List of Southeastern Conference champions
This article may overuse or misuse color, making it hard to understand for color-blind users. (September 2023) |
The Southeastern Conference (SEC) sponsors nine men's sports and twelve women's sports. This is a list of conference champions for each sport. Also see the list of SEC national champions.
Members
[edit]The SEC was established on December 1932, when the 13 members of the Southern Conference located west and south of the Appalachian Mountains left to form their own conference. Ten of the 13 founding members have remained in the conference since its inception. Three schools left the conference before 1966 and six have joined since 1991, bringing the current membership to 16.
Current members
[edit]- Alabama (since 1932)
- Arkansas (since 1991)
- Auburn (since 1932)
- Florida (since 1932)
- Georgia (since 1932)
- Kentucky (since 1932)
- LSU (since 1932)
- Mississippi (since 1932) – athletically known as "Ole Miss"
- Mississippi State (since 1932)
- Missouri (since 2012)
- Oklahoma (since 2024)
- South Carolina (since 1991)
- Tennessee (since 1932)
- Texas (since 2024)
- Texas A&M (since 2012)
- Vanderbilt (since 1932)
Former members
[edit]- Sewanee: 1932–1940
- Georgia Tech: 1932–1964
- Tulane: 1932–1966
Current champions
[edit]Men's sports
[edit]Sport | Regular-season champion | Postseason champion |
---|---|---|
Baseball | Tennessee (2023–24) | Tennessee (2023–24) |
Football | – | Alabama (2023–24) |
Men's Basketball | Tennessee (2023–24) | Auburn (2023–24) |
Men's Cross Country | – | Arkansas (2023–24) |
Men's Golf | – | Auburn (2023–24) |
Men's Indoor Track and Field | – | Arkansas (2023–24) |
Men's Outdoor Track and Field | – | Arkansas (2023–24) |
Men's Swimming and Diving | – | Florida (2023–24) |
Men's Tennis | Kentucky (2023-24) | Kentucky (2023-24) |
Women's sports
[edit]Sport | Regular-season champion | Postseason champion |
---|---|---|
Equestrian | – | Auburn (2023–24) |
Gymnastics | Florida (2023–24) | LSU (2023–24) |
Soccer | Arkansas (2023–24) | Georgia (2023–24) |
Softball | Tennessee (2023–24) | – |
Volleyball | Kentucky (2023–24) | – |
Women's Basketball | South Carolina (2023–24) | South Carolina (2023–24) |
Women's Cross Country | – | Florida (2023–24) |
Women's Golf | – | Mississippi State (2023–24) |
Women's Indoor Track and Field | – | Arkansas (2023–24) |
Women's Outdoor Track and Field | – | Arkansas (2022–23) |
Women's Swimming and Diving | – | Florida (2023–24) |
Women's Tennis | Georgia and Texas A&M (2023–24) | Georgia (2023–24) |
Baseball
[edit]All 14 SEC schools play baseball, as do future members Oklahoma and Texas.
Although this article lists both regular-season and tournament champions, the SEC awards its official baseball championship based solely on regular-season record, whether or not the tournament existed at a given time. The tournament, however, does determine the SEC's automatic berth in the NCAA tournament.
The method to determine the SEC Champion has varied greatly:[1]
- 1933-1947: Determined by conference winning percentage.
- 1948-1950: Division leaders met in best of 5 championship series.
- 1951: Determined by conference winning percentage.
- 1952: Division leaders were to meet in best of 3 championship series;[2] Eastern division leader ceded championship series to western division leader.[3]
- 1953-1976: Division leaders met in best of 3 championship series.
- 1977-1985: First SEC Tournament. Determined by top 2 teams from each division playing in double elimination tournament.
- 1986: Determined by top 4 teams overall playing in double elimination tournament.
- 1987: Determined by top 6 teams overall playing in double elimination tournament.
- 1988-1991: Determined by conference winning percentage. Tournament played to award NCAA auto-bid.
- 1992: Determined by conference winning percentage.
- 1993-1995: Determined by conference and tournament winning percentage. NCAA auto-bid is awarded to winner of divisional tournament that *has highest overall conference winning percentage.
- 1996-1997: Determined by conference winning percentage. Tournament played with top 3 teams in each division plus 2 at-large teams based on conference winning percentage to award NCAA auto-bid.
- 1998: Determined as before but with division leaders earning top 2 seeds in tournament.
- 1999-2012: Determined as before but tournament consisted of top 2 teams in each division plus 4 at-large teams based on conference winning percentage.
Current members | |||||
School | Last SEC Reg. Season Title | Number of SEC Reg. Season Titles | Last SEC Tourney Title | Number of SEC Tourney Titles | Number of SEC Overall Titles |
LSU | 2017 | 18 | 2017 | 12 | 18 |
Florida | 2023 | 16 | 2015 | 7 | 16 |
Alabama | 2006 | 14 | 2003 | 7 | 14 |
Mississippi State | 2016 | 11 | 2012 | 7 | 11 |
Vanderbilt | 2019 | 7 | 2019 | 3 | 7 |
Ole Miss | 2009 | 8 | 2018 | 3 | 6 |
Georgia | 2008 | 7 | never | 0 | 6 |
Auburn | 1978 | 6 | 1998 | 3 | 6 |
Tennessee | 2024 | 5 | 2024 | 5 | 5 |
South Carolina | 2002 | 2 | 2004 | 1 | 3 |
Arkansas | 2021 | 3 | 2021 | 1 | 4 |
Kentucky | 2006 | 1 | never | 0 | 1 |
Texas A&M | never | 0 | 2016 | 1 | none |
Missouri | never | 0 | never | 0 | none |
Former Members | |||||
Georgia Tech | 1957 | 1 | never | 0 | 1 |
Tulane | 1957 | 0 | never | 0 | none (+1 claimed) |
The SEC Tournament determined the overall SEC Champion from 1977-87 | |||||
Last team to win regular season & tournament in same year: Arkansas, 2021 |
Champions
[edit]Official SEC champions in bold.
Year | Regular Season or Playoff Champion(s) | Tournament Champion(s) | Eastern Champion(s) | Western Champion(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1933 | Georgia | No Tournament | ||
1934 | Alabama | No Tournament | ||
1935 | Alabama | No Tournament | ||
1936 | Alabama | No Tournament | ||
1937 | Auburn | No Tournament | ||
1938 | Alabama | No Tournament | ||
1939 | LSU | No Tournament | ||
1940 | Alabama | No Tournament | ||
1941 | Alabama | No Tournament | ||
1942 | Alabama | No Tournament | ||
1943 | LSU | No Tournament | ||
1944 | No Season | No Season | ||
1945 | LSU[4] | No Tournament | ||
1946 | LSU | No Tournament | ||
1947 | Alabama | No Tournament | ||
1948 | Mississippi State (def. AU, 3–0) | No Tournament | Auburn(1)[5] | Mississippi State (1)[6] |
1949 | Mississippi State (def. UK, 3–1) | No Tournament | Kentucky (1) | Mississippi State (2) |
1950 | Alabama (def. UK, 3–1) | No Tournament | Kentucky (2) | Alabama (1) |
1951 | Tennessee | No Tournament | ||
1952 | Florida (UT ceded series)[3] | No Tournament | Tennessee (1)[3] | Florida (1)[3] |
1953 | Georgia (def. MSU, 2–0) | No Tournament | Georgia (1) | Mississippi State (3) |
1954 | Georgia (def. UM, 2–1) | No Tournament | Georgia (2) | Ole Miss (1) |
1955 | Alabama (def. UGA, 2–1) | No Tournament | Georgia (3) | Alabama (2) |
1956 | Florida (def. UM, 2–0) | No Tournament | Florida (2) | Ole Miss (2) |
1957 | Georgia Tech (def. UA, 2–1) | No Tournament | Georgia Tech | Alabama (3) |
1958 | Auburn (def. UA, 2–0) | No Tournament | Auburn (2) | Alabama (4) |
1959 | Ole Miss (def. GT, 2–1) | No Tournament | Georgia Tech | Ole Miss (3) |
1960 | Ole Miss (def. UF, 2–0) | No Tournament | Florida (3) | Ole Miss (4) |
1961 | LSU (def. AU, 2–0) | No Tournament | Auburn (3) | LSU (1) |
1962 | Florida (def. MSU, 2–1) | No Tournament | Florida (4) | Mississippi State (4) |
1963 | Auburn (def. UM, 2–1) | No Tournament | Auburn (4) | Ole Miss (5) |
1964 | Ole Miss (def. AU, 2–1) | No Tournament | Auburn (5) | Ole Miss (6) |
1965 | Mississippi State (def. AU, 2–1) | No Tournament | Auburn (6) | Mississippi State (5) |
1966 | Mississippi State (def. UT, 2–0) | No Tournament | Tennessee (2) | Mississippi State (6) |
1967 | Auburn (def. UM, 2–0) | No Tournament | Auburn (7) | LSU (2), Ole Miss (7) |
1968 | Alabama (def. UF, 2–1) | No Tournament | Florida (5) | Alabama (5), LSU (3) |
1969 | Ole Miss (def. UF, 2–0) | No Tournament | Florida (6) | Ole Miss (8) |
1970 | Mississippi State (def. UT, 2–1) | No Tournament | Tennessee (3) | Mississippi State (7) |
1971 | Mississippi State (def. VU, 2–0) | No Tournament | Vanderbilt (1) | Mississippi State (8) |
1972 | Ole Miss (def. VU, 2–0) | No Tournament | Vanderbilt (2) | Ole Miss (9) |
1973 | Vanderbilt (def. UA, 2–0) | No Tournament | Vanderbilt (3) | Alabama (6) |
1974 | Vanderbilt (def. UA, 2–0) | No Tournament | Vanderbilt (4) | Alabama (6) |
1975 | LSU (def. UG, 2–0) | No Tournament | Georgia (4) | LSU (3) |
1976 | Auburn (def. UK, 2–1) | No Tournament | Kentucky (3), Tennessee (4) | Auburn (8) |
1977 | Ole Miss | Ole Miss | Florida (7) | Ole Miss (10) |
1978 | Mississippi State | Auburn | Florida (8) | Auburn (9) |
1979 | Florida | Mississippi State | Florida (9) | Mississippi State (9) |
1980 | Florida | Vanderbilt | Florida (10) | Auburn (10) |
1981 | Mississippi State, Alabama | Florida | Florida (11) | Alabama (7),[7][8] Mississippi State (10) |
1982 | Ole Miss | Florida | Florida (12) | Ole Miss (11) |
1983 | Mississippi State | Alabama | Florida (13) | Mississippi State (11) |
