Who made our list of SEC studs and duds in Week 13? Let’s find out.

STUDS

1. Nick Chubb: Georgia’s star freshman only needed one half of action to amass 113 yards and two touchdowns against an overmatched Charleston Southern defense on Saturday, averaging a whopping 12.6 yards per carry in the process. The Dawgs didn’t need much out of Chubb to take care of CSU, but it got plenty from its new workhorse on offense. As long as Chubb’s body holds up the rest of the way, he should do wonders for the Georgia offense in place of the injured Todd Gurley.

2. Trey Flowers: Flowers was a man among boys in Saturday’s win over Ole Miss, manhandling the Rebels’ offensive line for much of the day in a resounding 30-0 win by the Hogs. Flowers recorded six tackles and 1.5 tackles for loss, adding a sack, three quarterback hurries and a fumble recovery to a very full stat line. The senior gave the Ole Miss quarterbacks trouble all game, and he helped limit the Rebels to just 63 yards on the ground at worse than two yards per carry. Flowers showed the consistency of a veteran leader, but never lost the explosiveness and power that made him one of the best playmakers in the SEC. As a result, he helped his team earn a huge SEC victory in his final home game as a Hog.

3. Markus Golden: The Tigers senior defensive end had his second straight huge game opposite star end Shane Ray on Saturday, recording a team-high 2.5 tackles for loss and two sacks in a win over Tennessee. He also registered six tackles, which was second on the team, and added two quarterback hurries and a fumble recovery to keep Mizzou in the driver’s seat in the SEC East. Ray does as much to free up Golden as Golden does for Ray, and the senior is finally beginning to reap the rewards as the Tigers close in on yet another division crown.

DUDS

1. Bo Wallace: Bad Bo was on display Saturday in Fayetteville, and it cost his team a chance at a 10-win regular season and a potential SEC West title. Wallace completed just 16 of 31 passes and threw two interceptions in the end zone to cost his team points in a 30-0 loss. He also lost a fumble in the first quarter to set up the Hogs first score of the game, and he was never able to get comfortable in the pocket in one of his worst outings of the season. There were plenty of other problems with the Rebels offense on Saturday, but Wallace’s lack of command on offense was by far the most glaring in Ole Miss’ worst loss of 2014.

2. Jalen Hurd: Tennessee’s freshman tailback has had a sensational rookie year, but he had one of his worst games of the season in the Vols loss to Missouri. Hurd ran for just 40 yards on 11 carries against the Tigers, posting his lowest yards per carry average since a loss to Ole Miss more than a month ago. Missouri hasn’t been kind to many SEC rushing attacks this season, and Hurd learned why the hard way in Saturday’s game. The freshman actually had as many yards through the air as he did on the ground, but he was equally ineffective in both areas as the Vols missed on a chance to clinch bowl eligibility for the first time since 2010.

3. Matt Jones/Kelvin Taylor: Florida is normally a run-heavy team that sprinkles in the pass to keep defenses honest, but it flipped the script on Eastern Kentucky in an easy 52-3 win on Saturday. The Gators threw for 326 yards and five touchdowns but ran for just 104 yards at fewer than three yards per carry, and Jones and Taylor combined for just 56 yards on 17 carries, an average of just 3.3 yards per carry. Ultimately the lack of productivity by Florida’s star tailback tandem did not cost them on offense, but it was unusual to see both backs struggle so mightily against such an underwhelming opponent. No matter, Gators fans should expect to see plenty of both backs in Saturday’s showdown against arch-rival Florida State.