While 2012 and 2013 were busy years for coaching turnover in the SEC, it’s been a fairly consistent turnover across the league. With LSU’s change from Les Miles to Ed Orgeron last season, only Alabama and Mississippi State have not made a head coaching change in the past five years.

Nick Saban and Dan Mullen are the longest tenured head coaches in the SEC at 10 and eight seasons, respectively. The SEC East has been most volatile in recent years as Kentucky’s Mark Stoops and Tennessee’s Butch Jones are the longest tenured at four seasons each.

While we won’t review the retirements of Steve Spurrier and Gary Pinkel, here are the remaining SEC head coaches who have left their jobs in the past five years.

Arkansas

John L. Smith (2012): Lasted one season at Arkansas, finishing 4-8 and 2-6 in the SEC. He went on to coach three seasons at Fort Lewis College and collected a 14-19 record, 11-16 in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference and is the head coach at Division II Kentucky State. The Thorobreds went 4-7 last season and 4-4 in the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference where they lost 33-30 in double overtime to Fort Valley State in the championship game. Smith was named SIAC Coach of the Year after his team went 3-1 in SIAC divisional games and won the West division.

Auburn

Gene Chizik (2009-12): In his second season at Auburn, Chizik won a national championship. Two years later the Tigers went 3-9, 0-8 in the SEC, and he was fired. Out of coaching for two years, Chizik returned as defensive coordinator for North Carolina in 2015 and coached there for two seasons until he stepped down earlier this year. He said he wanted to spend more time with his family, which is still in Auburn. UNC was ranked 63rd nationally in total defense in 2016, and 96th in 2015. In 2014, the Tar Heels were 120th nationally.

Florida

Will Muschamp (2011-14): In his second season at Florida, Muschamp led the Gators to an 11-2 season, a tie for the SEC East title and a Sugar Bowl appearance. But the next two years, the Gators fell to 10-13 overall and 7-9 in the SEC, and Muschamp was released. He was the defensive coordinator at Auburn two years ago and went 6-7 as head coach last year at South Carolina in his first season, including 3-5 in the conference. The Gamecocks lost the Birmingham Bowl to No. 22 South Florida 46-39, in overtime.

Georgia

Mark Richt (2001-15): Just one losing season in 15 years at Georgia, he won or tied for six SEC East titles, his teams finished in the top five three times, won 10-plus games in nine seasons, went to a bowl game in all 15 seasons. Following a 9-3 campaign in 2015, he was let go. But he accepted an offer to coach his alma mater, Miami, and led the Hurricanes last season to a 9-4 record and 5-3 in the ACC. While a decent minority of the Georgia fan base still regrets the school’s decision, Miami defeated West Virginia 31-14 in the Russell Athletic Bowl for the program’s first bowl victory in 10 years. Miami was ranked No. 20 in the final Associated Press poll.

Kentucky

Joker Phillips (2010-12): Phillips went 13-24 in three seasons at Kentucky, 4-20 in the SEC. He became the wide receivers coach and recruiting coordinator at Florida until two years ago, then became the wide receivers coach for the Cleveland Browns following an alleged NCAA infraction at Florida. He was hired last season at Ohio State to serve as a quality control coach on offense. Two months ago, Phillips was hired at Cincinnati as wide receivers coach as former OSU assistant Luke Fickell became head coach of the Bearcats.

LSU

Les Miles (2005-16): Was fired four games into the 2016 season following a loss at Auburn, Miles was 114-34 and left LSU as the school’s second-winningest coach. Miles led the Tigers to the 2007 BCS National Championship, the third national title in program history. In 11-plus seasons with the Tigers, LSU averaged 10 wins a year and won more games from 2005-2015 than any other program in the SEC.

Along with the 114 overall wins, he also became the second-winningest coach in school history with SEC regular season victories (64). Along with the national title, one moment many will remember of Miles is following the 19-7 win over Texas A&M in 2015, when the Tigers carried him off the field on their shoulders. Miles was reportedly mentioned for open jobs at Purdue, Houston and Minnesota, but remains unemployed following his separation from LSU, which included a $9.6 million buyout.

Tennessee

Derek Dooley (2010-12): Three losing seasons at Tennessee, 15-21 overall and 4-19 in SEC games, isn’t what Vols fans were used to. He was fired with one game remaining in the 2012 season. Dooley has been the wide receivers coach for the Dallas Cowboys since 2013. In Dallas, Dooley reunited with head coach Jason Garrett after they coached with the Miami Dolphins in 2005-06 on a staff that included head coach Nick Saban and defensive coordinator Will Muschamp.

Vanderbilt

James Franklin (2011-13): Collected notable back-to-back 9-win seasons at Vanderbilt that led him to become the head coach at Penn State, where he went 7-6 in consecutive seasons, and then 11-3 last season, including 8-1 in the Big Ten.

Penn State narrowly missed the College Football Playoff, but a nine-game winning streak helped them to the Big Ten Championship and a Rose Bowl berth. The Nittany Lions lost to Southern Cal in the Rose Bowl, but Penn State finished the season ranked No. 5 in the College Football Playoff Rankings and No. 7 in the Associated Press.

It was Penn State’s highest finish in the polls since 2005.