Many consider Tim Couch the most prolific passer in Kentucky football history.

But did you know that Couch no longer is the program’s leader in categories such as career passing yards and career passing touchdowns? In fact, he’s not even in second place in either of those categories.

Still yet, Couch owns some Kentucky records that may never be broken. Let’s look at one of his and four other intriguing Wildcats records:

5. 200-yard Moe: Former RB Moe Williams sits second on Kentucky’s all-time rushing list, amassing 3,333 yards on the ground during his time with the Wildcats (1993-95). Falling 502 yards shy of record-holder Sonny Collins, Williams will never hold the distinction of being the Wildcats top career rusher, but what he did in his final season at Kentucky in 1995 is likely to make him a legend on campus for years to come. Williams ran for more than 200 yards on three separate occasions that season, the only player in school history to do so. He holds the top three spots on the Kentucky single-game rushing list, with 299 yards against South Carolina, 272 against Cincinnati and 238 against Mississippi State.

4. Yeast’s big day: It doesn’t take a long look at the Kentucky record book to recognize that Craig Yeast was the most productive wide receiver in school history. He owns the Wildcats record for most career receptions (208), receiving yards (2,899) and receiving touchdowns (28), just to name a few. But his single-game performance against Vanderbilt in 1998 produced the record he may hold the longest. In a 16-catch effort, Yeast set a Wildcats record with 269 receiving yards in one game. He holds second place on the list with a 206-yard game against Florida as the only Kentucky player to have more than 200 receiving yards in a game.

3. Kick-blocking bonanza: Former WR Lonnell Dewalt played one season at Kentucky in 2004, making his mark in the record book not for the 11 passes he hauled in, but for the seven kicks he blocked. With field-goal blocks against Louisville, Florida, Alabama, Ohio, Vanderbilt and Tennessee, as well as an extra-point block against the Volunteers, Dewalt became known around the league for his ability to disrupt an opponent’s kicking game. The record-setting seven blocks since have been matched during a four-year career by Matt Roark (2008-11), but the single-season record likely will never be approached.

2. “Hefty Lefty” threw the ball … a lot: While many people remember former top NFL draft pick Tim Couch as Kentucky’s most prolific passer, former Wildcats QB Jared Lorenzen actually holds many of the school’s career passing records. From 2000-03, the left-handed quarterback who looked more like a prototypical offensive lineman was slinging the ball, accumulating a program-record 10,637 total yards of offense. But Lorezen’s most unreachable record is his 1,514 career passing attempts. In order to pass that total, a Kentucky quarterback would have to attempt nearly 400 passes per season for four consecutive years.

1. Couch’s completions: Most of the quarterback career records now belong to Lorenzen due to him playing one more year than Couch. But the Cleveland Browns’ No. 1 overall draft pick in 1999 still claims plenty of single-season records, such as the most passing yards in a season (4,275). The Couch record that appears to be the hardest to approach for future Wildcats quarterbacks comes from that same ’98 season. Couch completed 400 of the 553 passes he attempted that season. Those 400 completions are 73 more than any other quarterback has completed in a single season. Playing in just 11 games that year, he averaged 36.4 completions per game.