The SEC has claimed so many of college football’s best quarterbacks through the years, it can be tough to keep track.

With that in mind, we’re continuing Quarterbacks Week at SDS by sorting some of the SEC’s best quarterbacks from the last 10 years by superlatives representing their greatest attributes as a player. Take a look:

MOST ACCURATE

Greg McElroy, Alabama: McElroy completed just shy of 70 percent of his passes his senior year in 2010, one year after he led Alabama to its first national championship of the Nick Saban era. He completed 222 of 313 throws that year, and is the only SEC quarterback of the last 10 years to complete at least 70 percent of his passes in a season. The next-most-accurate season by an SEC quarterback was delivered by Johnny Manziel during his Heisman run in 2013 when he completed more than 68 percent of his throws.

STRONGEST ARM

Matthew Stafford, Georgia: There were really only a handful of quarterbacks even considered for this honor: Stafford, former LSU star and No. 1 overall draft pick Jamarcus Russell, and former Arkansas signal caller Ryan Mallett. Many, including the writers for NFL.com, consider Stafford to have the strongest arm in the NFL today, and while that doesn’t account for Russell, who is now out of the league, it is safe to say that Stafford earns the edge. The former Dawgs quarterback can control his powerful arm, which is why he gets the nod here and why he’s a Pro Bowl quarterback while Russell is widely regarded as a bust.

WINNINGEST QUARTERBACK

A.J. McCarron, Alabama: McCarron won 36 of 40 games in three seasons as Alabama’s starting quarterback from 2011-13. He never posted an undefeated season, but he never lost more than twice in any season during that time, claiming two national championships and an SEC title by the end of his career. McCarron just beat out Tim Tebow, who won 35 games in three years as a full-time starter at Florida, and Connor Shaw, who won 33 games with three straight 11-win seasons during that three-year span from 2011-13.

FLEETEST OF FOOT

Tim Tebow, Florida: Players like Manziel and Cam Newton may have been more exciting running with the football, but no SEC quarterback was as accomplished with his legs as Tebow by the end of this career at Florida. He began his career as a situational backup quarterback to Chris Leak, and he carried the ball about as often as he threw it, using his legs as a weapon that ultimately pushed Florida over the top to its first title of the Urban Meyer era. He then took over as the starter for three years but continued to rely on his legs, rushing for 2,478 yards in those three seasons, an average of more than 800 yards per year. No quarterback in the SEC in the last 10 years ran for more than the 2,947 yards Tebow ran for in four years, landing him this honor as the conference’s best running quarterback during that time.

MOST RELIED UPON

Aaron Murray, Georgia: No SEC quarterback of the last 10 years, and only one other SEC quarterback in conference history (Kentucky’s Jared Lorenzen), attempted more passes for his career than the 1,478 attempted by Murray in four years as the Bulldogs’ starter from 2010-13. Not only was Murray asked to move the ball through the air more than any other SEC signal caller, but he completed more than 62 percent of his throws and threw for more yards than any other player in SEC history. Despite playing with the likes of Todd Gurley and Isaiah Crowell, Murray was asked to do more than any other SEC quarterback ever, and he rose to the challenge, leaving behind one of the best college careers in SEC history.

MOST ACCOMPLISHED

Tebow: In four years as a contributor and three years as Florida’s starting quarterback, Tebow led the Gators to two national titles, two SEC titles and three SEC championship game appearances, all on the backs of 45 wins in that four-year span. He won a Heisman Trophy and formed one of the greatest quarterback-coach combinations in SEC history between he and Meyer. Newton and Manziel also won Heismans in the last 10 years, and Newton won a national championship in his only season at Auburn, but no quarterback was as productive and successful in a four-year career as Tebow, which is why he’ll be remembered as one of the greatest players in the history of Division I football.