Missouri has a rich football history, which includes some impressive records that have been logged along the way.

Though few of them have happened since the Tigers joined the SEC in 2012, there are still several familiar names to all college football fans that will featured in the records below.

Let’s take a look at some Mizzou records that should be around for quite some time:

5. Chase Coffman: Reception machine

Former Mizzou TE Chase Coffman caught a pass in 45 consecutive games, a record-setting streak that stretched from the midway through the 2005 season until his college career was finished in 2008. In fact, if it wasn’t for being held without a catch in a game against Nebraska halfway through his freshman season, he would have ended his four-year career with a catch in all 50 games he played. It’s no wonder that he also holds the school record for career receptions at 247. For the streak to be broken, a player would need an unbelievable streak of health, productivity and good fortune over a four-year span.

4. Danario Alexander’s big farewell

Through his first three years in a Mizzou uniform, Danario Alexander was a guy whose results didn’t necessarily match his potential. The 6-foot-5 wide receiver had 78 catches for 997 yards through his 34 games with the Tigers. But something clicked in 2009, when Chase Daniel, who was Mizzou’s all-time leading passer, passed the torch to new starting QB Blaine Gabbert. Alexander went on to set the school record for receptions in a season (113), receiving yards in a season (1,781) and receiving touchdowns in a season (14). It was such a huge season, it propelled him to the top of the school’s all-time list for receiving yards (2,778).

3. One shy of the century mark

Back in 1968, the Colorado Buffaloes defense must have had a tough time stopping the run, or at least they did one occasion that fall. Missouri rushed the ball a school-record 99 times on the way to a 27-14 victory over Colorado at Faurot Field. The Tigers finished with 421 yards on the ground that day, which was 95 short of the team record set against Colorado in 1964. The run-heavy day for Mizzou accounted for nearly 16 percent of the Tigers’ 625 rushing attempts in the 1968 season, which ended with a 35-10 win over Alabama in the Gator Bowl.

2. Brad Smith’s running skills

From 2002-05, Mizzou featured one of the most versatile players in all of college football. Brad Smith was a four-year starter at quarterback for the Tigers, terrorizing defense with his ability to both effectively throw and run with the football. Smith was particularly gifted as a runner, accumulating a school-record 4,289 rushing yards over his career. That’s 1,091 more than the top running back in school history (Zach Abron) and 1,766 more than the closest quarterback (Corby Jones). You may argue that a running back could one day come along and break his record, but at minimum he’ll hold the rushing record for a quarterback for many years to come.

1. Chase Daniel’s passing skills

Being asked to follow a school legend like Brad Smith is tough draw, but QB Chase Daniel did his best to give Mizzou fans something even better. After backing Smith up in 2005, Daniel went on to be a three-year starter from 2006-08. In that time period, he made his own mark on the Missouri record books, throwing for a school-best 12,515 passing yards. He surpassed Smith, who set the previous record after four years as a starter, by 3,716 yards. Daniel owns three of the top four single-season passing marks, including a 4,335-yard performance in his senior season.