College Football

How much is every SEC football program worth ahead of the 2025 season?

How much is every SEC football program worth ahead of the 2025 season?

Texas A&M’s 2024 season ended in disappointment at 8-5, which included a 1-4 finish with consecutive losses to Texas and USC in the Las Vegas Bowl. While the fan base is divided between coach Mike Elko’s future with the program, the future is bright based on the recent offseason movements.

So far, Elko has begun to shore up the 2025 roster, adding 14 players from the transfer portal and former James Madison DC Lyle Hemphill to the defensive staff after leading the Dukes to a 21st defensive ranking last season.

In today’s NIL-based college football landscape, Texas A&M football is still one of the most valuable programs in the country, even though the Aggies have failed to make the College Football Playoff since its inception and have failed to win more than nine games since the 1998 season.

Still, the money flows, and the fan base is engaged as Elko enters its second season. The offseason moves and incoming recruiting class will result in positive change next season.

In a recent article from The Wall Street Journal, writer Andrew Beaton ranked the 131 FBS programs, measuring each school’s adjusted revenue, cash flow, and enterprise value.

Focusing on the SEC, here is where all 16 conference teams rank among the most valuable (enterprise value) college football programs.

  1. No. 2 overall: Texas Longhorns, $1.897 billion
  2. No. 4 overall: Georgia Bulldogs, $1.348 billion
  3. No. 6 overall: LSU Tigers, $1.060 billion
  4. No. 8 overall: Tennessee Volunteers, $1.017 billion
  5. No. 9 overall: Texas A&M Aggies, $1.001 billion
  6. No. 10 overall: Oklahoma Sooners, $881 million
  7. No. 11 overall: Alabama Crimson Tide, $846 million
  8. No. 12 overall: Auburn Tigers, $843 million
  9. No. 14 overall: Florida Gators, $793 million
  10. No. 19 overall: Arkansas Razorbacks, $616 million
  11. No. 30 overall: Ole Miss Rebels, $411 million
  12. No. 44 overall: South Carolina, $312 million
  13. No. 57 overall: Kentucky Wildcats, $202 million
  14. No. 58 overall: Mississippi State Bulldogs, $197 million
  15. No. 63 overall: Missouri…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Football | Aggies Wire…