The Big 12 released its 2023 football schedule on Tuesday, giving fans their road map for the new-look league after a little bit of a delay added mystery to the reveal.
The Big 12 welcomes in BYU, Cincinnati, Houston and UCF to the club this year while Texas and Oklahoma are on the way out — ostensibly in 2025, but with frequent rumors that their split could come a season sooner — so this may be the last time we get to see the Longhorns and Sooners in this lineup.
The league schedule begins on Sept. 16, with TCU hosting Houston, the first time the two old Southwest Conference rivals have met since 2007.
“I would like to thank our fans for their patience awaiting this historic schedule,” Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark said. “Given its importance, the complexities of weaving in four new schools, adding a third time zone and ensuring alignment with key stakeholders, we were very deliberate with its development.”
With the new teams, the league says it will continue to play nine league contests with no divisions. The top two finishers by conference win percentage in the regular season standings will meet in the Big 12 title game on Dec. 2 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
But before the new conference schedule kicks in, there are some marquee nonconference games to kick off the season, including West Virginia traveling to Penn State in Week 1 before hosting Pitt in the renewed Backyard Brawl on Sept. 16. Texas traveling to Alabama on Sept. 9, the same day Oregon travels to Texas Tech and Baylor hosts Utah, the back-to-back Pac-12 champs. Colorado will kick off the Coach Prime era under Deion Sanders with a road trip to TCU in Week 1, seeking to have the kind of first-year turnaround in Boulder that Sonny Dykes engineered last year in Fort Worth.
Here are each team’s schedules, along with some key questions they raise.
Games we’re most looking forward to?
You can’t start this list without Texas playing Oklahoma during the State Fair of Texas in Dallas on Oct. 7. While there was intrigue on if the league would ever consider sticking it to the Horns and Sooners and scheduling their game at some other point, it’s a historic rivalry that’s a key asset to the league. So with that being a given, let’s look elsewhere. The addition of Houston back to the league means every matchup against an old state SWC rival will be a little pettier and with a little added heat. Texas’ trip to Houston on Oct. 21 will be one the Cougars will be circling, looking for their first win against Texas since 1991. Similarly, Oklahoma State will be hosting Oklahoma on Nov. 4 in what could turn out to be the last Bedlam matchup.
On a pure football level, there is intrigue in Cincinnati’s first Big 12 game, when the Bearcats, under new coach Scott Satterfield, who replaced the Wisconsin-bound Luke Fickell, host Oklahoma, which is coming off a 6-7 season in Brent Venables’ first year. TCU — which rode a magical season all the way to the national championship game and is seeking to establish staying power — gets a Thursday night showdown in Lubbock against Texas Tech before a marquee matchup with Oklahoma the Friday after Thanksgiving to end the season.
The defending league champs, Kansas State, will host the Horned Frogs on Oct. 21, after the two teams played two incredible games in 2022, a 38-28 TCU win in Fort Worth and a 31-28 K-State win in the Big 12 championship game.
Who are the winners and losers?
Winner: Kansas State seemed to get its respect, kicking off the league schedule at home for the first time since 2017 with a game against UCF on Sept. 23. The Wildcats will also host Houston, meaning they won’t be traveling to any of the new teams’ stadiums this season.
Loser: Oklahoma begins Big 12 play with a road trip to Cincinnati, and wraps up the season with its first-ever trip to BYU on Nov. 18 before hosting TCU. The Sooners have one of the most unfamiliar schedules, and won’t play Kansas State or Baylor this season.
Winner: Baylor plays a school-record eight home games this season, with its first four matchups at McLane Stadium, including Texas on Sept. 23. The Bears only leave the state of Texas for road games at UCF, Cincinnati and Kansas State.
Loser: Iowa State has a tough closing slate, finishing with a Nov. 11 trip to Provo for its first matchup against BYU since 1974, before hosting Texas on Nov. 18 and then traveling to Kansas State on Nov. 25.
What’s at stake for fans of the new teams?
Houston, which was left out of the Big 12 after the SWC dissolved, gets in with perhaps one last shot at Texas and Oklahoma. The Cougars play their first seven games in Texas and replace Conference USA teams like Temple, Navy and East Carolina on the schedule with Baylor, Texas Tech and TCU, which will be a boost for fans.
BYU, which played two tight games with Baylor the past two years, misses the Bears now that the teams are conference rivals. But the home game against Oklahoma will be a hot ticket in Provo. Cougars fans will also get the benefit of Texas Tech’s first-ever game in Utah while watching an exciting offense that was influenced heavily by legendary BYU coach LaVell Edwards.
Cincinnati faces all three fellow newcomers, helping to lay down the foundation for future rivalries, with a home game against UCF and road trips to BYU and Houston. The Sept. 23 home game against Oklahoma could be one of the hottest tickets in Nippert Stadium history.
UCF appears to avoid the riskiest of the cold-weather road trips, with two November home games against Oklahoma State and Houston in Orlando, and one road game against Texas Tech. The Knights don’t play Texas this season, but will have tough road contests against Kansas State and Oklahoma.
