The days of multi-sport stars are dwindling down. From a young age, kids (or their parents) pick a sport and specialize in it, playing in year-round leagues, attending camps and meeting with private coaches.

That aspect of youth sports makes incoming SEC players Kyler Murray and Terry Godwin unique in this day and age. Both are baseball stars, with Godwin earning an invitation to an Atlanta Braves tryout camp leading up to the Major League Baseball draft, and Murray telling Major League teams he was opting out despite some first-round projections.

There are a few other two-sport athletes around the SEC. Notably, Alabama redshirt freshman cornerback Marlon Humphrey was a part of the Crimson Tide’s record-setting 4×400 relay, and three of his mates in the secondary — Tony Brown, Bradley Sylve and Anthony Averett — are also members of Alabama’s track and field team.

Who are some of the greatest multi-sport athletes in SEC football history? Let’s take a look at a few of the stars who played their second sport at an elite level.

Billy Cannon, LSU — track and field: Cannon was one of the most unique athletes of his day, a running back who could do it all with power and speed. That was evident in track and field as well as on the gridiron. At LSU, Cannon ran the 100-yard dash in 9.4 seconds. That would convert to approximately 10.3 seconds in the 100 meters, which is what they run in track these days. That would put him only a few tenths of a second off of the world record in the 100 meters. On top of that, Cannon tossed the shot put 54 feet, a mark that would put him on par with NCAA championship meet qualifiers today.

Bo Jackson, Auburn — baseball, track and field: Bo knew all about being an all-star. To this day, Jackson is the only athlete to ever make both the MLB All-Star Game and the NFL Pro Bowl. He batted .338 in his college baseball career at Auburn, then pursued baseball professionally with the Kansas City Royals while he sat out the 1986 NFL season. In his first full MLB season (the same year as his NFL rookie season), Jackson hit 22 home runs, then hit at least 25 home runs for three straight years before his devastating hip injury derailed both his football and baseball careers. Jackson also ran track at Auburn, qualifying for the NCAA championships in the 100-meter dash in both his freshman and sophomore years, running a personal best of 10.39 seconds in the 1985 NCAA championships.

Herschel Walker, Georgia — track and field, mixed martial arts, bobsled: Walker might be the biggest physical freak to ever grace a football field, and that’s saying something. Take a look at him as he neared 50. That’s better than most people look in their 20s. Walker wasn’t just a star on the football field. He ran his best 100-meter dash in 10.1 seconds and was a member of a national championship 4×100 meter relay team in 1981, earning two All-American selections in his career. In 1992, while a member of the Minnesota Vikings, Walker decided to give an unorthodox sport a try: bobsledding. He made the United States’ top two-man bobsled team, finishing seventh in the event. Then, well after his football career was finished, Walker took up MMA fighting. He made his debut in 2010 at 47 years old, winning by TKO, and won his second fight the next year in a first-round TKO, although he hasn’t fought since then.

Todd Helton, Tennessee — baseball: Helton wasn’t much of a producer at quarterback for the Volunteers, throwing just 75 passes in his career. He did back up Heath Shuler and was actually ahead of Peyton Manning on the depth chart to start the year during Manning’s freshman season, so he was clearly a talent. It was on the diamond where Helton made his name, though. Helton, who played both football and baseball at UT, was the eighth overall pick in the 1995 MLB draft and went on to become the greatest Colorado Rockies player in the franchise’s history. The five-time All Star batted .316 for his career and slugged 369 home runs while tallying more than 2,500 career hits. The Rockies retired his number in 2014.

Jeff Demps, Florida — track and field: For as dangerous of a weapon as Demps was for the Gators when they won their 2008 national championship, he was even better on the track. Before he even arrived on campus, Demps set the national high school record at the 2008 Olympic trials with a time of 10.01 seconds in the 100 meters. On top of a few SEC championships, Demps won national championships in the indoor 60-meter dash and the outdoor 100-meters in 2010, then another 60-meter championship in 2012. Demps was part of a relay that set the American record in the 4×100 relay at the 2012 Olympics and was a member of the silver medal-winning team.