1984 | Florida | Florida | Florida (14) | Mississippi State (12) |
1985 | Florida | Mississippi State | Florida (15) | LSU (4) |
1986 | LSU | LSU | ||
1987 | Georgia | Mississippi State | ||
1988 | Florida | Florida | ||
1989 | Mississippi State | Auburn | ||
1990 | LSU | LSU, Mississippi State (game called in 4th inning due to inclement weather) | ||
1991 | LSU | Florida | ||
1992 | LSU | LSU | Florida (16) | LSU (5) |
1993 | LSU | Tennessee (East) / LSU (West) | Tennessee (5) | LSU (6) |
1994 | Tennessee | Tennessee (East) / LSU (West) | Tennessee (6) | LSU (7) |
1995 | Tennessee | Tennessee (East) / Alabama (West) | Tennessee (7) | Auburn (11) |
1996 | Alabama, Florida, LSU | Alabama | Florida (17) | Alabama (8), LSU (8) |
1997 | LSU | Alabama | Florida (18), Tennessee (8) | LSU (9) |
1998 | Florida | Auburn | Florida (19) | LSU (10) |
1999 | Arkansas | Alabama | South Carolina (1) | Arkansas (1) |
2000 | South Carolina | LSU | South Carolina (2) | LSU (11) |
2001 | Georgia | Mississippi State | Georgia (5) | LSU (12) |
2002 | South Carolina | Alabama | South Carolina (3) | Alabama (9) |
2003 | LSU | Alabama | South Carolina (4) | LSU (13) |
2004 | Arkansas, Georgia | South Carolina | Georgia (6) | Arkansas (2) |
2005 | Florida | Mississippi State | Florida (20) | LSU (14) , Ole Miss (12) |
2006 | Alabama, Kentucky | Ole Miss | Kentucky (4) | Alabama (10) |
2007 | Vanderbilt | Vanderbilt | Vanderbilt (5) | Arkansas (3) |
2008 | Georgia | LSU | Georgia (7) | LSU (15) |
2009 | LSU, Ole Miss | LSU | Florida (21) | LSU (16), Ole Miss (13) |
2010 | Florida | LSU | Florida (22) | Auburn (12) |
2011 | Florida, South Carolina, Vanderbilt | Florida | Florida (23), South Carolina (5), Vanderbilt (6) | Arkansas (4) |
2012 | LSU | Mississippi State | South Carolina (6) | LSU (17) |
2013 | Vanderbilt | LSU | Vanderbilt (7) | LSU (18) |
2014 | Florida | LSU | Florida (23) | Ole Miss (14) |
2015 | LSU | Florida | Vanderbilt (8) | LSU (19) |
2016 | Mississippi State | Texas A&M | South Carolina (7) | Mississippi State (13) |
2017 | Florida,[9] LSU[10] | LSU[11] | Florida (24)[9] | LSU (20)[11] |
2018 | Florida | Ole Miss | Florida (25) | Ole Miss (15), Arkansas (5) |
2019 | Vanderbilt | Vanderbilt | Vanderbilt (9) | Arkansas (6), Mississippi State (14) |
2021 | Arkansas | Arkansas | Tennessee (9) | Arkansas (7) |
2022 | Tennessee | Tennessee | Tennessee (10) | Texas A&M (1) |
2023 | Florida | Vanderbilt | Florida (26) | Arkansas (7) |
2024 | Tennessee | Tennessee | Tennessee (1) | Arkansas (2) |
Men's basketball
[edit]All current and future SEC members play men's basketball.
Although this article lists both regular-season and tournament champions, the SEC has awarded its official men's basketball championship based solely on regular-season record since the 1950–51 season, whether or not the tournament existed at a given time. The tournament, however, does determine the SEC's automatic berth in the NCAA tournament.[12]
Current Members | ||||
School | Last SEC Reg. Season Title | Number of SEC Reg. Season Titles | Last SEC Tourney Title | Number of SEC Tourney Titles |
Kentucky | 2020 | 49 (+1 vacated) | 2018 | 31 (+1 vacated) |
Tennessee | 2024 | 11 | 2022 | 5 |
LSU | 2019 | 11 | 1980 | 1 |
Alabama | 2023 | 9 | 2023 | 8 |
Florida | 2014 | 7 | 2014 | 4 |
Mississippi State | 2004 | 6 | 2009 | 3 |
Auburn | 2022 | 5 | 2024 | 3 |
Vanderbilt | 1993 | 3 | 2012 | 2 |
Arkansas | 1994 | 2 | 2000 | 1 |
Georgia | 1990 | 1 | 2008 | 2 |
Texas A&M | 2016 | 1 | Never | 0 |
South Carolina | 1997 | 1 | Never | 0 |
Ole Miss | Never | 0 | 2013 | 2 |
Missouri | Never | 0 | Never | 0 |
Former Members | ||||
Georgia Tech | 1944 | 2 | 1938 | 1 |
Tulane | 1944 | 1 | Never | 0 |
Sewanee | Never | 0 | Never | 0 |
The SEC Tournament determined the overall SEC Champion from 1933-34 and 1936-50 | ||||
Last team to win regular season & tournament in same year: Alabama, 2023 |
Champions
[edit]Official SEC champions in bold.
Year | Regular-season champion(s) | Tournament champion |
---|---|---|
1933 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1934 | Kentucky, Alabama | Alabama |
1935 | Kentucky, LSU | No Tournament |
1936 | Kentucky[13]: 50 | Tennessee |
1937 | Georgia Tech | Kentucky |
1938 | Kentucky | Georgia Tech |
1939 | Alabama | Kentucky |
1940 | Alabama | Kentucky |
1941 | Kentucky,[13]: 50 Tennessee | Tennessee |
1942 | Tennessee,[13]: 50 Kentucky | Kentucky |
1943 | Kentucky,[13]: 50 Tennessee | Tennessee |
1944 | Georgia Tech, Tulane | Kentucky |
1945 | Kentucky, Tennessee[13]: 51 | Kentucky |
1946 | Kentucky, LSU | Kentucky |
1947 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1948 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1949 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1950 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1951 | Kentucky | Vanderbilt |
1952 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1953 | LSU | No Tournament |
1954 | Kentucky, LSU | (Kentucky def. LSU in single-game playoff)[14] |
1955 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1956 | Alabama | No Tournament |
1957 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1958 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1959 | Mississippi State | No Tournament |
1960 | Auburn | No Tournament |
1961 | Mississippi State | (Kentucky def. VU in single-game playoff)[15] |
1962 | Kentucky, Mississippi State | No Tournament |
1963 | Mississippi State | No Tournament |
1964 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1965 | Vanderbilt | No Tournament |
1966 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1967 | Tennessee | No Tournament |
1968 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1969 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1970 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1971 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1972 | Kentucky, Tennessee | No Tournament |
1973 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1974 | Alabama, Vanderbilt | No Tournament |
1975 | Alabama, Kentucky | No Tournament |
1976 | Alabama | No Tournament |
1977 | Kentucky, Tennessee | No Tournament |
1978 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
1979 | LSU | Tennessee |
1980 | Kentucky | LSU |
1981 | LSU | Ole Miss |
1982 | Kentucky, Tennessee | Alabama |
1983 | Kentucky | Georgia |
1984 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1985 | LSU | Auburn |
1986 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1987 | Alabama | Alabama |
1988 | Kentucky (vacated) | Kentucky (vacated) |
1989 | Florida | Alabama |
1990 | Georgia | Alabama |
1991 | LSU, Mississippi State | Alabama |
1992 | Arkansas | Kentucky |
1993 | Vanderbilt | Kentucky |
1994 | Arkansas | Kentucky |
1995 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1996 | Kentucky | Mississippi State |
1997 | South Carolina | Kentucky |
1998 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1999 | Auburn | Kentucky |
2000 | Florida, Kentucky, LSU, Tennessee | Arkansas |
2001 | Florida, Kentucky | Kentucky |
2002 | Alabama | Mississippi State |
2003 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
2004 | Mississippi State | Kentucky |
2005 | Kentucky | Florida |
2006 | LSU | Florida |
2007 | Florida | Florida |
2008 | Tennessee | Georgia |
2009 | LSU | Mississippi State |
2010 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
2011 | Florida | Kentucky |
2012 | Kentucky | Vanderbilt |
2013 | Florida | Ole Miss |
2014 | Florida | Florida |
2015 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
2016 | Kentucky, Texas A&M | Kentucky |
2017 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
2018 | Auburn, Tennessee | Kentucky |
2019 | LSU | Auburn |
2020 | Kentucky | Tournament Canceled |
2021 | Alabama | Alabama |
2022 | Auburn | Tennessee |
2023 | Alabama | Alabama |
2024 | Tennessee | Auburn |
Division champions (1992–2011)
[edit]When the SEC expanded to 12 schools with the addition of South Carolina and Arkansas for the 1992 season, the conference divided its basketball teams into separate divisions, East and West, just like for football. In June 2011, the SEC voted to eliminate divisions in basketball.[16]
Year | East Champion(s) | West Champion(s) |
---|---|---|
1992 | Kentucky | Arkansas |
1993 | Vanderbilt | Arkansas |
1994 | Florida, Kentucky | Arkansas |
1995 | Kentucky | Arkansas, Mississippi State |
1996 | Kentucky | Mississippi State |
1997 | South Carolina | Ole Miss |
1998 | Kentucky | Ole Miss |
1999 | Tennessee | Auburn |
2000 | Florida, Kentucky, Tennessee | LSU |
2001 | Florida, Kentucky | Ole Miss |
2002 | Florida, Georgia, Kentucky | Alabama |
2003 | Kentucky | Mississippi State |
2004 | Kentucky | Mississippi State |
2005 | Kentucky | Alabama, LSU |
2006 | Tennessee | LSU |
2007 | Florida | Mississippi State, Ole Miss |
2008 | Tennessee | Mississippi State |
2009 | South Carolina, Tennessee | LSU |
2010 | Kentucky | Mississippi State, Ole Miss |
2011 | Florida | Alabama |
Women's basketball
[edit]All current and future members play women's basketball.
