 pm
Posted by NYCAuburn
TD Platinum Membership/SECr Sheriff
Member since Feb 2011
57002 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:05 pm to
UA vs Texas NCG (Thought the SEC would be stopped
AU vs Oregon and LSU vs Oregon, Everyone thought the high octane could sustain against the SEC
This post was edited on 7/11/17 at 1:10 pm
Posted by TigerTalker16
Columbia,MO
Member since Apr 2015
11533 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:07 pm to
quote:

2011 BCS title game: Bama-21, LSU-0

The day LSU football died
Posted by BamaGradinTn
Murfreesboro
Member since Dec 2008
26991 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:08 pm to
quote:

2009 SECCG: Bama-32, UF-13
Game was beginning of Alabama dominance. Before the game, Florida and Alabama were seen as equal powers. This game was the start of the Sabah dynasty



Maybe...but the 2008 demolishing of a preseason top 10 Clemson team was the game that officially served notice that Alabama was back, and back in a huge way that should have struck fear in the heart of every other program and served notice of what was coming. Remember...Clemson had exactly zero yards rushing. IMO, any discussion of watershed games in the true sense of the term begins and ends with that game.
Posted by Lacour
Member since Nov 2009
32949 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:10 pm to
2017 LSU 43 - Alabama 8


Start to finish the Tigers defense absolutely dominated Jalen Hurts and the favored Tide's historic offense. An absolute bludgeoning that no one saw coming but everyone in the world outside
Alabama enjoyed.
Posted by UFMatt
Gator Nation - Everywhere
Member since Oct 2010
11493 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:10 pm to
quote:

2009 SECCG: Bama-32, UF-13
Game was beginning of Alabama dominance. Before the game, Florida and Alabama were seen as equal powers. This game was the start of the Sabah dynasty



This was the most influential game in the last 20 years in the conference. With a win UF would probably gone on to win their 3rd naty in 4 years and continued to roll. Urban Meyer's heart would not have hurt and he may still be coaching at UF. This win began the Saban dynasty, that has continued to this day.
This post was edited on 7/11/17 at 1:11 pm
Posted by ThePTExperience1969
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Apr 2016
13360 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:11 pm to
2013 Iron Bowl: Auburn-34 Bama-28
Ended Bama's quest for the 3-peat and, in a way, ended the SEC national title winning streak with Auburn's subsequent loss to FSU in the title game. SEC doesn't win the title 3 of the these 4 years, essentially the end of their reign atop college football.

2013 BCS title game: FSU-34 Auburn-31
The official end of the SEC's reign atop college football, Auburn pulls a 2006 New England Patriots and squanders a 21-3 lead to be defeated by Jameis and the Noles in the final seconds. SEC only wins one title in the subsequent 3 seasons.
Posted by BengalShark
Member since Jul 2017
3229 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:15 pm to
2009 SECCG definitely changed a lot of things and had Urban Meyer running for the hills, he had to go to a program where he could dominate everyone in the conference because the SEC was too competitive for Urban, he beating his chest now though at Ohio state cuz he looks fine to me! Lol

This post was edited on 7/11/17 at 1:20 pm
Posted by Monticello
Member since Jul 2010
16197 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:17 pm to
2013 AU-FSU National title game: The SEC streak ends

2015 Arkansas-Ole Miss: 4th and 25: This play prevents Ole Miss from going to its first SEC title game ever. And Ole Miss would have likely beaten Florida to be the first non Big 6 champion since 70's Kentucky.
Posted by AUTiger45
The Ham
Member since Oct 2013
4043 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:30 pm to
I remember lots of water being shed after the 2006 AU/LSU game. something about a tipped pass negating a PI call. that was the original game of the century btw.
Posted by BamaGradinTn
Murfreesboro
Member since Dec 2008
26991 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 1:42 pm to
Here's the deal: all discussions about the top football program in the country begin and end with Alabama. Still. Today. Period. That's evidenced by the fact that, once again, they are the preseason #1 team in the country. All of these other games mentioned have been important, with some perhaps more significant than the other, but at the end of the day, the true "watershed" game...according to the definition of the term...is the one that started that run...which in case you guys haven't figured out, isn't over yet.

So while I think it's Alabama-Clemson 2008, one can certainly make a valid argument for Alabama-Florida 2009.

Seriously...any game that Auburn or Ole Miss played? What changed? Nothing. Until we're past this run...which we apparently aren't yet...games like the Kick 6, 4th and 25, or (chuckle) Auburn-FSU are just interesting diversions. Nothing really changed.
Posted by Godawgs4
Member since Aug 2016
4307 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 3:21 pm to
2001 State-USCe
1st game after Nine-Eleven

We lost 14-7 and that was the beginning of the end of the Sherrill era at State. From 1992-2000, we were a force to be reckoned with.
That game ended that and led State down a spiral that lasted all the way until 2009 with the exception of 2007. 2001 record was 3-8.

So yes that was a watershed game for us.
Posted by CBandits82
Lurker since May 2008
Member since May 2012
54189 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 3:35 pm to
quote:

2001 SECCG: LSU-31, Tenn-20
Game seemed to send programs in opposite directions. In the 90s LSU was a laughingstock and Tennessee was a title contender. Proved that LSU had arrived as a relevant program


One of two programs we killed
Posted by FearlessFreep
Baja Alabama
Member since Nov 2009
17328 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 3:43 pm to
2008 Bama-UGa is the most obvious answer.

Sure, the season opener against a vastly overrated Clemson team was impressive, but even then we could write it off as another case of Clemsoning rather than Bama dominance. The Blackout game made fans of every other SEC school go "oh shite..."

