Every SEC fan remembers a game they never thought their team would win.

All but one of these features a game between two SEC teams, but all of them are worth taking that trip down memory lane to revisit them, which I’m sure many of you have already done several times.

Here are the most memorable from the last decade at each program:

Alabama: vs. No. 16 Arkansas (2007): The Nick Saban era in Tuscaloosa started with a modest 7-6 campaign, but Alabama made its first statement under its new coach in Week 3, taking down defending SEC West champion Arkansas 41-38 at home. The Tide raced out to a 21-0 lead before the Razorbacks roared back with three straight touchdowns of their own to take a 38-31 lead in the fourth quarter. With eight seconds left and the score 38-34, Alabama QB John Parker Wilson found Matt Caddell on a game-winning 4-yard TD. Both teams finished with exactly 450 yards of total offense and 3 turnovers apiece. The win came despite Darren McFadden rushing for 195 yards and 2 TDs.

Arkansas: vs. No. 1 LSU (2007): Following that loss to the Tide, the Razorbacks also lost to Kentucky, Auburn and Tennessee. That set up a 7-4 Arkansas team venturing into Death Valley to face No. 1 LSU, which was on a 19-game home winning streak dating back to early 2005. However, Houston Nutt’s Hogs came away with an incredible 50-48 triple-overtime victory after Matterral Richardson intercepted the 2-point conversion attempt. That loss was widely expected to end LSU’s national title hopes, but the two-loss Tigers improbably made it to the BCS Championship Game, beating the Ohio State Buckeyes.

Auburn: at No. 4 Florida (2007): It’s incredible that the first three games on here are all from the 2007 season. However, Auburn’s win over Florida (just two weeks after Alabama’s upset of Arkansas), took down the defending national champs and snapped the Gators’ 18-game winning streak at home, giving Urban Meyer his first home loss since he arrived in Gainesville. Auburn was just 3-2 entering the game with disappointing losses to South Florida and Mississippi State, but Wes Byrum nailed a 43-yarder as time expired to give the Tigers the 20-17 win.

Florida: vs. No. 3 Ole Miss (2015): The Gators weren’t supposed to win this kind of game in Jim McElwain’s first year as head coach. But all the electricity The Swamp generated after a dramatic come-from-behind win over Tennessee the previous week was still in the stadium. In abundance. Florida demolished a No. 3-ranked Ole Miss team that came in riding high after a 4-0 start that included a win in Tuscaloosa two weeks back. The Gators led 25-0 at halftime and eventually won 38-10 while feasting on four Rebels turnovers.

Georgia: at No. 5 Auburn (2006): The Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry has seen some crazy outcomes, and Georgia’s 37-15 win over Auburn in 2006 is one of them. The Bulldogs came in at 6-4 to face a 9-1 Auburn team whose only loss had come to the eventual SEC West champs. The sheer domination made it all the more surprising. Georgia went up 24-0 less than five minutes before halftime after Tra Battle’s 30-yard interception return for a touchdown. The Bulldogs outgained the Tigers 446 to 171, intercepting QB Brandon Cox four times. Auburn finished the year 11-2 and had to settle for the Cotton Bowl.

Kentucky: vs. No. 1 LSU (2007): It’s time to revisit the wacky ’07 season that started with Appalachian State beating Michigan in the Big House. During its national championship run, LSU lost twice — the aforementioned game against Arkansas and against Kentucky. This one also went to triple overtime. The win marked the Wildcats’ first win over a top-ranked team since 1964, the year they beat Ole Miss.

LSU: vs. No. 3 Ole Miss (2014): Finding upset wins for LSU is difficult considering how consistent the program has been under the direction of Les Miles. However two seasons ago, a 6-2 LSU team derailed an undefeated 7-0 Ole Miss team that was shooting to represent the SEC in the inaugural College Football Playoff. During their run, the Rebels had ended a 10-game losing streak to Alabama and won every other contest comfortably up until their trip to Tiger Stadium. A 3-yard touchdown pass from Anthony Jennings to Logan Stokes provided the final 10-7 margin.

