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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.
The list of national champions on the SEC website only includes championships won since the conference first sponsored the sport. [9] This table includes all championships won by schools that were SEC members at the time of the championship. Before joining the SEC in 2012, Texas A&M won two national titles (in 2002 and 2012).
The SEC Championship Game is an annual American football game that has determined the Southeastern Conference's season champion since 1992. For its first 32 seasons, the championship game pitted the Eastern Division regular season champion against the Western Division regular season champion.
In 1990, the conference did not accept an automatic bid after lightning and heavy rain disrupted the tournament's championship game and co-champions were declared. The teams in the cancelled championship game, LSU and Mississippi State, had already received bids to the NCAA tournament by being selected as regional hosts before the SEC Tournament.
With the abandonment of divisions in SEC men's basketball starting in 2011–12, the top four teams in the conference standings received first-round byes. [2] Bracketing was identical to that of the SEC women's basketball tournament—note that SEC women's basketball has long been organized in a single league table without divisions.
Three decades ago, $50 got South Carolina into the Southeastern Conference. ... Motivated, at least on some level, by a desire to create a conference championship game, the SEC needed one more team.
Kentucky 1949 NCAA Champions: 1950 Kentucky Kentucky – 1951 Kentucky: Vanderbilt – Kentucky 1951 NCAA Champions: 1952 Kentucky: Kentucky – 1953 LSU: No Tournament – LSU 1953 Final Four: 1954 Kentucky LSU: No Tournament – 1955 Kentucky: No Tournament – 1956 Alabama: No Tournament – 1957 Kentucky: No Tournament – 1958 Kentucky: No ...
The first post-regular season conference championship game played in Division I-A football (what is now Division I FBS) was the 1992 SEC Championship Game, won by Alabama over Florida. [2] The SEC had gone from being a 10-team conference in 1991, to being a 12-team conference—divided into two six-team divisions—in 1992. [3]