Sept. 2: Texas State Sept. 9: Utah Sept. 16: Long Island Sept. 23: Texas Sept. 30: at UCF Oct. 7: Texas Tech Oct. 14: Open Oct. 21: at Cincinnati Oct. 28: Iowa State Nov. 4: Houston Nov. 11: at Kansas State Nov. 18: at TCU Nov. 25: West Virginia
Sept. 2: Sam Houston Sept. 9: Southern Utah Sept. 16: at Arkansas Sept. 23: at Kansas Sept. 29: Cincinnati Oct. 7: Open Oct. 14: at TCU Oct. 21: Texas Tech Oct. 28: at Texas Nov. 4: at West Virginia Nov. 11: Iowa State Nov. 18: Oklahoma Nov. 25: at Oklahoma State
Sept. 2: Eastern Kentucky Sept. 9: at Pitt Sept. 16: Miami (Ohio) Sept. 23: Oklahoma Sept. 29: at BYU Oct. 7: Open Oct. 14: Iowa State Oct. 21: Baylor Oct. 28: at Oklahoma State Nov. 4: UCF Nov. 11: at Houston Nov. 18: at West Virginia Nov. 25: Kansas
Sept. 2: UTSA Sept. 9: at Rice Sept. 16: TCU Sept. 23: Sam Houston Sept. 30: at Texas Tech Oct. 7: Open Oct. 12: West Virginia Oct. 21: Texas Oct. 28: at Kansas State Nov. 4: at Baylor Nov. 11: Cincinnati Nov. 18: Oklahoma State Nov. 25: at UCF
Sept. 2: Northern Iowa Sept. 9: Iowa Sept. 16: at Ohio Sept. 23: Oklahoma State Sept. 30: at Oklahoma Oct. 7: TCU Oct. 14: at Cincinnati Oct. 21: Open Oct. 28: at Baylor Nov. 4: Kansas Nov. 11: at BYU Nov. 18: Texas Nov. 25: at Kansas State
Sept. 2: Missouri State Sept. 9: Illinois Sept. 16: at Nevada Sept. 23: BYU Sept. 30: at Texas Oct. 7: UCF Oct. 14: at Oklahoma State Oct. 21: Open Oct. 28: Oklahoma Nov. 4: at Iowa State Nov. 11: Texas Tech Nov. 18: Kansas State Nov. 25: at Cincinnati
Sept. 2: Southeast Missouri Sept. 9: Troy Sept. 16: at Missouri Sept. 23: UCF Sept. 30: Open Oct. 6: at Oklahoma State Oct. 14: at Texas Tech Oct. 21: TCU Oct. 28: Houston Nov. 4: at Texas Nov. 11: Baylor Nov. 18: at Kansas Nov. 25: Iowa State
Sept. 2: Arkansas State Sept. 9: SMU Sept. 16: at Tulsa Sept. 23: at Cincinnati Sept. 30: Iowa State Oct. 7: Texas (Dallas) Oct. 14: Open Oct. 21: UCF Oct. 28: at Kansas Nov. 4: at Oklahoma State Nov. 11: West Virginia Nov. 18: at BYU Nov. 25: TCU
Sept. 2: Central Arkansas Sept. 9: at Arizona State Sept. 16: South Alabama Sept. 23: at Iowa State Sept. 30: Open Oct. 6: Kansas State Oct. 14: Kansas Oct. 21: at West Virginia Oct. 28: Cincinnati Nov. 4: Oklahoma Nov. 11: at UCF Nov. 18: at Houston Nov. 25: BYU
·Sept. 2: Colorado Sept. 9: Nicholls Sept. 16: at Houston Sept. 23: SMU Sept. 30: West Virginia Oct. 7: at Iowa State Oct. 14: BYU Oct. 21: at Kansas State Oct. 28: Open Nov. 2: at Texas Tech Nov. 11: Texas Nov. 18: Baylor Nov. 24: at Oklahoma
Sept. 2: Rice Sept. 9: at Alabama Sept. 16: Wyoming Sept. 23: at Baylor Sept. 30: Kansas Oct. 7: Oklahoma (Dallas) Oct. 14: Open Oct. 21: at Houston Oct. 28: BYU Nov. 4: Kansas State Nov. 11: at TCU Nov. 18: at Iowa State Nov. 24: Texas Tech
Sept. 2: at Wyoming Sept. 9: Oregon Sept. 16: Tarleton State Sept. 23: at West Virginia Sept. 30: Houston Oct. 7: at Baylor Oct. 14: Kansas State Oct. 21: at BYU Oct. 28: Open Nov. 4: TCU Nov. 11: at Kansas Nov. 18: UCF Nov. 24: at Texas
Aug. 31: Kent State Sept. 9: at Boise State Sept. 16: Villanova Sept. 23: at Kansas State Sept. 30: Baylor Oct. 7: at Kansas Oct. 14: Open Oct. 21: at Oklahoma Oct. 28: West Virginia Nov. 4: at Cincinnati Nov. 11: Oklahoma State Nov. 18: at Texas Tech Nov. 25: Houston
Sept. 2: at Penn State Sept. 9: Duquesne Sept. 16: Pitt Sept. 23: Texas Tech Sept. 30: at TCU Oct. 7: Open Oct. 12: at Houston Oct. 21: Oklahoma State Oct. 28: at UCF Nov. 4: BYU Nov. 11: at Oklahoma Nov. 18: Cincinnati Nov. 25: at Baylor