Week 8 may as well have been called Blowout Saturday in the SEC. All five games involving conference teams were decided by more than 15 points, with four of them decided by more than 30.

Here are some of the most interesting numbers to come out of Week 8 in the SEC.

Tennessee: 0 offensive touchdowns

That the Volunteers are 0-4 in the SEC is bad enough.That they have been outscored 127-36 in SEC games is worse.

Saturday’s loss to Alabama marked the third consecutive game Tennessee’s offense failed to score a touchdown. To find the last offensive touchdown the Volunteers scored, you have to go back to the second quarter of their win over UMass on Sept. 23.

So when Tennessee travels next weekend to take on Kentucky, it will be 14 consecutive quarters and five weeks since its offense was able to produce a touchdown.

Arkansas: Bad defense against Auburn … again

A year ago, the Razorbacks traveled to Auburn near the end of October to take on the Tigers and gave up 56 points and 632 total yards.

This year, the Razorbacks again took on Auburn near the end of October, and showed an improved defensive effort.

Instead of giving up 56 points, Arkansas gave up 52. And instead of allowing 632 total yards, this year the Razorbacks allowed only 629 yards.

So, to recap, in their last two meetings against Auburn, the Razorbacks have allowed 108 points and 1,261 total yards.

Darius Slayton: 36.5 yards per reception

Sticking with the Auburn-Arkansas matchup, Auburn wide receiver Darius Slayton had an impressive stat line Saturday: 4 receptions, 146 yards and a TD.

Slayton became just the second Auburn player since 2000 to average at least 35 yards a catch in a game with at least four receptions. The other player was Sammie Coates, who did it twice in his career, both in 2014.

Drew Lock: Dominating non-Power 5 foes

All the signs pointed to Missouri and quarterback Drew Lock having a big day against Idaho. The Tigers were playing at home for the first time this month. They were stepping outside conference play and, most importantly, they were taking on an opponent outside the Power 5 conferences.

Lock responded with some impressive numbers, such as 467 passing yards and 6 TD throws. However, neither was even a season high for Lock. For those numbers, you have to look at his performance against Missouri State: 521 yards, 7 TDs.

Here is how Lock’s numbers break down by level of competition:

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Nick Fitzgerald: Running all over Kentucky … again

Wildcats fans must be getting tired of seeing Fitzgerald on the field for Mississippi State. A year ago (almost to the day), Fitzgerald rushed for 107 yards and two touchdowns.

This year, Fitzgerald again topped the 100-yard mark on the ground against Kentucky, rushing for 115 yards and two more scores.

One notable difference: Last year, Bulldogs fans were heartbroken as Kentucky pulled out a 40-38 victory. This year Mississippi State dominated, winning 45-7.

Stephen Johnson: 46.4% completion rate

While Fitzgerald was running wild, Kentucky’s QB was struggling throwing the ball. Johnson completed just 13 of 28 attempts, the first time all season he was held under 50 percent.

From a percentage standpoint, it was Johnson’s second-worst passing game of his career with as many attempts. Last season at Tennessee, Johnson went 12-of-29 (41.4%).

Ole Miss: Defense gives up big plays

Normally playing on your home field provides at least a little bit of an edge over your opponent. The certainly was not the case Saturday when the Rebels hosted LSU. The Rebels allowed 8.7 yards per play in their 40-24 loss to the Tigers.

Ole Miss became the first team to allow 8.5 yards a play on its home field in an SEC game since … Ole Miss, in last season’s Egg Bowl against Mississippi State.

In fact, since the start of the 2011 season, SEC teams have allowed 8.5 yards a play seven times in a conference game, and Ole Miss did it three of those seven.

Derrius Guice: Another 250-yard performance

LSU fans had been waiting for a game like this from running back Derrius Guice all season, and on Saturday they got it against Ole Miss.

Guice, who had not even had a 100-yard rushing effort since Week 2 against Chattanooga, broke out with 276 yards and a touchdown against the Rebels. So now, not only does Guice own three of the five best rushing games in school history, he is the first player in the history of the SEC to have three games with at least 250 rushing yards (hat tip to ESPN’s Stats & Information Group).

Amazingly, these three 250-yard games have all come in an 11-game span for Guice.

Danny Etling: Few completions, but big yards

Sticking with the LSU theme, quarterback Danny Etling put up some solid numbers. Etling needed just nine completions to rack up 200 yards passing. That’s 22.2 yards per completion.

It was the second time this season Etling needed fewer than 10 completions to throw for 200 yards. In fact, since 2000, he is the only SEC quarterback to pull off this feat twice.

Alabama: Dominating the first half

Say what you want about the Crimson Tide’s schedule so far (and I could say plenty). But Alabama is simply putting games away early.

In Alabama’s five SEC games, its has outscored the opponents 128-6 in the first half. That’s an average margin of 24.4 points … in the first half!

Oh, yeah, and Alabama has yet to allow a touchdown in the first half of an SEC game this season.

If you want to take it one step further, Alabama has not allowed a first-half touchdown in eight straight SEC regular-season games, dating to last season. The last time the Crimson Tide allowed a TD in the first half of a regular-season conference game was exactly one year ago — Oct. 22, 2016 — against Texas A&M.