Every SEC program, with an insane amount of numbers that go with decades of football, has those incredibly odd statistics or facts attached to it, whether good, bad or somewhere in between. You could no doubt uncover one odd number or thing for every year of football each program has played. Here’s one for each school, whether it’s a present-day thing or something we dipped into the past to find out:

ALABAMA

OK, we’re nitpicking here, because Bama is the current king of college football and obviously in the SEC. But through all the history and tradition and titles and coaching statues, there are only two Heisman Trophy statues that can be found in that rich trophy case, and one of them was won a few months ago by Derrick Henry. The other Heisman winner was also a running back, Mark Ingram in 2009. To which Bama fans will justifiably shrug and say, look at our national titles, and they would be absolutely right. Just surprising to only see two Heisman winners in all those years of glorious football at a program that began in 1892, but that can only speak to the balance all those great teams had. Auburn and Florida have more Heisman winners.

ARKANSAS

Darren McFadden (1,830) and Felix Jones (1,162) combined for 2,992 yards in 2007 — a record for two running back teammates selected in the first round of the same NFL draft. McFadden was the No. 4 overall pick in 2008; Jones was No. 22.

AUBURN

In the 2005 NFL draft, Tigers running backs Ronnie Brown and Carnell Williams were selected No. 2 and No. 5, respectively. That’s the earliest two offensive teammates from an SEC school have been selected. Brown and Williams combined for 2,078 rushing yards in 2004, in case you were wondering.

FLORIDA

This is one of a few schedule oddities that make the list. Not until the calendar turns to November will the Gators play a game that’s not in Florida or Tennessee. Five games in Gainesville, a back-to-back road set against Tennessee and Vanderbilt and the showdown with Georgia in Jacksonville take UF all the way into a Nov. 5 matchup at Arkansas. After that? Two more games in Gainesville and the finale against FSU in Tallahassee, so the Gators have exactly one game not in Florida or Tennessee.

GEORGIA

Perhaps this is some karma for the Bulldogs, and especially if you’re one of the diehards who showed up 93,000 strong to watch the G-Day spring game at Sanford Stadium. The White team beat the Red team 34-14 in front of that mass of people on April 16, setting the SEC record for spring game attendance. But the stat, or the connection, that lands this here is that it happened in Kirby Smart’s first spring game. Smart is a Nick Saban disciple, and the previous SEC record for spring game attendance was 92,310, set at Alabama’s 2011 A-Day game, which was also the day the Crimson Tide unveiled a statue of Saban. You can put the Smart statue plans on hold for now, but it’s not a bad place to start.

KENTUCKY

This one is short and sweet for the perennial SEC bottom-feeders, who despite a 5-7 overall record and a dismal 2-6 mark in the SEC were outscored by just 33 points (329-296) in 2015. Blame Mississippi State and Tennessee, who crushed the Wildcats by a combined margin of 57 points on back-to-back weeks in late October.

LSU

OK, Bayou Bengal fanatics, don’t get upset, we’re just reporting the facts. We know your passion burns deep each fall for your Tigers, you don’t have to prove anything in that regard. But the attendance for this year’s spring game was a bit of a stunner: 21,000. For any middling program, that wouldn’t be bad at all. But you would figure a proud program like LSU could garner a number a little closer to rival Alabama (76,000). Georgia drew an unheard of 93,000 for Smart’s first spring game, but the Bulldogs had the novelty factor. But LSU’s figure was ahead of only Vanderbilt (3,500) and Mississippi State (15,717) in the SEC. Surely LSU will survive this, just a hunch, and still have its usual solid season this fall.

MISSISSIPPI STATE

Here’s a somewhat shocking one: Despite having the dazzling Dak Prescott running around from the quarterback position in 2015, the Bulldogs and their shaky offensive line allowed 32 sacks in 13 games, including the bowl matchup with North Carolina State. That’s two more sacks than the Bulldogs had themselves.

MISSOURI

This one goes back to last season, an uneven one for the Tigers, who were stout on defense and inconsistent, to be kind, on offense. In 2015, Missouri’s defense was third in the nation in yards allowed per play (4.32) and fifth in scoring defense (16.1 points per game). Hard to believe the Tigers could squeeze out only five wins, but they do play in the SEC and that offense was, well, inconsistent. Incidentally, the Tigers’ D allowed just 3.9 yards per play in the spring game.

OLE MISS

This speaks to Hugh Freeze’s immediate impact on the program. In his first three years from 2012-14, the Rebels boasted three straight Vaught-Hemingway Stadium season-ticket sellouts and season attendance records, and three straight top-15 recruiting classes.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Will Muschamp has a lot to prove in his second SEC stop after a disappointing stint at Florida, but he doesn’t exactly have a lot to follow in the way of titles in Columbia, even if the names that preceded him would suggest otherwise. South Carolina’s previous two coaches, spanning from 1999-2015, are named Lou Holtz and Steve Spurrier, yet the Gamecocks’ last conference title was still won in 1969, and that was an ACC crown, long before they joined the SEC in 1992. South Carolina came close in 2010, losing in the SEC title game to Auburn, and did have three consecutive 11-win seasons between 2011-13.

TENNESSEE

Like Florida’s schedule oddity involving the state of Tennessee, the Volunteers have one of their own. The Vols won’t leave the state of Tennessee in September or in November. It’s Tennessee’s year to host Florida, at the end of September, and the Vols also have a special home game in Bristol against Virginia Tech on Sept. 10. They then have three home games to start November and end the season at Vanderbilt. Yes, it’s a road game, but it’s in Nashville. So only in October, which includes visits to Georgia, Texas A&M and South Carolina, and one little home game against Alabama, will the Volunteers leave the state to play a game. Weird, but the Vols and their fans probably won’t mind.

TEXAS A&M

While Johnny Manziel hasn’t had any impact in the NFL, they sure do miss him in College Station. The Aggies are just 7-9 in the SEC (3-5 in 2014 and 4-4 in 2015) since he left.

VANDERBILT

We don’t mean to dump on poor Vanderbilt, which had back-to-back 9-4 seasons as recently as 2012 and 2013, but the past is the past, something each Commodores coach aims to change or at least improve. In 112 years of football, Vandy has only been to an astonishing seven bowl games. The good news? Four have come since 2008.