Mississippi: at No. 4 Florida (2008): The 2008 Gators were loaded, regarded by some as quite possibly the best team of the 2000s. Tim Tebow, fresh off his Heisman campaign in 2007, and his squad faced a 22-point underdog that had already dropped games to Vanderbilt and Wake Forest. Ole Miss overcame a 10-point deficit and found itself up 31-30 after a missed extra point following Percy Harvin’s 15-yard TD run with 3:28 left. Facing fourth-and-1 with 40 seconds left at the Ole Miss 32-yard line, the Rebels stopped Tebow short and picked up the victory. Obviously, Ole Miss’ win over Alabama in 2014 was also a candidate, but this one gets the nod.

Mississippi State: at No. 22 Florida (2010): The Gators hadn’t lost back-to-back home games since ’03. Former Florida offensive coordinator Dan Mullen, in his second season in Starkville, led his Bulldogs to a 10-7 win despite his quarterback Chris Relf only going 4 of 9 passing for 33 yards. How big was the victory for Mississippi State? The next day, MSU was ranked in the AP Poll for the first time since 2001.

Missouri: vs. No. 1 Oklahoma (2010): The only game that didn’t pit two SEC schools against each other was this one, which came two years before Missouri joined the conference. Gary Pinkel, after starting 0-7 against Oklahoma in his time at Columbia, toppled undefeated and No. 1 Oklahoma to vault Mizzou to No. 7 in the AP Poll. After entering the fourth quarter down 21-20, the Tigers scored 16 points in the fourth quarter on the way to a 36-27 win.

South Carolina: vs. No. 1 Alabama (2010): Like 2007, ’10 was a crazy season in its own right. That was also the year that saw South Carolina win its first-ever game against the No. 1 team in the country. The Gamecocks had time to lick their wounds with a bye after dropping a 35-27 decision to No. 17 Auburn before having to face the defending national champs. Stephen Garcia, Marcus Lattimore and Alshon Jeffery led the team to the 35-21 win. “I said, ‘Fellas, if fate means for us to win this game Saturday then let’s give it a chance. Let’s give fate a chance to happen,'” Spurrier said. South Carolina would go on to appear in its one and only SEC Championship Game.

Tennessee: vs. No. 12 Georgia (2007): The Bulldogs weren’t afraid of Neyland Stadium, having won three straight there entering their ’07 matchup. Matt Stafford led a talented Georgia team looking to extend it to four against a Tennessee team that had suffered a two-touchdown loss to Cal and a 59-20 drubbing at the hands of Florida. However, Knowshon Moreno and UGA’s ground game only managed 69 yards on the day as the Vols ambushed the Bulldogs by going up 28-0 at halftime. Erik Ainge was efficient in going 17 of 22 for 165 yards and Arian Foster found the end zone three times in the convincing 35-14 win. UT went on to lose to LSU in the SEC title game while Georgia finished the season on a seven-game winning streak, including a Sugar Bowl annihilation of Colt Brennan and Hawaii.

Texas A&M: at No. 1 Alabama (2012): Here’s Johnny! Redshirt freshman Johnny Manziel took his show to Tuscaloosa and immediately put the defending national champs — and eventual national champs that season — on notice by leading the Aggies to a 20-0 lead after the first quarter. Alabama climbed back to within a field goal entering the fourth quarter and were only down by 6 with nine minutes still to play until this happened on third-and-goal. The Tide made it 29-24 on the ensuring drive, but Deshazor Everett’s interception on fourth-and-goal at the 2-yard line with about 1:30 seconds left secured the Aggies’ win.

Vanderbilt: at No. 6 South Carolina (2007): Wait, you thought we were done with 2007? The Commodores came into their matchup at sixth-ranked Gamecocks having lost consecutive games to Auburn and Georgia. Vanderbilt handed Steve Spurrier arguably the biggest head-scratching loss of his career in Columbia. What’s even more amazing is that Vandy scored all 17 of its points in the eventual 17-6 win in the opening quarter. In fact, the only other points in the game came by way of two South Carolina field goals in the second quarter. The ‘Dores defense was too much, limiting the Gamecocks’ ground game to just 26 yards while intercepting quarterbacks Blake Mitchell and Chris Smelley a total of three times. That sent South Carolina’s promising season into a tailspin as it finished on a five-game skid.