Although the SEC began sponsoring women's basketball competition in the 1979–80 season, it was not fully integrated into the conference until the 1982–83 season, which was the first in which each team played the same number of conference games. Also, although this article lists both regular-season and tournament champions, the SEC has officially awarded its conference title based solely on the regular-season standings since the 1985–86 season. From 1980 to 1985, the official SEC champion was the tournament winner, but the tournament now only determines the recipient of the SEC's automatic berth in the NCAA tournament.[17]
Champions
[edit]Year | Regular-season champion(s) | Tournament champion |
---|---|---|
1980 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1981 | Auburn | Auburn |
1982 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1983 | Georgia | Georgia |
1984 | Georgia | Georgia |
1985 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1986 | Georgia | Georgia |
1987 | Auburn | Auburn |
1988 | Auburn | Tennessee |
1989 | Auburn | Tennessee |
1990 | Tennessee | Auburn |
1991 | Georgia | LSU |
1992 | Ole Miss | Tennessee |
1993 | Tennessee | Vanderbilt |
1994 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1995 | Tennessee | Vanderbilt |
1996 | Georgia | Tennessee |
1997 | Georgia | Auburn |
1998 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1999 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
2000 | Georgia | Tennessee |
Tennessee | ||
2001 | Tennessee | Georgia |
2002 | Tennessee | Vanderbilt |
2003 | Tennessee | LSU |
2004 | Tennessee | Vanderbilt |
2005 | LSU | Tennessee |
2006 | LSU | Tennessee |
2007 | Tennessee | Vanderbilt |
2008 | LSU | Tennessee |
2009 | Auburn | Vanderbilt |
2010 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
2011 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
2012 | Kentucky | Tennessee |
2013 | Tennessee | Texas A&M |
2014 | South Carolina | Tennessee |
2015 | South Carolina | South Carolina |
Tennessee | ||
2016 | South Carolina | South Carolina |
2017 | South Carolina | South Carolina |
2018 | Mississippi State | South Carolina |
2019 | Mississippi State | Mississippi State |
2020 | South Carolina | South Carolina |
2021 | Texas A&M | South Carolina |
2022 | South Carolina | Kentucky |
2023 | South Carolina | South Carolina |
2024 | South Carolina | South Carolina |
Women's basketball summary
[edit]Current members | |||||
School | Last SEC reg. season title | Number of SEC reg. season titles | Last SEC tourney title | Number of SEC tourney titles | Number of total SEC titles |
Tennessee | 2015 | 18 | 2014 | 17 | 35 |
South Carolina | 2024 | 8 | 2024 | 8 | 16 |
Georgia | 2000 | 7 | 2001 | 4 | 11 |
Auburn | 2009 | 5 | 1997 | 4 | 9 |
Vanderbilt | never | 0 | 2009 | 6 | 6 |
LSU | 2006 | 3 | 2003 | 2 | 5 |
Kentucky | 2012 | 2 | 2022 | 2 | 4 |
Mississippi State | 2019 | 2 | 2019 | 1 | 3 |
Texas A&M | 2021 | 1 | 2013 | 1 | 2 |
Ole Miss | 1992 | 1 | never | 0 | 1 |
Alabama | never | 0 | never | 0 | 0 |
Arkansas | never | 0 | never | 0 | 0 |
Florida | never | 0 | never | 0 | 0 |
Missouri | never | 0 | never | 0 | 0 |
Last team to win regular season & tournament in same year: South Carolina, 2024 |
Cross country
[edit]All current and future SEC members participate in men's and women's cross country except South Carolina, which only fields a women's team.
Current Members (Men) | ||||
School | Last Men's SEC Title | Number of Men's SEC Titles | ||
Arkansas | 2023 | 28 | ||
Tennessee | 1990 | 25 | ||
Auburn | 1980 | 6 | ||
Mississippi State | 1962 | 5 | ||
Alabama | 2022 | 4 | ||
Kentucky | 1988 | 4 | ||
Florida | 1987 | 3 | ||
Ole Miss | 2019 | 2 | ||
Georgia | never | 0 | ||
LSU | never | 0 | ||
Missouri | never | 0 | ||
Texas A&M | never | 0 | ||
Vanderbilt | never | 0 | ||
Former Members (Men) | ||||
Georgia Tech | 1954 | 10 | ||
Current Members (Women) | ||||
School | Last Women's SEC Title | Number of Women's SEC Titles | ||
Arkansas | 2021 | 22 | ||
Florida | 2023 | 7 | ||
Tennessee | 2005 | 5 | ||
Alabama | 2022 | 3 | ||
Kentucky | 1989 | 3 | ||
Vanderbilt | 2011 | 1 | ||
Auburn | never | 0 | ||
Georgia | never | 0 | ||
LSU | never | 0 | ||
Mississippi State | never | 0 | ||
Missouri | never | 0 | ||
Ole Miss | never | 0 | ||
South Carolina | never | 0 | ||
Texas A&M | never | 0 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Men's Champion | Women's Champion |
---|---|---|
1935 | Georgia Tech | |
1936 | Georgia Tech | |
1937 | Georgia Tech | |
1938 | Georgia Tech | |
1939 | Georgia Tech | |
1940 | Georgia Tech | |
1941 | Mississippi State | |
1942 | Georgia Tech | |
1946 | Auburn | |
1947 | Georgia Tech | |
1948 | Auburn | |
1949 | Tennessee | |
1950 | Tennessee | |
1951 | Tennessee | |
1952 | Tennessee | |
1953 | Georgia Tech | |
1954 | Georgia Tech | |
1955 | Auburn | |
Florida | ||
1956 | Tennessee | |
1957 | Mississippi State | |
1958 | Kentucky | |
1959 | Kentucky | |
1960 | Mississippi State | |
1961 | Mississippi State | |
1962 | Mississippi State | |
1963 | Tennessee | |
1964 | Auburn | |
1965 | Tennessee | |
1966 | Tennessee | |
1967 | Tennessee | |
1968 | Tennessee | |
1969 | Tennessee | |
1970 | Kentucky | |
1971 | Tennessee | |
1972 | Tennessee | |
1973 | Alabama | |
1974 | Tennessee | |
1975 | Tennessee | |
1976 | Tennessee | |
1977 | Tennessee | |
1978 | Tennessee | |
1979 | Auburn | |
1980 | Auburn | |
1981 | Tennessee | |
1982 | Tennessee | |
1983 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1984 | Tennessee | Florida |
1985 | Tennessee | Kentucky |
1986 | Florida | Alabama |
1987 | Florida | Alabama |
1988 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1989 | Tennessee | Kentucky |
1990 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1991 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
1992 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
1993 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
1994 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
1995 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
1996 | Arkansas | Florida |
1997 | Arkansas | Florida |
1998 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
1999 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2000 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2001 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2002 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2003 | Arkansas | Tennessee |
2004 | Arkansas | Tennessee |
2005 | Arkansas | Tennessee |
2006 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2007 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2008 | Alabama | Arkansas |
2009 | Alabama | Florida |
2010 | Arkansas | Florida |
2011 | Arkansas | Vanderbilt |
2012 | Arkansas | Florida |
2013 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2014 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2015 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2016 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2017 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2018 | Ole Miss | Arkansas |
2019 | Ole Miss | Arkansas |
2020 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2021 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2022 | Alabama | Alabama |
2023 | Arkansas | Florida |
Equestrian
[edit]Four SEC schools compete in Women's Equestrian: Auburn, Georgia, South Carolina and Texas A&M. The first conference championship was contested in 2013.
Current Members | ||||
School | Last Women's SEC Title | Number of Women's SEC Titles | ||
Auburn | 2024 | 7 | ||
Georgia | 2018 | 3 | ||
South Carolina | 2014 | 2 | ||
Texas A&M | never | 0 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Champion |
---|---|
2013 | South Carolina |
2014 | South Carolina |
2015 | Georgia |
2016 | Auburn |
2017 | Georgia |
2018 | Georgia |
2019 | Auburn |
2020 | Auburn |
2021 | Auburn |
2022 | Auburn |
2023 | Auburn |
2024 | Auburn |
Football
[edit]All current and future SEC schools play football.
