The SEC has passed the ball more and more since the 1990s, and it shows when you look at the all-time single-season receptions leaderboard.

Throughout conference history, there have been seven seasons in which a player has had 90 or more catches; six of them have come since 1999.

One school — surprisingly, Vanderbilt — claims three of the seven seasons (including two by one player), while four other programs claim one player each to pull off the feat.

Here’s the short list, in chronological order.

Keith Edwards, Vanderbilt

Year: 1983
Stats: 97 catches, 909 yards

Edwards is the first player in SEC history to crack the 90-catch plateau — a running back, at that — and there are quite a few remarkable things about his season.

He did it on a 2-9 Vanderbilt team that led the league in pass attempts (trailing often enough to finish 2-9 leads to a lot of throwing situations). Edwards also was not his team’s leading receiving, yardage-wise; that honor went to Chuck Scott, who had 70 catches for 971 yards. Edwards did have the most touches on the team, also running the ball 59 times on the season. Perhaps most remarkably, out of those 97 catches and 156 total offensive touches, Edwards didn’t find the end zone once.

Edwards finished his career 200 catches on the dot, then the highest career total in SEC history.

James Whalen, Kentucky

Year: 1999
Stats: 90 catches, 1,019 yards, 10 TD

The second player to hit 90 catches in a season also was not a wide receiver. Whalen, a tight end for the Wildcats, put up his monster year the season after Tim Couch left, showing that Hal Mumme’s Air Raid offense could survive without the former No. 1 overall pick.

In his All-American senior season, which at the time included the second-most receptions in SEC history (and still stands as the most in Kentucky history), Whalen placed himself second on Kentucky’s single-season leaderboard in both receiving yards and touchdowns. He had four games with double-digit catches, five 100-yard games and tied the Kentucky record with four receiving touchdowns (to go along with a season-best 151 yards) against Georgia.

Josh Reed, LSU

Year: 2001
Stats: 94 catches, 1,740 yards, 7 TD

The SEC’s first Biletnikoff Award winner was a monster while paired with quarterback Rohan Davey. He set LSU records for receptions and yards and set the SEC mark for receiving yards in a season while leading the nation in yards and catches.

Reed’s biggest moment came against Alabama in a showdown in Tuscaloosa. While neither team was ranked in the annual rivalry showdown, Reed still made history. He set the SEC record with 19 receptions, which still stands, and put up 293 yards, which at the time the was the most in SEC history.

Cobi Hamilton, Arkansas

Year: 2012
Stats: 90 catches, 1,355 yards, 5 TD

Hamilton exploded as a senior, tallying more catches in his final season than he’d had in his previous three seasons combined. Always a big-play threat — he averaged no less than 15.9 yards per catch in his first three seasons — Hamilton became a do-it-all receiver for the Razorbacks in his final year.

Unfortunately, his big season came as Arkansas transitioned away from the Bobby Petrino era. The Hogs started the season ranked No. 10, but after a loss to Louisiana-Monroe plummeted out of the rankings and finished 4-8.

Still, Arkansas leaned on Hamilton to keep them in games, and he had five contests with 10 or more receptions on the season. He broke Reed’s record for receiving yards in a game with 303 yards on just 10 catches in a loss to Rutgers.

Jordan Matthews, Vanderbilt

Years: 2012, 2013
Stats: 94 catches, 1,323 yards, 8 TD (2012); 112 catches, 1,477 yards, 7 TD (2013)

One of the greatest Commodores in program history, Matthews has a claim as perhaps the best SEC wide receiver of all time. He broke another former Commodore’s all-time SEC catches mark, passing Earl Bennett’s career total to finish with 262 receptions.

Matthews’ back-to-back 90-catch seasons coincided with the best two-year stretch in Vanderbilt’s recent history, with the team making and winning two straight bowl games and winning nine games in consecutive years. Across the two seasons, Matthews averaged 7.9 receptions per game. After putting up the second-best receiving season in SEC history in 2012, Matthews obliterated the conference’s catches record as a senior, blowing past Edwards by 15 catches.

Amari Cooper, Alabama

Year: 2014
Stats: 124 catches, 1,727 yards, 16 touchdowns

Matthews’ single-season receptions record didn’t last long. Cooper bounced back from an injury-plagued sophomore year to dominate as a junior, winning the SEC’s second Biletnikoff Award while earning consensus All-American honors. He was the catalyst of the most prolific passing offense in Alabama history, serving as both an extension of the running game through the air and as a deep threat.

Cooper’s 124 catches were the most in SEC history (although he did it in one more game than Matthews), and he also led the nation in catches and finished second in receiving yards and touchdowns. Alabama won 12 games, and after the season Cooper left school a year early for the NFL; he was the No. 4 pick in the draft.