Each year, the SEC sees some spectacular performances, the types we’ll remember for the ages. Who put up those memorable offensive performances in 2014? Here are some of our favorite individual performances from the past season.

Nick Chubb vs. Louisville, Belk Bowl

Stats: 33 carries, 266 yards, 2 TD

You’d think a freshman would be worn out by his team’s final game of the season, especially after carrying the load like Chubb did all year. You’d be wrong when it comes to this freshman, though. Chubb strapped the Dawgs on his back and pummeled Louisville on his own, averaging a ridiculous 8.1 yards per carry. He came within 17 yards of toppling Herschel Walker’s single-game record for the Bulldogs, blasting through one of the best run defenses in the nation in the process.

Dak Prescott vs. LSU, Week 4

Stats: 15-of-24 passing, 268 yards, 2 TD, 22 carries, 105 rush yards, 2 TD

Prescott had some under-the-radar Heisman buzz coming into the season, but he really put himself (and Mississippi State) on the map by marching into Death Valley and taking it to LSU. Prescott hit the Tigers in the mouth on the Bulldogs first drive, leading a quick touchdown drive, but his signature moment came when he burst through the defense for a 56-yard touchdown sprint in the third quarter. It wasn’t Prescott’s highest output in terms of passing or rushing yards, but he was balanced, efficient and mistake free in tearing LSU apart.

Leonard Fournette vs. Notre Dame, Music City Bowl

Stats: 11 carries, 143 yards, 2 TD, 2 kickoff returns, 121 yards, 1 TD

Fournette had a much lighter workload than Chubb all season, and his bowl performance was just as spectacular considering the disparity in touches. Fournette averaged a bonkers 20 yards per touch when you factor in his kickoff returns. He sprinted through kick coverage on his return touchdown, showing off unfair speed for a punishing player listed at 6-foot-1 and 230 pounds. It seemed like each time Fournette took a handoff, defenders simply fell off of him as he cruised to first down after first down. You have to wonder why LSU didn’t just keep giving him the rock in the loss to the Fighting Irish.

Kenny Hill vs. South Carolina, Week 1

Stats: 44-of-60 passing, 511 yards, 3 TD,

This sure feels like forever ago, doesn’t it? Hill is out at Texas A&M, granted his release from his scholarship in January. Back on August 28, Hill, “Kenny Football,” “Kenny Trill,” or whatever other nickname he was given, was just “The Man.” In his first career college start, Hill lit the Gamecocks up like a Christmas tree. While we later learned that this was no aberration for South Carolina’s defense, Hill still set a program yardage record and made himself look like a Heisman candidate out of nowhere in Week 1.

Amari Cooper vs. Auburn, Week 14

Stats: 13 catches, 224 yards, 3 TD

The greats save their best performances for the biggest moments, and that’s exactly what Cooper did in the Iron Bowl. Cooper tied his own school records with 13 catches and 224 yards, but what’s most impressive is how he threw the team on his back when the Crimson Tide needed him most. Starting from when Alabama went down 33-21 early in the third quarter, Cooper went absolutely nuts: seven catches, 164 yards, and two touchdowns, one a 39-yard strike and the other a 75-yard bomb.