Champions
[edit]Current Members | |||
School | Last SEC Title | Number of SEC Titles | Number of Divisional Titles |
Alabama | 2023 | 30 | 16 |
Georgia | 2022 | 14 | 13 |
Tennessee | 1998 | 13 | 6 |
LSU | 2019 | 12 | 10 |
Florida | 2008 | 8 (+1 vacated) | 15 |
Auburn | 2013 | 8 | 6 |
Ole Miss | 1963 | 6 | 0 |
Kentucky | 1976 | 2 | 0 |
Mississippi State | 1941 | 1 | 1 |
Arkansas | Never | 0 | 3 |
Missouri | Never | 0 | 2 |
South Carolina | Never | 0 | 1 |
Texas A&M | Never | 0 | 0 |
Vanderbilt | Never | 0 | 0 |
Former Members | |||
Georgia Tech | 1952 | 5 | N/A |
Tulane | 1949 | 3 | N/A |
Sewanee | Never | 0 | N/A |
Pre-championship game era (1933–1991)
[edit]Year | Team(s) | Record(s) |
---|---|---|
1933 | Alabama | 5–0–1 |
1934 | Alabama Tulane |
7–0 8–0 |
1935 | LSU | 5–0 |
1936 | LSU | 6–0 |
1937 | Alabama | 6–0 |
1938 | Tennessee | 7–0 |
1939 | Georgia Tech Tennessee Tulane |
6–0 6–0 5–0 |
1940 | Tennessee | 5–0 |
1941 | Mississippi State | 4–0–1 |
1942 | Georgia | 6–1 |
1943 | Georgia Tech | 3–0 |
1944 | Georgia Tech | 4–0 |
1945 | Alabama | 6–0 |
1946 | Georgia Tennessee |
5–0 5–0 |
1947 | Ole Miss | 6–1 |
1948 | Georgia | 6–0 |
1949 | Tulane | 5–1 |
1950 | Kentucky | 5–1 |
1951 | Georgia Tech Tennessee |
7–0 5–0 |
1952 | Georgia Tech | 7–0 |
1953 | Alabama | 4–0–3 |
1954 | Ole Miss | 5–0 |
1955 | Ole Miss | 5–1 |
1956 | Tennessee | 6–0 |
1957 | Auburn | 7–0 |
1958 | LSU | 6–0 |
1959 | Georgia | 7–0 |
1960 | Ole Miss | 5–0–1 |
1961 | Alabama LSU |
7–0 6–0 |
1962 | Ole Miss | 6–0 |
1963 | Ole Miss | 5–0–1 |
1964 | Alabama | 8–0 |
1965 | Alabama | 6–1–1 |
1966 | Alabama Georgia |
6–0 5–0 |
1967 | Tennessee | 6–0 |
1968 | Georgia | 5–0–1 |
1969 | Tennessee | 5–1 |
1970 | LSU | 5–0 |
1971 | Alabama | 7–0 |
1972 | Alabama | 7–1 |
1973 | Alabama | 8–0 |
1974 | Alabama | 6–0 |
1975 | Alabama | 6–0 |
1976 | Georgia Kentucky |
5–1 5–1 |
1977 | Alabama | 7–0 |
1978 | Alabama | 6–0 |
1979 | Alabama | 6–0 |
1980 | Georgia | 6–0 |
1981 | Alabama Georgia |
6–0 6–0 |
1982 | Georgia | 6–0 |
1983 | Auburn | 6–0 |
1984 | Florida (vacated) | 5–0–1 |
1985 | Tennessee | 5–1 |
1986 | LSU | 5–1 |
1987 | Auburn | 5–0–1 |
1988 | Auburn | 6–1 |
1989 | Alabama Auburn Tennessee |
6–1 6–1 6–1 |
1990 | Tennessee | 5–1–1 |
1991 | Florida | 7–0 |
Championship game era (1992–present)
[edit]Year | Winning team | Record | Score | Losing team | Record |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1992 | Alabama W | 8–0 | 28–21 | Florida E | 6–2 |
1993 | Florida E | 7–1 | 28–13 | Alabama W | 5–2–1 |
1994 | Florida E | 7–1 | 24–23 | Alabama W | 8–0 |
1995 | Florida E | 8–0 | 34–3 | Arkansas W | 6–2 |
1996 | Florida E | 8–0 | 45–30 | Alabama W | 6–2 |
1997 | Tennessee E | 7–1 | 30–29 | Auburn W | 6–2 |
1998 | Tennessee E | 8–0 | 24–14 | Mississippi State W | 6–2 |
1999 | Alabama W | 7–1 | 34–7 | Florida E | 7–1 |
2000 | Florida E | 7–1 | 28–6 | Auburn W | 6–2 |
2001 | LSU W | 5–3 | 31–20 | Tennessee E | 7–1 |
2002 | Georgia E | 7–1 | 30–3 | Arkansas W | 5–3 |
2003 | LSU W | 7–1 | 34–13 | Georgia E | 6–2 |
2004 | Auburn W | 8–0 | 38–28 | Tennessee E | 7–1 |
2005 | Georgia E | 6–2 | 34–14 | LSU W | 7–1 |
2006 | Florida E | 7–1 | 38–28 | Arkansas W | 7–1 |
2007 | LSU W | 6–2 | 21–14 | Tennessee E | 6–2 |
2008 | Florida E | 7–1 | 31–20 | Alabama W | 8–0 |
2009 | Alabama W | 8–0 | 32–13 | Florida E | 8–0 |
2010 | Auburn W | 8–0 | 56–17 | South Carolina E | 5–3 |
2011 | LSU W | 8–0 | 42–10 | Georgia E | 7–1 |
2012 | Alabama W | 7–1 | 32–28 | Georgia E | 7–1 |
2013 | Auburn W | 7–1 | 59–42 | Missouri E | 7–1 |
2014 | Alabama W | 7–1 | 42–13 | Missouri E | 7–1 |
2015 | Alabama W | 7–1 | 29–15 | Florida E | 7–1 |
2016 | Alabama W | 8–0 | 54–16 | Florida E | 6–2 |
2017 | Georgia E | 7–1 | 28–7 | Auburn W | 7–1 |
2018 | Alabama W | 8–0 | 35–28 | Georgia E | 7–1 |
2019 | LSU W | 8–0 | 37–10 | Georgia E | 7–1 |
2020 | Alabama W | 10–0 | 52–46 | Florida E | 8–2 |
2021 | Alabama W | 7–1 | 41–24 | Georgia E | 8–0 |
2022 | Georgia E | 8-0 | 50–30 | LSU W | 6-2 |
2023 | Alabama W | 8-0 | 27-24 | Georgia E | 8-0 |
Divisional champions
[edit]From 1992 through 2023, divisional champions were crowned. Occasionally, a tie between two or more teams occurred, requiring a tiebreaker. All teams involved in the tiebreaker were considered co-divisional champions, and the winner of the tiebreaker was the division's representative to the championship game. The 2023 season was the last for the divisional format. All divisional champions and co-champions are listed below.
Year | East Division champion(s) | West Division champion(s) |
---|---|---|
1992 | Florida*, Georgia | Alabama |
1993 | Florida | Alabama† |
1994 | Florida | Alabama |
1995 | Florida | Arkansas |
1996 | Florida | Alabama*, LSU |
1997 | Tennessee | Auburn*, LSU |
1998 | Tennessee | Mississippi State*, Arkansas |
1999 | Florida | Alabama |
2000 | Florida | Auburn |
2001 | Tennessee | LSU*, Auburn |
2002 | Georgia | Arkansas*‡, Auburn, LSU |
2003 | Georgia*, Florida, Tennessee | LSU*, Mississippi |
2004 | Tennessee | Auburn |
2005 | Georgia | LSU*, Auburn |
2006 | Florida | Arkansas |
2007 | Tennessee*, Georgia | LSU |
2008 | Florida | Alabama |
2009 | Florida | Alabama |
2010 | South Carolina | Auburn |
2011 | Georgia | LSU |
2012 | Georgia*, Florida | Alabama |
2013 | Missouri | Auburn*, Alabama |
2014 | Missouri | Alabama |
2015 | Florida | Alabama |
2016 | Florida | Alabama |
2017 | Georgia | Auburn*, Alabama |
2018 | Georgia[18] | Alabama[18] |
2019 | Georgia | LSU |
2020 | Florida | Alabama |
2021 | Georgia | Alabama |
2022 | Georgia | LSU*, Alabama |
2023 | Georgia | Alabama |
* denotes tie-break winner and subsequent division representative to the SEC championship game.
† in 1993 Auburn finished first in the West standings but was ineligible due to NCAA probation and postseason ban.
‡ in 2002 Alabama finished first in the West standings but was ineligible due to NCAA probation and postseason ban.
Southern Conference football champions
[edit]The Southern Conference was an immediate predecessor to the SEC, with all thirteen charter SEC schools having been members before leaving to form the SEC after the 1932 season.
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association
[edit]The Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA) was a predecessor to the Southern Conference, with every current, former, and future member of the SEC having been members at some point except Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma.
Golf
[edit]All current and future SEC schools play both men's and women's golf.
