The irony is thick enough to cut with a chainsaw: this week, BYU (No. 15) and Utah (No. 23) are set for a Holy War showdown that has national juice, yet ESPN’s College GameDay decided to truck down to Athens for Ole Miss vs. Georgia.
Ole Miss held on by three points against a stinky Washington State team. Georgia beat an unranked Auburn squad by 10. That’s their marquee matchup? Meanwhile, two top‑25 Big 12 rivals square off in Provo, and GameDay gives them the cold shoulder.
Let’s call this what it’s become: SEC GameDay. These guys don’t care about football anywhere other than in the SEC. You’ve got a top‑25 intraconference rivalry, two undefeated or near‑undefeated teams, stakes in conference standings and recruiting bragging rights, and you’d expect the marquee studio show to land there? You’d think. But no, they head to Georgia because the SEC remains sacrosanct in their eyes.
Don’t get me wrong: Georgia vs. Ole Miss isn’t inherently bad television. But when it’s the default choice every single week, even when more compelling games exist, it becomes lazy, regional bias masquerading as national coverage. ESPN is making a statement with their stops, and it’s loud: Big 12, ACC, even the Big Ten? You’re optional. The SEC is their priority, always.
Provo deserves better. This Holy War matchup is dripping with history, with rivalry, with legitimate ranking stakes. In‑conference. Big 12 relevance. Even local and national audiences expect GameDay to show up for games like this. But ESPN’s map is stuck in one region. Their tagline might as well be “bringing GameDay back to the SEC.”
So yes, ESPN is free to pick whatever sites make them comfortable. But if they keep snubbing marquee non‑SEC games, it’s fair to accuse them of caring less about the sport than they pretend. They’ve got blinders on, and apparently, the only direction in their field of vision is “SEC first.”
GameDay can keep trending to the SEC every week; they just can’t call it national coverage anymore.