The SEC has had its share of head coaching changes over the past five years: 11 of the 14 schools have changed, at least once. Only Alabama, LSU and Mississippi State have not had a coaching change in the past five seasons.

LSU’s Les Miles is the longest tenured coach in the SEC – 11 years. Alabama’s Nick Saban is next at nine years followed by Dan Mullen, who has been at Mississippi State for seven seasons.

The picture is very different in the SEC East, where Kentucky’s Mark Stoops and Tennessee’s Butch Jones share the longest stint, each with three years at their respective schools. Three schools, all in the SEC East (Georgia, South Carolina, Missouri) will have new coaches for the 2016 season.

Here are the 12 former SEC head coaches who have changed jobs in the past five years, their school and where they are now:

ARKANSAS

Bobby Petrino (2008-11): In four years at Arkansas, the Razorbacks improved every season, culminating in an 11-2 season in 2011, a second consecutive 6-2 record in the SEC, a Cotton Bowl berth and a No. 5 ranking nationally. But a motorcycle accident and subsequent scandal ended his career there. Petrino was the head coach for one season at Western Kentucky (8-4, 4-3 Sun Belt Conference) before returning to Louisville, where he was the head coach from 2003-06 before taking the Arkansas job.

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 compiling a 14-19 record, 11-16 in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference before being named in December as the head coach at Division II Kentucky State.

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 remains there today.

FLORIDA

Will Muschamp (2011-14): In his second season at Florida, Muschamp guided the Gators to an 11-2 season, a tie for the SEC East crown and a Sugar Bowl appearance. But in two seasons following, the Gators didn’t come close to matching those numbers (10-13 overall, 7-9 in the SEC) and Muschamp was let go. He was the defensive coordinator at Auburn last year and this season takes over as head coach at South Carolina.

GEORGIA

Mark Richt (2001-15): Only one losing season in 15 years at Georgia, he won or tied for six SEC East titles, his teams finished in the top 5 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. He soon after signed to become the head coach at Miami, his alma mater.

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 last season, when he coached wide receivers for the NFL Cleveland Browns.

MISSOURI

Gary Pinkel (2001-15): After winning back-to-back SEC East titles in 2013-14 with 12- and 11-win seasons, respectively, in Missouri’s second and third seasons in the SEC, the Tigers plummeted to 5-7 overall and just 1-7 in the SEC. Pinkel announced his retirement after the season citing health issues.

OLE MISS

Houston Nutt (2008-11): After 10 seasons at Arkansas, Nutt resigned and went to Ole Miss where following two consecutive Cotton Bowl appearances, the Rebels sunk to 4-8 and 2-10 in successive years and he was fired. He hasn’t coached since and currently works for CBS Sports as a college football analyst.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Steve Spurrier (2005-15): The Head Ball Coach brought Gamecocks football to new heights after winning a national championship at Florida (1996). He brought South Carolina three consecutive 11-win seasons (2011-13) before calling it quits in the middle of the 2015 season, although not officially retiring.

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. Let go with one game remaining in the 2012 season, Dooley has been the wide receivers coach for the NFL Dallas Cowboys from 2013 to the present.

TEXAS A&M

Mike Sherman (2008-11): After just one winning season in four at College Station, the former Green Bay Packers head coach was dismissed. He was the offensive coordinator for the NFL Miami Dolphins (2012-13) and out of coaching for one year before taking the position of head coach at Nauset Regional High School, near Cape Cod, where he remains today.

VANDERBILT

James Franklin (2011-13): Impressive back-to-back 9-win seasons at Vanderbilt got Franklin the job as head coach at Penn State, where he has gone 7-6 in consecutive seasons and remains the coach entering the 2016 season.