Current Members (Men) | ||||
School | Last Men's SEC Title | Number of Men's SEC Titles | ||
Georgia | 2016 | 29 | ||
Florida | 2023 | 16 | ||
LSU | 2015 | 16 | ||
Alabama | 2014 | 5 | ||
Auburn | 2024 | 5 | ||
Tennessee | 2007 | 3 | ||
Vanderbilt | 2022 | 3 | ||
Mississippi State | 1997 | 2 | ||
Arkansas | 1995 | 1 | ||
Kentucky | 2005 | 1 | ||
Ole Miss | 1984 | 1 | ||
Missouri | never | 0 | ||
South Carolina | never | 0 | ||
Texas A&M | never | 0 | ||
Former Members (Men) | ||||
Georgia Tech | 1949 | 1 | ||
Current Members (Women) | ||||
School | Last Women's SEC Title | Number of Women's SEC Titles | ||
Georgia | 2007 | 11 | ||
Auburn | 2021 | 10 | ||
Florida | 2017 | 9 | ||
Alabama | 2016 | 3 | ||
LSU | 2022 | 2 | ||
Texas A&M | 2023 | 2 | ||
Vanderbilt | 2014 | 2 | ||
Arkansas | 2018 | 1 | ||
Mississippi State | 2024 | 1 | ||
South Carolina | 2002 | 1 | ||
Kentucky | never | 0 | ||
Missouri | never | 0 | ||
Ole Miss | never | 0 | ||
Tennessee | never | 0 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Men's Champion | Women's Champion |
---|---|---|
1937 | LSU | |
1938 | LSU | |
1939 | LSU | |
1940 | LSU | |
1941 | Georgia | |
1942 | LSU | |
1943-45 | No Tournament | |
1946 | LSU | |
1947 | LSU | |
1948 | LSU | |
1949 | Georgia Tech | |
1950 | Georgia | |
1951 | Georgia | |
1952 | Georgia | |
1953 | LSU | |
1954 | LSU | |
1955 | Florida | |
1956 | Florida | |
1957 | Georgia | |
1958 | Georgia | |
1959 | Georgia | |
1960 | LSU | |
1961 | Georgia | |
1962 | Georgia | |
1963 | Georgia | |
1964 | Georgia | |
1965 | Georgia | |
1966 | LSU | |
1967 | LSU | |
1968 | Florida | |
1969 | Georgia | |
1970 | Georgia | |
1971 | Georgia | |
1972 | Georgia | |
1973 | Florida | |
1974 | Florida | |
1975 | Florida | |
1976 | Auburn | |
1977 | Georgia | |
1978 | Georgia | |
1979 | Alabama | |
1980 | Tennessee | |
1981 | Auburn | Florida |
1982 | Georgia | Florida |
1983 | Georgia | Georgia |
1984 | Ole Miss | Florida |
1985 | Florida | Georgia |
1986 | LSU | Florida |
1987 | LSU | Florida |
1988 | Georgia | Georgia |
1989 | Florida | Auburn |
1990 | Tennessee | Georgia |
1991 | Florida | Florida |
1992 | Florida | LSU |
1993 | Florida | Georgia |
1994 | Florida | Georgia |
1995 | Arkansas | Florida |
1996 | Mississippi State | Auburn |
1997 | Mississippi State | Georgia |
1998 | Georgia | Georgia |
1999 | Florida | Georgia |
2000 | Georgia | Auburn |
2001 | Georgia | Georgia |
2002 | Auburn | South Carolina |
2003 | Florida | Auburn |
2004 | Georgia | Vanderbilt |
2005 | Kentucky | Auburn |
2006 | Georgia | Auburn |
2007 | Tennessee | Georgia |
2008 | Alabama | Florida |
2009 | Georgia | Auburn |
2010 | Georgia | Alabama |
2011 | Florida | Auburn |
2012 | Alabama | Alabama |
2013 | Alabama | Alabama |
2014 | Alabama | Vanderbilt |
2015 | LSU | Texas A&M |
2016 | Georgia | Alabama |
2017 | Vanderbilt | Florida |
2018 | Auburn | Arkansas |
2019 | Arkansas | Ole Miss |
2020 | Season canceled due to COVID-19 | |
2021 | Vanderbilt | Auburn |
2022 | Vanderbilt | LSU |
2023 | Florida | Texas A&M |
2024 | Auburn | Mississippi State |
Women's gymnastics
[edit]Eight SEC schools participate in women's gymnastics: Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, and Missouri. Future member Oklahoma also sponsors the sport.
In 2017, the SEC began recognizing a regular season champion in addition to the winner of the SEC championship meet. LSU claimed the first regular season title.[19]
Current Members | |||||
School | Last SEC championship meet title | Number of SEC championship meet titles | Last SEC regular-season title | Number of regular-season titles | Total SEC championships |
Florida | 2023 | 12 | 2024 | 6 | 18 |
Georgia | 2008 | 16 | never | 0 | 16 |
Alabama | 2021 | 10 | never | 0 | 10 |
LSU | 2024 | 5 | 2018 | 2 | 7 |
Arkansas | never | 0 | never | 0 | 0 |
Auburn | never | 0 | never | 0 | 0 |
Kentucky | never | 0 | never | 0 | 0 |
Missouri | never | 0 | never | 0 | 0 |
Last team to win SEC championship and national championship in same year: Florida, 2023 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Regular-season champion | Championship meet (overall) champion |
---|---|---|
1981 | LSU | |
1982 | Florida | |
1983 | Florida | |
1984 | Florida | |
1985 | Florida | |
1986 | Georgia | |
1987 | Georgia | |
1988 | Alabama | |
1989 | Florida | |
1990 | Alabama | |
1991 | Georgia | |
1992 | Georgia | |
1993 | Georgia | |
1994 | Georgia | |
1995 | Alabama | |
1996 | Georgia | |
1997 | Georgia | |
1998 | Georgia | |
1999 | Georgia | |
2000 | Alabama | |
2001 | Georgia | |
2002 | Georgia | |
2003 | Alabama | |
2004 | Georgia | |
2005 | Georgia | |
2006 | Georgia | |
2007 | Florida | |
2008 | Georgia | |
2009 | Alabama | |
2010 | Florida | |
2011 | Alabama | |
2012 | Florida | |
2013 | Florida | |
2014 | Alabama | |
2015 | Alabama | |
2016 | Florida | |
2017 | LSU | LSU |
2018 | LSU | LSU |
2019 | Florida | LSU |
2020 | Florida | N/A |
2021 | Florida | Alabama |
2022 | Florida | Florida |
2023 | Florida | Florida |
2024 | Florida | LSU |
Indoor track and field
[edit]All current and future SEC schools participate in both men's and women's indoor track & field except Vanderbilt, which once sponsored the sport for both sexes but now sponsors it only for women.
Current Members (Men) | ||||
School | Last Men's SEC Title | Number of Men's SEC Titles | ||
Arkansas | 2024 | 27 | ||
Tennessee | 1996 | 18 | ||
Florida | 2019 | 8 | ||
Alabama | 2017 | 6 | ||
LSU | 1990 | 4 | ||
Auburn | 1980 | 4 | ||
Kentucky | 1960 | 1 | ||
Georgia | never | 0 | ||
Mississippi State | never | 0 | ||
Missouri | never | 0 | ||
Ole Miss | never | 0 | ||
South Carolina | never | 0 | ||
Texas A&M | never | 0 | ||
Vanderbilt | never | 0 | ||
Current Members (Women) | ||||
School | Last Women's SEC Title | Number of Women's SEC Titles | ||
Arkansas | 2024 | 14 | ||
LSU | 2011 | 12 | ||
Florida | 2014 | 8 | ||
Tennessee | 2009 | 4 | ||
Alabama | 1994 | 1 (+1 vacated) | ||
Georgia | 2006 | 1 | ||
Auburn | never | 0 | ||
Kentucky | never | 0 | ||
Mississippi State | never | 0 | ||
Missouri | never | 0 | ||
Ole Miss | never | 0 | ||
South Carolina | never | 0 | ||
Texas A&M | never | 0 | ||
Vanderbilt | never | 0 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Men's champion | Women's champion |
---|---|---|
1957 | LSU | |
1958 | Alabama | |
1959 | Alabama | |
1960 | Kentucky | |
1961 | Alabama | |
1962 | Alabama | |
1963 | LSU | |
1964 | Tennessee | |
1965 | Tennessee | |
1966 | Tennessee | |
1967 | Tennessee | |
1968 | Tennessee | |
1969 | Tennessee | |
1970 | Tennessee | |
1971 | Tennessee | |
1972 | Alabama | |
1973 | Tennessee | |
1974 | Tennessee | |
1975 | Florida | |
1976 | Florida | |
1977 | Auburn | |
1978 | Auburn | |
1979 | Auburn | |
1980 | Auburn | |
1981 | Tennessee | |
1982 | Tennessee | |
1983 | Tennessee | |
1984 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1985 | Tennessee | LSU |
1986 | Tennessee | Alabama (vacated) |
1987 | Florida | LSU |
1988 | Florida | LSU |
1989 | LSU | LSU |
1990 | LSU | Florida |
1991 | Tennessee | LSU |
1992 | Arkansas | Florida |
1993 | Arkansas | LSU |
1994 | Arkansas | Alabama |
1995 | Arkansas | LSU |
1996 | Tennessee | LSU |
1997 | Arkansas | Florida |
1998 | Arkansas | LSU |
1999 | Arkansas | LSU |
2000 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2001 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2002 | Arkansas | Florida |
2003 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2004 | Florida | Florida |
2005 | Arkansas | Tennessee |
2006 | Arkansas | Georgia |
2007 | Arkansas | Tennessee |
2008 | Arkansas | LSU |
2009 | Arkansas | Tennessee |
2010 | Arkansas | Florida |
2011 | Florida | LSU |
2012 | Arkansas | Florida |
2013 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2014 | Arkansas | Florida |
2015 | Florida | Arkansas |
2016 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2017 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2018 | Alabama | Arkansas |
2019 | Florida | Arkansas |
2020 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2021 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2022 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2023 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2024 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
Outdoor track and field
[edit]All current and future SEC schools participate in outdoor track & field for both sexes except for Vanderbilt, which sponsors the sport only for women.
