Alright, let’s talk about something I spent a good bit of time on over the past few years – keeping track of how the ACC and SEC football teams stacked up against each other. It wasn’t for any big project, mostly just my own curiosity, you know? Like many folks, I’d hear all the talk radio debates and see the arguments online, and I just wanted to see the numbers for myself, plain and simple.

Getting Started
So, about five years back, I figured I’d start jotting things down. It wasn’t anything fancy at first. I grabbed a simple notebook, then eventually moved to a basic spreadsheet on my computer because, let’s be honest, it’s easier to sort things that way. My main goal was just to track the wins and losses, specifically when ACC teams played SEC teams. Head-to-head, that’s what really interested me.
I started pulling data season by season. I’d check the schedules at the beginning of the year, mark down the cross-conference games, and then update the results as they happened. ESPN’s site, the official conference sites – those were my main go-to places. I tried to be consistent, just looking at the final scores for regular season and bowl games.
The Nitty-Gritty Process
Once I had a season’s worth of data, I’d tally it up. My spreadsheet had simple columns: Date, ACC Team, SEC Team, Winner, Loser, Score. Pretty straightforward stuff. At the end of each season, I’d calculate:
- Total head-to-head wins for the ACC.
- Total head-to-head wins for the SEC.
- Performance in bowl games specifically between the two conferences.
I kept a running total year over year. It started to build up quite a record. It wasn’t just about who won more games overall against all opponents, but specifically how they did when they faced off against each other. That felt like a more direct comparison, at least to me.
What I Noticed Along the Way
Compiling this wasn’t always smooth sailing. Sometimes finding final scores for older games took a bit more digging than expected. And deciding how much weight to give a bowl game versus a regular-season matchup – well, I mostly just counted them as straight wins or losses in the head-to-head record to keep it simple.

Over the five years I tracked, my records showed the SEC generally having the edge in head-to-head matchups. No huge surprise there, maybe, given their reputation, but seeing the numbers laid out year after year made it pretty clear from my perspective. There were definitely years where the ACC held its own, especially in certain bowl games or rivalry matchups, but the overall trend in my spreadsheet leaned towards the SEC.
I also noticed patterns with specific teams. Some ACC teams consistently struggled against SEC opponents, while others seemed to rise to the occasion more often. Same on the SEC side, naturally. It wasn’t a total domination, more like a consistent upper hand in the win column based on the games I logged.
Wrapping Up My Thoughts
So, after five years of keeping these records, what’s the big takeaway? For me, it was less about proving one conference was definitively “better” – because how do you even measure that perfectly? It was more about satisfying my own curiosity with some actual, albeit simple, data I gathered myself. It gave me a clearer picture, based on direct competition, than just listening to the talking heads.
It confirmed some things I suspected and maybe challenged a few assumptions too. Mostly, it was just a little side project, a way to engage with the sport beyond just watching the games. Looking back at my spreadsheet now, it’s a neat little history of those specific matchups over the last half-decade. Nothing groundbreaking, just my own personal log of ACC vs. SEC battles.