Heisman ballots are due on Monday, Dec. 7. And now that we’re through 13 weeks of regular season play with one Saturday filled with conference championship games left to go, it is time for voters to get serious about who they will hand college football’s most prestigious award to next.

The SEC has three candidates that have been in the discussion as the season has moved along.

Let’s take a look at the body of work each has put together:

GIVE THE MAN HIS TROPHY

RB Derrick Henry, Alabama

2015 stats: 295 carries, 1,797 rushing yards, 22 rushing touchdowns; 10 receptions for 97 receiving yards in 12 games.

Remaining schedule: SEC Championship Game vs. Florida

Week 13 recap: If there was any doubt about Henry’s worthiness for the award prior to Week 13, he may have eliminated it during the Iron Bowl on Saturday. Henry threw the Alabama offense on his back and carried them to a 29-13 win. He ran for 271 yards and a touchdown on a jaw-dropping 46 attempts. Henry still has one more chance to improve his stock with a big game against a tough Florida defense in the SEC Championship Game. But as far as we’re concerned, we’ve seen enough. Give the man his trophy.

IT WAS A GOOD RUN

RB Leonard Fournette, LSU
2015 stats: 271 carries for 1,741 yards and 18 rushing touchdowns; 18 catches for 209 yards in 11 games.

Week 13 recap: Fournette finished his Heisman campaign with a strong effort during a 19-7 win against Texas A&M, totaling 212 yards of offense. If you compare his numbers to Henry’s, they’re very similar. If you take into account that he was shortchanged a game early in the season due to inclement weather, they’re even more impressive. But the turning point in the season for Fournette’s viability as a Heisman candidate was getting crushed in a head-to-head matchup with Henry in early November. Still, he deserves enough votes to warrant an invite to the ceremony.

NO HEISMAN, BUT STILL AN ALL-TIME SEC GREAT

QB Dak Prescott, Mississippi State
2015 stats: 291 of 435 passing for 3,413 yards and 25 touchdowns, four interceptions; 148 carries for 541 rushing yards and 10 rushing touchdowns in 12 games.

Week 13 recap: Though he showed some signs of a potential late rally for Heisman votes in a Week 12 performance against Arkansas, Prescott was unable to finish the season with a win against Ole Miss in the Egg Bowl. His numbers turned out just fine, throwing for 254 yards and two touchdowns, while rushing for 63 yards and another score. But quarterbacks on teams that have lost four games aren’t going to garner much in the way of votes, even with numbers as consistent as Prescott has produced this season. Though he will never win the Heisman, his career has still been one of the most impressive in the conference’s modern era.

INJURED, BUT NOT FORGOTTEN

RB Nick Chubb, Georgia
2015 stats: 92 carries for 747 yards and seven rushing touchdowns; four catches for 32 yards and a touchdown.

2015 summary: Chubb, who was considered one of the league’s top Heisman candidates in the preseason and through the early portion of the season, suffered a season-ending knee injury at Tennessee on Oct. 10. He was on pace to potentially have an opportunity to make a trip to New York as one of the Heisman finalists. Chubb finished the season with an average of 8.1 yards per carry, and averaged scoring a touchdown once every 12 touches.

On the outside looking in: Texas A&M DE Myles Garrett; Ole Miss QB Chad Kelly; Tennessee RB Jalen Hurd; Texas A&M WR Christian Kirk; Ole Miss DL Robert Nkemdiche; Arkansas RB Alex Collins; Auburn RB Peyton Barber; Missouri LB Kentrell Brothers; Ole Miss WR Laquon Treadwell.