Current Members (Men) | ||||
School | Last Men's SEC Title | Number of Men's SEC Titles | ||
Tennessee | 2007 | 25 | ||
Arkansas | 2024 | 23 | ||
LSU | 2019 | 23 | ||
Florida | 2018 | 6 | ||
Auburn | 1979 | 4 | ||
Alabama | 1980 | 3 | ||
Texas A&M | 2017 | 2 | ||
Georgia | 1937 | 1 | ||
Mississippi State | 1962 | 1 | ||
Kentucky | never | 0 | ||
Missouri | never | 0 | ||
Ole Miss | never | 0 | ||
South Carolina | never | 0 | ||
Former Members (Men) | ||||
Georgia Tech | 1949 | 3 | ||
Current Members (Women) | ||||
School | Last Women's SEC Title | Number of Women's SEC Titles | ||
LSU | 2024 | 13 | ||
Arkansas | 2023 | 10 | ||
Florida | 2022 | 7 | ||
Tennessee | 1984 | 4 | ||
South Carolina | 2005 | 3 | ||
Alabama | 1994 | 2 | ||
Georgia | 2006 | 2 | ||
Texas A&M | 2013 | 1 | ||
Auburn | never | 0 | ||
Kentucky | never | 0 | ||
Mississippi State | never | 0 | ||
Missouri | never | 0 | ||
Ole Miss | never | 0 | ||
Vanderbilt | never | 0 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Men's Champion | Women's Champion |
---|---|---|
1933 | LSU | |
1934 | LSU | |
1935 | LSU | |
1936 | LSU | |
1937 | Georgia | |
1938 | LSU | |
1939 | LSU | |
1940 | LSU | |
1941 | LSU | |
1942 | LSU | |
1943 | LSU | |
1944 | Georgia Tech | |
1945 | Georgia Tech | |
1946 | LSU | |
1947 | LSU | |
1948 | LSU | |
1949 | Georgia Tech | |
1950 | Alabama | |
1951 | LSU | |
1952 | Alabama | |
1953 | Florida | |
1954 | Auburn | |
1955 | Auburn | |
1956 | Florida | |
1957 | LSU | |
1958 | LSU | |
1959 | LSU | |
1960 | LSU | |
1961 | Auburn | |
1962 | Mississippi State | |
1963 | LSU | |
1964 | Tennessee | |
1965 | Tennessee | |
1966 | Tennessee | |
1967 | Tennessee | |
1968 | Tennessee | |
1969 | Tennessee | |
1970 | Tennessee | |
1971 | Tennessee | |
1972 | Tennessee | |
1973 | Tennessee | |
1974 | Tennessee | |
1975 | Tennessee | |
1976 | Tennessee | |
1977 | Tennessee | |
1978 | Tennessee | |
1979 | Auburn | |
1980 | Alabama | |
1981 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1982 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1983 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1984 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1985 | Tennessee | LSU |
1986 | Tennessee | Alabama |
1987 | Florida | LSU |
1988 | LSU | LSU |
1989 | LSU | LSU |
1990 | LSU | LSU |
1991 | Tennessee | LSU |
1992 | Arkansas | Florida |
1993 | Arkansas | LSU |
1994 | Arkansas | Alabama |
1995 | Arkansas | Georgia |
1996 | Arkansas | LSU |
1997 | Arkansas | Florida |
1998 | Arkansas | Florida |
1999 | Arkansas | South Carolina |
2000 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2001 | Tennessee | Arkansas |
2002 | Tennessee | South Carolina |
2003 | Arkansas | Florida |
2004 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2005 | Arkansas | South Carolina |
2006 | Arkansas | Georgia |
2007 | Tennessee | LSU |
2008 | Arkansas | LSU |
2009 | Arkansas | Florida |
2010 | Florida | LSU |
2011 | Arkansas | LSU |
2012 | Arkansas | LSU |
2013 | Arkansas | Texas A&M |
2014 | Texas A&M | Arkansas |
2015 | Florida | Arkansas |
2016 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2017 | Texas A&M | Arkansas |
2018 | Florida | Florida |
2019 | LSU | Arkansas |
2020 | Season canceled due to COVID-19 | |
2021 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2022 | Arkansas | Florida |
2023 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2024 | Arkansas | LSU |
Soccer
[edit]All 14 schools play women's soccer, as do future members Oklahoma and Texas. While only women's soccer is sponsored by the SEC, Kentucky and South Carolina both have men's soccer teams in the Sun Belt Conference.
Current Members | ||||
School | Last SEC Reg. Season Title | Number of SEC Reg. Season Titles | Last SEC Tourney Title | Number of SEC Tourney Titles |
Florida | 2015 | 14 | 2016 | 12 |
Tennessee | 2005 | 3 | 2021 | 5 |
Texas A&M | 2020–21 | 3 | 2017 | 3 |
Vanderbilt | 2018 | 3 | 2020–21 | 3 |
South Carolina | 2017 | 3 | 2022 | 3 |
Arkansas | 2023 | 4 | never | 0 |
Kentucky | 1995 | 1 | 2006 | 2 |
Auburn | 2002 | 1 | 2011 | 1 |
Alabama | 2022 | 1 | never | 0 |
LSU | never | 0 | 2018 | 1 |
Georgia | never | 0 | 2023 | 1 |
Ole Miss | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Mississippi State | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Missouri | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Last team to win regular season & tournament in same year: Florida, 2015 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Regular-season champion | Tournament champion |
---|---|---|
1993 | Vanderbilt | Vanderbilt |
1994 | Vanderbilt | Vanderbilt |
1995 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1996 | Florida | Florida |
1997 | Florida | Florida |
1998 | Florida | Florida |
1999 | Florida | Florida |
2000 | Florida | Florida |
2001 | Florida | Florida |
2002 | Auburn | Tennessee |
2003 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
2004 | Tennessee | Florida |
2005 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
2006 | Florida | Kentucky |
2007 | Florida | Florida |
2008 | Florida | Tennessee |
2009 | Florida | South Carolina |
2010 | Florida | Florida |
2011 | South Carolina | Auburn |
2012 | Florida | Florida |
2013 | Florida | Texas A&M |
Texas A&M | ||
2014 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M |
2015 | Florida | Florida |
2016 | South Carolina | Florida |
2017 | South Carolina | Texas A&M |
2018 | Vanderbilt | LSU |
2019 | Arkansas | South Carolina |
2020–21[a] | Arkansas | Vanderbilt |
Texas A&M[b] | ||
2021 | Arkansas | Tennessee |
2022 | Alabama | South Carolina |
2023 | Arkansas | Georgia |
- ^ The SEC played a split soccer season in the COVID-affected 2020–21 school year, holding conference competition during the traditional NCAA soccer season in fall 2020 and non-conference games in spring 2021.
- ^ Arkansas won the West Division title outright, but shared the regular-season title with fellow West Division member Texas A&M.
Other division winners
[edit]1995 - Alabama (West)
1996 - Arkansas (West)
1997 - Alabama (West)
1998 - Alabama (West)
1999 - Mississippi (West)
2000 - Mississippi (West)
2001 - Mississippi State, Auburn (West)
2002 - Tennessee (East)
2003 - Auburn (West)
2004 - Auburn (West)
2005 - Mississippi (West)
2006 - Auburn (West)
2007 - LSU (West)
2008 - Auburn, LSU (West)
2009 - LSU (West)
2010 - Auburn (West)
2011 - LSU (West)
2012 - Texas A&M (West)
2019 – Vanderbilt (East)
2020–21 – Tennessee (East)
- Divisional winners discontinued from 2013–2018, and after 2020–21.
Softball
[edit]All current and future SEC schools except Vanderbilt play softball.
Current Members | ||||
School | Last SEC Reg. Season Title | Number of SEC Reg. Season Titles | Last SEC Tourney Title | Number of SEC Tourney Titles |
Florida | 2021 | 9 | 2024 | 6 |
Alabama | 2019 | 6 | 2021 | 6 |
LSU | 2004 | 5 | 2007 | 5 |
Tennessee | 2024 | 3 | 2023 | 3 |
Arkansas | 2022 | 2 | 2022 | 1 |
Georgia | 2005 | 2 | 2014 | 1 |
South Carolina | 1997 | 1 | 2000 | 2 |
Auburn | never | 0 | 2016 | 2 |
Ole Miss | never | 0 | 2017 | 1 |
Kentucky | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Mississippi State | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Missouri | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Texas A&M | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Last team to win regular season & tournament in same year: Tennessee, 2023 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Regular-season champion(s) | Tournament champion |
---|---|---|
1997 | South Carolina | South Carolina |
1998 | Florida | Alabama |
1999 | LSU | LSU |
2000 | LSU | South Carolina |
2001 | LSU | LSU |
2002 | LSU | LSU |
2003 | Georgia | Alabama |
2004 | LSU | LSU |
2005 | Georgia | Alabama |
2006 | Alabama | Tennessee |
2007 | Tennessee | LSU |
2008 | Florida | Florida |
2009 | Florida | Florida |
2010 | Alabama | Alabama |
2011 | Alabama | Tennessee |
2012 | Alabama | Alabama |
2013 | Florida | Florida |
2014 | Alabama | Georgia |
2015 | Florida | Auburn |
2016 | Florida | Auburn |
2017 | Florida | Ole Miss |
2018 | Florida | Florida |
2019 | Alabama | Florida |
2020 | Season canceled due to COVID-19 | |
2021 | Arkansas | Alabama |
Florida | ||
2022 | Arkansas | Arkansas |
2023 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
2024 | Tennessee | Florida |
Other division winners
[edit]1997 - LSU (West)
1998 - LSU (West)
1999 - Tennessee, South Carolina (East)
2000 - Kentucky (East)
2001 - South Carolina (East)
2002 - South Carolina (East)
2003 - Alabama (West)
2004 - Tennessee (East)
2005 - Georgia (East)
2006 - Georgia (East)
2007 - LSU (West)
2007 - Alabama (West)
2008 - Alabama (West)
2009 - Alabama (West)
2010 - Florida (East)
2011 - Florida (East)
2012 - Tennessee (East)
2013 - LSU (West)
- Division winners discontinued in 2014
Swimming and diving
[edit]10 SEC schools participate in men's swimming and diving, and 12 in women's swimming and diving.
The following schools have both men's and women's teams: Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Missouri, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas A&M. Future member Texas also has men's and women's teams.
Arkansas and Vanderbilt sponsor the sport for women only. The two Mississippi schools and future member Oklahoma do not sponsor the sport at all.
