Every SEC team has at least one multi-game bowl winning streak, though some stretched over a decade or more and several included multiple coaches.

Here’s a look at each program’s longest bowl winning streak (* means it’s active):

Alabama (6): Despite the Crimson Tide’s current decade of dominance, their longest bowl winning streak started in the 1970s under Bear Bryant. Alabama won six in a row — in six consecutive seasons from 1975-80 — against Penn State, UCLA, Ohio State, Penn State, Arkansas and Baylor as four of them came in the Sugar Bowl.

Nick Saban’s best streak is four consecutive bowl wins.

Arkansas (3*): The Razorbacks are in the midst of their best bowl stretch in history, riding wins over Kansas State, Texas and Kansas State in the Cotton, Texas and Liberty bowls. And they’ve scored at least 29 points in every game. They’re only other noticeable success was in 1975 and 1977 with consecutive wins in the Cotton and Orange bowls.

Auburn (5): Tommy Tuberville began the five-game streak in 2006 with a Cotton Bowl win over Nebraska, and it continued through two Chick-fil-A bowl wins and a BCS Championship as the brain trust shifted to Gene Chizik.

Florida (4): The Gators’ longest streak also included multiple coaches, and neither was named Steve Spurrier. Urban Meyer won three consecutive bowls, starting with the January 2008 BCS Championship, and Will Muschamp finished the four-game streak with a bowl win in 2011 — over Ohio State.

Spurrier’s best streak was three consecutive bowl wins.

Georgia (4): The Bulldogs don’t have a problem putting together bowl winning streaks. In fact, they’ve had four-game winning streaks three times. The most recent streak came in the Chick-fil-A, Sugar, Capital One and Independence from 2006-09 under Mark Richt. They also won four in a row from 1997-00 and 1941-46 (they didn’t play in ’43 or ’44).

Kentucky (3): Rich Brooks is often credited with leading a golden age of Big Blue football with two Music City victories, and one Liberty Bowl win from 2006-08. Yet that brief run of success only tied Bear Bryant’s wins in the 1950 Sugar Bowl, 1951 Cotton and the 1976 team led by Fran Curci, that beat North Carolina in the Peach Bowl.

LSU (5): Independence and Peach bowls helped the Tigers win five in a row from 1995 through 2001 as the streak was bookended by Gerry DiNardo and Nick Saban. That 2001 season included upsets over Tennessee in the SEC Championship Game, and Illinois in the Sugar Bowl.

Mississippi State (5): Three coaches contributed to this streak, which started with Jackie Sherrill in 2000, included one win from Sylvester Croom in his only bowl appearance and ended with Dan Mullen’s second bowl win in 2011.

Missouri (4): One highlight of the Tigers’ streak of the 1960s under Dan Devine was a victory over Georgia Tech in 1962 in the Bluebonnet Bowl. With a current three-game winning streak, the program had a chance to match the 1960s mark the past two seasons only to come up empty.

Ole Miss (6): Three coaches built this streak as well. David Cutliffe (with quarterback Eli Manning) started it with two wins in 2002 and 2003, Houston Nutt went 2-0 in his only bowl appearances and Hugh Freeze won his first two in 2012 and 2013.

South Carolina (4*): The Gamecocks are in the midst of their greatest run of bowl success. Remarkable, considering South Carolina lost its first eight bowl games from 1945-1988. Steve Spurrier is responsible for the streak, ripping off four straight bowl wins from 2011-2014. Will Muschamp will try to make it five in a row in the Birmingham Bowl against South Florida.

Tennessee (5): The mid-1980s were a heyday for Johnny Majors’ Vols and culminated in 1990 with a 23-22 win over Virginia in the Sugar Bowl with a young offensive coordinator, Phillip Fulmer. They won five consecutive bowl games in a six-year span.

Texas A&M (4): The Aggies’ streak included a host of high-scoring affairs from 2011 through 2014 with at least 41 points scored in three of the four games. Tim DeRuyter gets credit for starting it, and Kevin Sumlin added three more before losing last year. The program overall has had a roller-coaster relationship with bowls as it’s won three consecutive and loss three consecutive each three times.

Vanderbilt (2*): Already on an active program-high run of two consecutive, thanks to James Franklin’s 2012 Music City and 2013 BBVA Compass wins over N.C. State and Houston, Derek Mason has a chance to extend it further this season. It’s only the eighth appearance in a bowl, as Vanderbilt played in just three from 1955-1982.