I would compare it to Bama unleashing the wishbone on defending champ Tennessee in 1971, or the Florida serving notice on the rest of the SEC by crushing the Tide 35-0 in 1991. Each of those games set the stage for long-term conference dominance.
Posted by Scoob
Near Exxon
Member since Jun 2009
20450 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 3:50 pm to
quote:

Here are my top 4

2001 SECCG: LSU-31, Tenn-20
Game seemed to send programs in opposite directions. In the 90s LSU was a laughingstock and Tennessee was a title contender. Proved that LSU had arrived as a relevant program

2006 BCS title game; UF-41, OSU-14
How could underdog Florida stop Troy Smith and the high octane Buckeyes? Florida went on a 41-7 run and proved to America that the SEC was the best conference, and they responded with 7 straight title wins. This game gave the SEC a ton of credibility, and the SEC backed it all up.

2009 SECCG: Bama-32, UF-13
Game was beginning of Alabama dominance. Before the game, Florida and Alabama were seen as equal powers. This game was the start of the Sabah dynasty

2011 BCS title game: Bama-21, LSU-0
Alabama toppled LSU and claimed the title as the unquestioned best program in the SEC

good list.

I'd add:
2005 Peach Bowl. LSU (who didn't win the SEC title game) against Miami.

Back then, even SEC champs were often not considered elite-level teams, able to compete physically at the highest level against the best. And Miami was still considered "The U", superstars who bully the opposition.

LSU beat Miami up and down the field in winning 40-3, and then won the fight outside the lines in similarly dominant fashion.
Signaled the arrival of LSU (and the SEC) as elite-level teams, capable of physical domination over anyone.

Florida's win in 06, coupled with LSU's stomping of Notre Dame in the Sugar, cemented that. The conference was no longer outclassed by anybody.
Posted by BHMKyle
Birmingham, AL
Member since Feb 2013
5076 posts
Posted on 7/11/17 at 3:59 pm to
quote:

Here are my top 4


Agreed except while correct about Florida vs. Ohio State, I would stick to just SEC.

You are correct that there are certain games that just have a feel about them as turning points in terms of SEC superiority. You can take it back further also:

You can start with the SEC in the Post-Bryant era. Obviously Bama dominated most of the 1960s and 1970s. Georgia took over as the dominant power in the early '80s, though unfortunately none of Georgia's great teams of the early '80s ever faced Bama for that "changing of the guard" type game. Georgia softly took power and became the dominant team of the the early '80s, winning the SEC in 1980 (along with a National Title), 1981, and 1982. From this point on, it seems every time one program took power, the actual turning point was in a head-to-head game:

1983: #3 Auburn @ #4 Georgia
Both teams entered the late-November game ranked in the Top 5. Auburn ultimately beat Georgia, ending the Bulldogs streak of three consecutive SEC Titles. It would ultimately be 20 long years before Georgia won another SEC Title, while Auburn went on to claim the 1983 title during a string of winning the conference 4 times in 7 years (1983, 1987, 1988, 1989). Auburn was the league's top program from '83 through the end of the decade.

1990: #4 Auburn @ #15 Florida
Auburn came riding into Gainesville ranked #4 in the country, following a stint of being ranked in the AP Top 25 in 126 of the previous 127 poll releases, stretching back all the way back to 1982. This game sent Auburn's program into a tailspin, and it was the coming out party for 1st year head coach, Steve Spurrier. The Gators new style of offense got the better of Auburn's team which had been known for its staunch defenses during the Pat Dye era. Not only was it the changing of the guard in terms of program superiority, but it was the end of "Defense wins Championships" mentality which had ultimately ruled the conference for decades.

1998: #2 Florida @ #6 Tennessee
Florida came into the game having won five of the previous six SEC Championships, including the 1996 National Title. Tennessee was also a national power at the time, consistently ranked in the Top 10. However, Florida always seemed to get the better of Tennessee, having won 5 consecutive games against the Vols. Tennessee finally triumphed in '98, shifting power in the conference northward. Tennessee would go on to win the 1998 National Title, as well as consecutive SEC Titles in 1998 and 1999. It was certainly a power-shift, as Tennessee would get the better of the Gators in 3 out of 4 seasons, winning the East in '98, '99, and '01.

2001: #21 LSU vs. #2 Tennessee
Tennessee entered the SEC Title Game a heavy favorite to win and go on to play for their 2nd National Title in 4 years. Instead, it was Nick Saban's LSU team that would pull the upset. It sent Tennessee's program into the abyss, and it was the pivotal game that sent LSU's program on top of the SEC for a sustained period of time in the modern era.

2006: #9 LSU @ #5 Florida
While LSU and Florida jockeyed for position atop of the SEC for the majority of the mid-to-late 2000s, this was the game that sent Florida's program back on top and catapulted them towards 2 National Titles in 3 seasons. LSU did win another National Title in between the Florida titles (2007) as the first 2-loss champion in the BCS era, however Florida's program under Urban Meyer was on a different level while LSU under Les Miles seemed to always be barely hanging on to superior status.

2009: #2 Alabama vs. #1 Florida
This was the game that brought the Urban Meyer dynasty crashing down, and it sent Bama back on top of the SEC as the sustained power-holder for the first time since the end of the Bryant era. Florida has not since won an SEC Title, while Bama has now won 4 National Titles since this game.

It will be very interesting to see how long the Saban dynasty can continue. Since '83, typically these power-shifts have occurred every 5.3 years. We're at 8 years now for the Bama dynasty, which now equals the length of time Florida held the title as the dominant power in the league under Spurrier, from 1990-1998. Obviously Bama's dynasty has been far more lucrative in terms of Championships though.
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