Current Members (Men) | ||||
School | Last Men's SEC Title | Number of Men's SEC Titles | ||
Florida | 2024 | 45 | ||
Auburn | 2012 | 18 | ||
Tennessee | 1996 | 10 | ||
Georgia | 1955 | 3 | ||
Alabama | 1987 | 2 | ||
LSU | 1988 | 1 | ||
Kentucky | never | 0 | ||
Missouri | never | 0 | ||
South Carolina | never | 0 | ||
Texas A&M | never | 0 | ||
Former Members (Men) | ||||
Georgia Tech | 1950 | 4 | ||
Current Members (Women's) | ||||
School | Last Women's SEC Title | Number of Women's SEC Titles | ||
Florida | 2024 | 19 | ||
Georgia | 2015 | 12 | ||
Auburn | 2008 | 5 | ||
Texas A&M | 2019 | 4 | ||
Tennessee | 2022 | 2 | ||
Alabama | 1985 | 1 | ||
Kentucky | 2021 | 1 | ||
Arkansas | never | 0 | ||
LSU | never | 0 | ||
South Carolina | never | 0 | ||
Vanderbilt | never | 0 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Men's Champion | Women's Champion |
---|---|---|
1937 | Florida | |
1938 | Florida | |
1939 | Florida | |
1940 | Florida | |
1941 | Florida | |
1942 | Georgia Tech | |
1943-1947 | No Competition Held | |
1948 | Georgia Tech | |
1949 | Georgia Tech | |
1950 | Georgia Tech | |
1951 | Georgia | |
1952 | Georgia | |
1953 | Florida | |
1954 | Florida | |
1955 | Georgia | |
1956 | Florida | |
1957 | Florida | |
1958 | Florida | |
1959 | Florida | |
1960 | Florida | |
1961 | Florida | |
1962 | Florida | |
1963 | Florida | |
1964 | Florida | |
1965 | Florida | |
1966 | Florida | |
1967 | Florida | |
1968 | Florida | |
1969 | Tennessee | |
1970 | Florida | |
1971 | Florida | |
1972 | Tennessee | |
1973 | Tennessee | |
1974 | Tennessee | |
1975 | Tennessee | |
1976 | Tennessee | |
1977 | Tennessee | |
1978 | Tennessee | |
1979 | Florida | |
1980 | Florida | |
1981 | Florida | Florida |
1982 | Alabama | Florida |
1983 | Florida | Florida |
1984 | Florida | Florida |
1985 | Florida | Alabama |
1986 | Florida | Florida |
1987 | Alabama | Florida |
1988 | LSU | Florida |
1989 | Tennessee | Florida |
1990 | Florida | Florida |
1991 | Florida | Florida |
1992 | Florida | Florida |
1993 | Florida | Florida |
1994 | Auburn | Florida |
1995 | Auburn | Florida |
1996 | Tennessee | Florida |
1997 | Auburn | Georgia |
1998 | Auburn | Georgia |
1999 | Auburn | Georgia |
2000 | Auburn | Georgia |
2001 | Auburn | Georgia |
2002 | Auburn | Florida |
2003 | Auburn | Auburn |
2004 | Auburn | Auburn |
2005 | Auburn | Auburn |
2006 | Auburn | Georgia |
2007 | Auburn | Auburn |
2008 | Auburn | Auburn |
2009 | Auburn | Florida |
2010 | Auburn | Georgia |
2011 | Auburn | Georgia |
2012 | Auburn | Georgia |
2013 | Florida | Georgia |
2014 | Florida | Georgia |
2015 | Florida | Georgia |
2016 | Florida | Texas A&M |
2017 | Florida | Texas A&M |
2018 | Florida | Texas A&M |
2019 | Florida | Texas A&M |
2020 | Florida | Tennessee |
2021 | Florida | Kentucky |
2022 | Florida | Tennessee |
2023 | Florida | Florida |
2024 | Florida | Florida |
Men's tennis
[edit]All current and future SEC schools play men's tennis except for Missouri.
From 1953-1989, the SEC Champion was determined by the accumulation of points in an individual flighted tournament (there was not a separate team tournament champion).[20]
In 1990, a team dual match format was instituted for the conference tournament which provided the SEC tournament champion.[20]
From 1990-98, the SEC Champion was determined by a total aggregate points accumulated at the conclusion of the conference tournament: one full point was awarded for each regular-season conference win, one-half point for wins in the first two rounds of the conference tournament, one-half point for receiving a first-round bye in the conference tournament and one full point for a win in the conference tournament semifinals and finals.[20]
For the 1999 season, the same points system was in place with a couple of changes: one full point for first-round bye in the conference tournament and one full point for a win in any round of the conference tournament.[20]
In 2000, the SEC changed the determination of its tennis regular season champion to the team with the best winning percentage in conference regular-season dual matches.[20]
Current Members | ||||
School | Last SEC Reg. Season Title | Number of SEC Reg. Season Titles | Last SEC Tourney Title | Number of SEC Tourney Titles |
Georgia | 2023 | 32 | 2017 | 10 |
Florida | 2022 | 12 | 2022 | 6 |
Tennessee | 2011 | 10 | 2021 | 4 |
LSU | 1999 | 5 | 1999 | 2 |
Mississippi | 2009 | 5 | 2009 | 3 |
Kentucky | 2024 | 3 | 2024 | 3 |
Mississippi State | 1993 | 3 | 2019 | 3 |
Texas A&M | 2018 | 3 | 2015 | 2 |
Auburn | 1984 | 2 | never | 0 |
Alabama | 1976 | 1 | never | 0 |
Vanderbilt | never | 0 | 2003 | 1 |
Arkansas | never | 0 | never | 0 |
South Carolina | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Former Members | ||||
Tulane | 1964 | 18 | DNC | 0 |
Georgia Tech | 1960 | 3 | DNC | 0 |
The SEC Champion was determined by accumulation of individual points at the SEC Tournament from 1953-89 | ||||
Last team to win regular season & tournament in same year: Kentucky, 2024 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Regular-season champion(s) | Tournament champion(s) |
---|---|---|
1938 | Georgia Tech | |
1939 | Tulane | |
1940 | LSU | |
1941 | Tulane | |
1942 | Tulane | |
1943-1945 | No Competition Held | |
1946 | Georgia Tech | |
1947 | Tulane | |
1948 | Tulane | |
1949 | Tulane | |
1950 | Florida | |
1951 | Tennessee | |
Tulane | ||
1952 | Tulane | |
1953 | Tulane | |
1954 | Tulane | |
1955 | Tulane | |
1956 | Tulane | |
1957 | Tulane | |
1958 | Tulane | |
1959 | Tulane | |
1960 | Georgia Tech | |
1961 | Florida | |
1962 | Tulane | |
1963 | Tulane | |
1964 | Tulane | |
1965 | Mississippi State | |
1966 | Tennessee | |
1967 | Mississippi State | |
1968 | Florida | |
1969 | Florida | |
1970 | Tennessee | |
1971 | Georgia | |
1972 | Georgia | |
1973 | Georgia | |
1974 | Georgia | |
1975 | Georgia | |
Florida | ||
1976 | Alabama | |
LSU | ||
1977 | Georgia | |
1978 | Georgia | |
1979 | Georgia | |
1980 | Tennessee | |
1980 | Tennessee | |
1981 | Georgia | |
1982 | Georgia | |
1983 | Auburn | |
1984 | Auburn | |
1985 | Georgia | |
LSU | ||
1986 | Tennessee | |
1987 | Georgia | |
1988 | Georgia | |
1989 | Georgia | |
1990 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1991 | Georgia | Georgia |
1992 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1993 | Georgia | Georgia |
Mississippi State | ||
1994 | Florida | Florida |
1995 | Georgia | Georgia |
1996 | Ole Miss | Mississippi State |
Georgia | ||
1997 | Ole Miss | Ole Miss |
Georgia | ||
1998 | LSU | LSU |
1999 | LSU | LSU |
Georgia | ||
2000 | Florida | Florida |
Tennessee | ||
2001 | Georgia | Georgia |
2002 | Georgia | Tennessee |
2003 | Florida | Vanderbilt |
2004 | Ole Miss | Georgia |
2005 | Ole Miss | Florida |
Florida | ||
2006 | Georgia | Georgia |
2007 | Georgia | Georgia |
2008 | Georgia | Ole Miss |
2009 | Ole Miss | Ole Miss |
2010 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
2011 | Georgia | Florida |
Tennessee | ||
2012 | Kentucky | Georgia |
2013 | Georgia | Georgia |
2014 | Georgia | Texas A&M |
2015 | Georgia | Texas A&M |
Texas A&M | ||
2016 | Georgia | Florida |
2017 | Georgia | Georgia |
Texas A&M | ||
2018 | Texas A&M | Mississippi State |
2019 | Florida | Mississippi State |
2020 | Season canceled due to COVID-19 | |
2021 | Florida | Tennessee |
2022 | Florida | Florida |
2023 | Georgia | Kentucky |
2024 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
Other division winners
[edit]2002 - Ole Miss (West)
2003 - Ole Miss (West)
2004 - Florida (East)
2005 - Florida (East), Ole Miss (West)
2006 - Ole Miss (West)
2007 - Ole Miss (West)
2008 - Ole Miss (West)
2009 - Georgia (East)
2010 - Ole Miss (West)
2011 - Mississippi State (West)
2012 - Mississippi State (West)
2013 - Texas A&M, Ole Miss (West)
- Divisional winners discontinued in 2014
Women's tennis
[edit]All current and future SEC schools play women's tennis.
In 2000, the SEC changed the determination of its tennis champions to the team with the best winning percentage in conference regular-season dual matches (11 matches). Before this, a points system was used in which full- or half-points were awarded for wins during the season as well as during the conference tournament.
