Updated Dec. 10, 2025, 5:00 p.m. ET
- The current contract for the Louisville vs. Kentucky football series extends through 2030.
- Because Louisville and Georgia mutually agreed to cancel their home-and-home series, signed in 2021, neither school will owe the other liquidated damages.
- To comply with the ACC’s 10 Power Four game requirement, Louisville added a neutral-site opener against Ole Miss in the Georgia game’s place.
- The UofL-Ole Miss opener, which was announced Wednesday seven hours after the news release confirming the cancellation of Louisville’s home-and-home series with Georgia, will be played in Nashville.
Louisville and Georgia football have canceled their 2026-27 home-and-home agreement for the 2026 and 2027 seasons.
Because both schools mutually agreed to cancel the series, which UofL athletics director Josh Heird and Georgia athletics director Josh Brooks signed in 2021, neither school will owe the other liquidated damages. Louisville and UGA, in a news release Wednesday, said they will look to play a neutral-site game in the future. Heird said in his own statement they’re planning for “the early 2030s.”
This scheduling change comes after the ACC and SEC established a scheduling requirement in which member schools must play 10 power conference opponents every year. Before canceling the series with UofL, Georgia only had one non-Power Four opponent on the schedule for 2026 (Western Kentucky).
Heird’s statement regarding the canceled series called the cancellation “another example of the scheduling adjustments that come with today’s evolving college football landscape.” Heird said UGA approached Louisville about needing to opt out of the 2026 game.
Rather than dealing with contractual complexities and “the structure of the 2027 return game,” Heird said, “both schools worked together to find a solution that provides long-term scheduling flexibility for each program.” UGA would’ve otherwise owed Louisville $1 million for canceling the 2026 game, according to the series contract. Keeping UGA on the schedule for 2026 and 2027 would’ve also forced UofL to buy out already-scheduled nonconference opponents to abide by the ACC’s new nine-game scheduling model, he added. “That would have added unnecessary cost without improving our overall competitive position.”
Conference expansion, which prompted those scheduling model changes, has killed many a college football rivalry. But the ACC and SEC are determined to preserve one particular handful as they move from eight to nine conference games: Florida-Florida State. South Carolina-Clemson. Georgia-Georgia Tech. Florida-Miami. And Kentucky-Louisville.
So while the UofL-UGA series won’t happen, the Governor’s Cup is expected to continue.
There’s the practical aspect of it, in that SEC and ACC schools are required to play 10 power conference opponents every year, and who wants to pay thousands of dollars to fly cross country for that 10th game when there’s a perfectly suitable team 80 miles away? Especially when there’s already a contract in place through 2030. And then there’s the sentimental aspect: College sports have changed so much. Wouldn’t it be nice to preserve the state’s most beloved rivalry?
“It’s good for both fan bases,” Kentucky athletics director Mitch Barnhart told the Kentucky Legislature’s Joint Committee on Economic Development & Workforce Investment on Sept. 25. “I see no reason to challenge that.”
“We haven’t even talked about it,” Heird said at the same meeting. “And from my end, I didn’t feel like I needed to. Because I’m just assuming that we’re gonna play every year.”
This season, UofL faced nine Power Four opponents: Kentucky and eight ACC teams (Pitt, Virginia, Miami, Boston College, Virginia Tech, Cal, Clemson and SMU). The Cards had 10 scheduled for 2026 including the Bulldogs. To comply with the ACC’s 10 Power Four game requirement, Louisville added a neutral-site opener against Ole Miss in the Georgia game’s place.
The UofL-Ole Miss opener, which was announced Wednesday seven hours after the news release confirming the cancellation of Louisville’s home-and-home series with Georgia, will be played at Nissan Stadium in Nashville on Sept. 5 or 6 and broadcast on ESPN.
Scheduling is a tricky balancing act. Athletics departments want to position their football teams for success by planning marquee matchups that strengthen their schedule and attract as many eyeballs as possible (especially in the ACC, where revenue sharing is dependent on TV viewership on a rolling five-year basis). But schedule too aggressively, and set the team up for failure in the form of too many losses to qualify for the College Football Playoff or achieve bowl eligibility. Every possible result has an economic impact.
Louisville received $2.1 million during the 2024 fiscal year via expense reimbursements and ticket sales from participating in the Holiday Bowl, according to the department’s annual NCAA financial report. UofL received $8.04 million from conference distributions of bowl-generated revenue that same year.
CFP appearances also come with lucrative participation payouts: $4 million for qualifying, $4 million for advancing to the quarterfinals, $6 million for making the semifinals and $6 million for reaching the championship game).
Reach college sports enterprise reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com and follow her on X @petitus25. Subscribe to her “Full-court Press” newsletter here for a behind-the-scenes look at how college sports’ biggest stories are impacting Louisville and Kentucky athletics.
