Rivalry week. What better time to make history.

A look at the 10 best matchups in Week 13 in the SEC, beginning with a couple of players who are challenging everybody who ever played their position.

Alabama RB Derrick Henry vs. SEC record book: Henry enters the Iron Bowl against Auburn with 21 rushing TDs. He needs 2 more to tie Tim Tebow and Tre Mason’s single-season SEC record.

That’s not all he’s chasing.

Henry also has 1,526 yards. He still trails LSU’s Leonoard Fournette (1,582) but in all likelihood Henry will have one more game than Fournette — the SEC Championship Game — to run down Herschel Walker (1,891 yards) and set the SEC’s single-season rushing record.

Ole Miss QB Chad Kelly vs. SEC record book: Kelly enters the Egg Bowl against Mississippi State with 3,504 passing yards. He could break Eli Manning’s single-season Rebels record of 3,600 in the first quarter. He likely will zoom past names like Danny Wuerffel (3,625), Johnny Manziel (3,706) and Peyton Manning (3,819) on the SEC’s list Saturday too.

His target is Kentucky record-holder Tim Couch, who threw for 4,275 yards in 1998. Kelly has at least two games to catch him.

Mississippi State QB Dak Prescott vs. Ole Miss defensive line: The Egg Bowl has never been more NFL prospect-laden. That’s good for Prescott, who will get one more chance to show NFL scouts he’s draft worthy. Alabama sacked Prescott nine times and hit him repeatedly when he tried to run.

He bounced back last week with a spectacular effort against Arkansas, throwing for a career-high 508 yards and accounting for 7 TDs in the Bulldogs’ 51-50 win.

Ole Miss presents the second-best defensive front Prescott will face.

Texas A&M receiver Christian Kirk vs. LSU CB Tre’Davious White: White was matched up on Laquon Treadwell last week and held the SEC’s top receiver to 4 catches for 58 yards, though one was an 11-yard TD pass.

Kirk presents a different type of challenge. He’s not as big or physical as Treadwell but might be more dangerous after the catch. He’s particularly effective on first down, when the Aggies like to get him the ball in space.

UF QB Treon Harris vs. FSU DB Jalen Ramsey: Harris plays with an excellent DB in Vernon Hargreaves III, but Ramsey might be on a different level.

They’re different players with different games. Hargreaves is much more of a shut down corner, whereas Ramsey (6-1, 202) is a punishing tackler, and enforcer in the FSU backfield. Ramsey starred last season as more of a free safety but departures forced his return to corner this season. He’ll play safety in the NFL, and is a projected top-10 pick in April.

FSU’s Dalvin Cook vs. Florida’s front seven: Remember, Cook committed to Florida before flipping to FSU. All he’s done in Tallahassee is emerge as a Heisman Trophy candidate. Cook has 1,475 yards in just 10 games. He’s from Miami and tore up the Hurricanes for 222 yards and 2 TDs. He ran for 194 against No. 1 Clemson.

He had his breakout game last season against the Gators, rushing for 144 yards.

Florida has allowed just two teams to crack 150 yards rushing this season.

Cook will challenge that.

LSU OT Vadal Alexander vs. Texas A&M DE Myles Garrett: Last week Alexander took on Ole Miss and its play-making rush specialists. Saturday, he’ll line up opposite the SEC’s best in Garrett, who leads the league with 10.5 sacks but has been shut out in November.

Georgia’s linebackers vs. Georgia Tech’s triple option: The ultimate “do your job” challenge awaits the Bulldogs, who should be familiar with the concept after facing a similar attack last week from Georgia Southern. The difference this week is the caliber of athlete they’ll be facing his higher.

Georgia Tech has had a disastrous season and beating rival Georgia is the only way to salvage it. The Yellow Jackets opened No. 16 in the preseason poll and their only win since beating Tulane on Sept. 12 was its shocking upset of FSU on Oct. 24.

QB Justin Thomas is banged up but reportedly will play. The Yellow Jackets don’t have much hope anyway, but they’ll have almost none if Thomas can’t direct that option attack that accounts for 261 rushing yards per game.

Georgia’s defensive line must maintain its gap integrity, and the linebackers must play assignment football. Do somebody else’s job and run the risk of Tech’s RBs running free in the secondary.

Tennessee QB Josh Dobbs vs. Vanderbilt front seven: Vanderbilt’s defense has gotten some credit, but not nearly enough. The Commodores have given up just 20 TDs in 11 games. That’s two fewer than Alabama.

They’re particularly difficult to run against, and that’s what makes the matchup against Dobbs intriguing. Dobbs isn’t the SEC’s fastest running QB, but he’s timely in determining when to take off. Effective too. He has 8 rushing TDs this season.

South Carolina LB Skai Moore vs. Clemson QB Deshaun Watson: Watson might be the most dangerous QB in the country and should be leading the Heisman conversation. He ranks 11th nationally in total offense (behind SEC QBs Chad Kelly and Dak Prescott) at 326 yards per game. He’ll keep Moore busy and honest with his feet, too. Watson is Clemson’s second-leading rusher with 642 yards. He’s rushed for 6 TDs and has a long run of 63.