Current Members | ||||
School | Last SEC Reg. Season Title | Number of SEC Reg. Season Titles | Last SEC Tourney Title | Number of SEC Tourney Titles |
Florida | 2016 | 30 | 2016 | 19 |
Georgia | 2024 | 12 | 2024 | 10 |
Texas A&M | 2024 | 4 | 2022 | 1 |
Vanderbilt | 2018 | 2 | 2018 | 3 |
Kentucky | 2005 | 1 | never | 0 |
Alabama | 2014 | 1 | never | 0 |
Mississippi | never | 0 | 1999 | 1 |
South Carolina | never | 0 | 2019 | 1 |
Arkansas | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Auburn | never | 0 | never | 0 |
LSU | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Mississippi State | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Missouri | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Tennessee | never | 0 | never | 0 |
The SEC Champion was determined by the accumulation of individual points in the SEC Tournament from 1980-81 and 1984-1989. In 1982-1983, the SEC Champion was determined from dual match play in the SEC tournament From 1990-1999, the SEC Champion was determined by accumulated points in dual matches during the regular season and in the SEC Tournament | ||||
Last team to win regular season & tournament in same year: Georgia, 2024 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Regular-season champion(s) | Tournament champion(s) |
---|---|---|
1980 | Florida | |
1981 | Florida | |
1982 | Florida | |
1983 | Georgia | |
1984 | Florida | |
1985 | Florida | |
1986 | Florida | |
1987 | Florida | |
1988 | Florida | |
1989 | Georgia | |
1990 | Florida | Florida |
Georgia | ||
1991 | Florida | Florida |
1992 | Florida | Florida |
1993 | Florida | Florida |
1994 | Georgia | Georgia |
1995 | Florida | Florida |
1996 | Florida | Florida |
1997 | Florida | Florida |
1998 | Florida | Florida |
1999 | Florida | Ole Miss |
2000 | Georgia | Florida |
2001 | Florida | Georgia |
2002 | Georgia | Florida |
2003 | Florida | Florida |
2004 | Florida | Florida |
2005 | Kentucky | Florida |
2006 | Florida | Florida |
2007 | Florida | Georgia |
Georgia | ||
2008 | Florida | Georgia |
2009 | Georgia | Georgia |
2010 | Florida | Florida |
2011 | Florida | Florida |
2012 | Florida | Florida |
2013 | Florida | Florida |
Georgia | ||
Texas A&M | ||
2014 | Alabama | Georgia |
2015 | Florida | Vanderbilt |
2016 | Florida | Florida |
2017 | Vanderbilt | Vanderbilt |
2018 | Vanderbilt | Vanderbilt |
2019 | Georgia | South Carolina |
2020 | Season canceled due to COVID-19 | |
2021 | Georgia | Georgia |
2022 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M |
2023 | Texas A&M | Georgia |
2024 | Georgia | Georgia |
Texas A&M |
Other division winners
[edit]2002 - Auburn (West)
2003 - Alabama (West)
2004 - LSU (West)
2005 - Mississippi State, Ole Miss (West)
2006 - Alabama (West)
2007 - LSU, Auburn (West)
2008 - Arkansas (West)
2009 - Arkansas (West)
2010 - Ole Miss (West)
2011 - Alabama (West)
2012 - Alabama (West)
2013 - Florida, Georgia (East), Texas A&M (West)
- Divisional winners discontinued in 2014
Volleyball
[edit]Thirteen SEC schools, as well as future members Oklahoma and Texas, play women's volleyball. Vanderbilt played in the first SEC tournament in 1979, but dropped the sport after that season; it will reinstate women's volleyball in 2025. The SEC does not currently sponsor men's volleyball, and no current or future conference member has a varsity men's team.
The SEC Volleyball Tournament was suspended for three seasons after the 2005 season. It was not renewed, but, with the NCAA on the verge of officially adding beach volleyball (then called "sand volleyball") to its Emerging Sports program, the conference's coaches instead sponsored a Commissioner's Cup tournament for that variation of the sport. The tournaments, which were held in mid-April between 2008–10, were won by Georgia, South Carolina, and LSU respectively.
On March 14, 2023, the SEC announced that the women's volleyball tournament will be reinstated in the near future. At the time, the conference had not decided whether the tournament would resume in 2024 (when Oklahoma and Texas join) or 2025 (when Vanderbilt reinstates women's volleyball).[21]
Current Members | ||||
School | Last SEC Reg. Season Title | Number of SEC Reg. Season Titles | Last SEC Tourney Title | Number of SEC Tourney Titles |
Florida | 2022 | 25 | 2005 | 12 |
Kentucky | 2023 | 12 | 1988 | 5 |
LSU | 2009 | 6 | 1991 | 4 |
Tennessee | 2011 | 5 | 2004 | 4 |
Georgia | 1986 | 2 | 1985 | 1 |
Missouri | 2016 | 2 | never | 0 |
Texas A&M | 2015 | 1 | never | 0 |
Arkansas | never | 0 | 1997 | 1 |
Alabama | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Auburn | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Mississippi | never | 0 | never | 0 |
Mississippi State | never | 0 | never | 0 |
South Carolina | never | 0 | never | 0 |
The SEC Tournament determined the overall SEC Champion from 1979-85. It was discontinued after the 2005 season. | ||||
Last team to win regular season & tournament in same year: Florida, 2005 |
Champions
[edit]Year | Regular-season champion(s) | Tournament champion |
---|---|---|
1979 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1980 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1981 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1982 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1983 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1984 | Tennessee | Tennessee |
1985 | Georgia | Georgia |
LSU | ||
1986 | Georgia | LSU |
LSU | ||
1987 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1988 | Kentucky | Kentucky |
1989 | LSU | LSU |
1990 | LSU | LSU |
1991 | Florida | LSU |
LSU | ||
1992 | Florida | Florida |
1993 | Florida | Florida |
1994 | Florida | Florida |
1995 | Florida | Florida |
1996 | Florida | Florida |
1997 | Florida | Arkansas |
1998 | Florida | Florida |
1999 | Florida | Florida |
2000 | Florida | Florida |
2001 | Florida | Florida |
2002 | Florida | Florida |
2003 | Florida | Florida |
2004 | Florida | Tennessee |
Tennessee | ||
2005 | Florida | Florida |
2006 | Florida | No Tournament |
2007 | Florida | No Tournament |
2008 | Florida | No Tournament |
2009 | LSU | No Tournament |
2010 | Florida | No Tournament |
2011 | Tennessee | No Tournament |
2012 | Florida | No Tournament |
2013 | Missouri | No Tournament |
2014 | Florida | No Tournament |
2015 | Texas A&M | No Tournament |
2016 | Florida | No Tournament |
Missouri | ||
2017 | Florida | No Tournament |
Kentucky | ||
2018 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
2019 | Florida | No Tournament |
Kentucky | ||
2020* | Kentucky | No Tournament |
2021* | Kentucky | No Tournament |
2022 | Florida | No Tournament |
Kentucky | ||
2023 | Kentucky | No Tournament |
- The 2020 season was split into fall and spring phases due to COVID-19.
- From 1979–1982 regular-season conference standings were not tabulated.
Other division winners
[edit]1995 - Arkansas (West)
1996 - Arkansas (West)
1997 - Arkansas (West)
1998 - Arkansas (West)
1999 - Arkansas (West)
2000 - Alabama (West)
2001 - Arkansas (West)
2002 - Arkansas (West)
2003 - Arkansas (West)
2004 - Arkansas, Alabama (West)
2005 - LSU, Arkansas (West)
2006 - LSU (West)
2007 - LSU (West)
2008 - LSU (West)
2009 - Kentucky (East)
2010 - LSU (West)
2011 - LSU (West)
2012 - Texas A&M (West)
- Divisional winners discontinued in 2013
References
[edit]- ^ "Southeastern Conference" (PDF).
- ^ "Three-Game Series Set To Decide SEC Baseball". Baton Rouge State-Times (sec. B, p. 4). May 2, 1952.
- ^ a b c d "Tennessee and Florida Player (sic) Pace SEC Race". Baton Rouge State-Times (sec. B, p. 2). May 22, 1952.
- ^ Billy Gates (May 3, 1946). "Red Sticks Lose 5–1—Bengal Nine Faces Tulane Today—Title May Ride With Twin Bill In New Orleans—Bankston and Didier To Pitch Important Conference Contests". Baton Rouge Morning Advocate (p. 15).
- ^ "Auburn and State Start Play-Offs For SEC Crown". Baton Rouge State-Times (sec. B, p. 6). May 28, 1948.
- ^ Chick Hosch (May 13, 1948). "Maroons Are Western SEC Baseball Champs". Baton Rouge State-Times (sec. A, p. 17).
- ^ Steve Martin (May 12, 1981). "Alabama prepares for SEC by routing LSU". Tuscaloosa News (p. 10).
- ^ Alex Thompson, ed. (2016). "Alabama Baseball: 2016 Media Guide". UA Athletics Communications Office (p. 103).
- ^ a b "Gators win series, clinch East division title". secsports.com. May 20, 2017. Retrieved May 20, 2017.
- ^ "Baseball Captures 17th SEC Championship". lsusports.net. May 20, 2017. Archived from the original on May 26, 2017. Retrieved May 20, 2017.
- ^ a b "LSU wins SEC Baseball Tournament". secsports.com. May 28, 2017. Retrieved May 28, 2017.
- ^ "Through the Years: SEC Champions" (PDF). 2012–13 SEC Men's Basketball Media Guide. Southeastern Conference. p. 67. Retrieved May 17, 2013.
Since 1951, when the round-robin schedule was introduced, the title has been decided by a winning percentage on the conference schedule.
- ^ a b c d e Craig Pinkerton, ed. (2017). "2017–18 SEC Basketball Record Book" (PDF). Southeastern Conference Office.
- ^ Tom Wallace (2002). Kentucky Basketball Encyclopedia. Sports Publishing LLC. ISBN 9781582615691.
- ^ Bill Traughber (December 15, 2010). "Controversy puts Vandy in 1961 playoff". vucommodores.com. Retrieved May 21, 2017.
- ^ "SEC basketball to scrap divisions starting '11-12". June 2011.
- ^ "Championships: SEC Champions" (PDF). 2012–13 SEC Women's Basketball Media Guide. Southeastern Conference. p. 88. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
- ^ a b "SEC Standings". cbssports.com. 2018. Retrieved 2018-12-02.
- ^ "No. 2 LSU claims first SEC regular-season title".
- ^ a b c d e "Southeastern Conference".
- ^ "Seven SEC sports future scheduling formats are approved" (Press release). Southeastern Conference. March 14, 2023. Retrieved March 15, 2023.