Auburn might be on its third defensive coordinator in the last three years, but for a program whose football history extends beyond a century, there have been a handful of Tigers achievements that will never be touched.

Here are five Auburn football records that should stand the test of time.

Cam Newton’s 51-TD season

There are numerous great things about Auburn’s 2010 season, which ended with the Tigers’ first national championship since 1957. Cam Newton also won AU’s first Heisman Trophy since Bo Jackson brought home college football’s biggest prize in 1985.

Six years ago, Newton rushed for 1,473 yards and 20 touchdowns on 264 carries. But what set him apart was the fact that he also threw for 30 TDs.

For good measure, Newton even caught a pass for a score during a 51-31 win over Ole Miss to give him 51 total TDs. To put that number in perspective, Nick Marshall had a pretty impressive 2014 season in which he finished with 31 total touchdowns — 20 fewer than Newton.

To put Newton’s number in even more perspective, flash back to 1970, when Auburn legend Pat Sullivan totaled 26 TDs. He won the Heisman the following year with only 23 total scores, so Newton nearly doubled Sullivan’s best output, and the next great Tigers QBs will be hard-pressed to approach Cam-elot.

Nine interceptions vs. Florida

As bad as Auburn QB Jeremy Johnson was last year — and he was bad, with six interceptions in his first three games before he was benched for Sean White — his struggles weren’t nearly as bad as the game Florida signal-caller John Reaves had against the Tigers on Nov. 1, 1969. That’s the day AU picked off the eventual first-round draft pick and 11-year NFL vet nine times in a 38-12 victory. In case you were wondering, since that game, no SEC quarterback has thrown more than six picks in a game.

Of course, those numbers raise the question of why a coach would leave a quarterback in a game long enough to throw at least six interceptions, let alone nine. But at least Auburn is in the record books for picking off those passes and not for throwing them.

Holding the ball for an entire quarter

The best any team can do with this peculiar occurrence is match it because there are obviously only 15 minutes in a quarter, and Auburn used all of them in a 24-17 victory over South Carolina in 2006. After fielding the second-half kickoff, the Tigers drove for more than eight minutes before settling on a field goal, then drove again for six-plus minutes after recovering an onside kick.

Auburn ended the third quarter at South Carolina’s 1-yard line. Kenny Irons scored on a 4th-and-1 play to start the fourth quarter and cap the Tigers’ time of possession over that span at a period-plus.

Terry Beasley’s 29 career receiving TDs

What makes Beasley’s school record particularly impressive is that he set it in 31 games over just three seasons — 1969-71 — which coincides with Sullivan’s stint on The Plains. Ben Obomanu — the No. 2 guy on the Tigers’ list in this category — made 18 scoring grabs from 2002-05 in 20 more games!

Think about this. Beasley set his record during an era not known for passing offenses, or spread ones for that matter. It’s going to take a special talent to even challenge his mark, someone who might have to stay in school for four years to approach it.

Nine shutouts in a season

Under new defensive coordinator Kevin Steele, Auburn would make major news if it happened to shut out an opponent this season — something the Tigers haven’t done since 2008, when they blanked Louisiana-Monroe, 34-0, in their season opener. But imagine a season full of shutouts, something AU pulled off in 1914, when it went 8-0-1, while not allowing a single point.

Auburn’s “modern era” record for shutouts in a season is six set by the 1957 team. But with the way offenses have emerged in college football, one shutout in 2016 would be a good place to start.