Here’s a look at the SEC’s top position groups by team from Week 4:

QUARTERBACKS  — Alabama: Nearly flawless during the Crimson Tide’s most important game to date, Blake Sims finished a deep post shy of the school record for single-game passing yards and squashed all talk of a quarterback controversy in Tuscaloosa.

RUNNING BACKS — Georgia: The Bulldogs surpassed the 300-yard rushing mark for the second time this season and surprisingly, it wasn’t Todd Gurley who exceeded triple digits. Freshman Sony Michel contributed 155 yards and three touchdowns during a 66-point rout of Troy. Mississippi State’s Josh Robinson deserves a nod here too, after nearly topping 200 yards at LSU.

WIDE RECEIVERS — Alabama: What Amari Cooper did against Florida was nothing short of legendary, a dichotomy of short, intermediate and deep routes that gashed the Gators secondary. Whether it was zone or man coverage, Florida had no answer for Cooper, who currently leads all FBS wideouts in catches and yards.

OFFENSIVE LINE — Mississippi State: The Bulldogs gave Dak Prescott room to operate in the pocket and when receivers were covered, the dual threat quarterback tucked it in his gut and rushed for 105 yards. As one of the SEC’s best, LSU’s front seven still managed two sacks and a fumble return for a touchdown, but Mississippi State won the battle in the trenches which had to happen to pull off the victory at Tiger Stadium. We’ll forget Dillon Day’s stomping incident(s) ever happened.

DEFENSIVE LINE — Texas A&M: Mark Snyder’s side of the football swarmed SMU throughout Saturday’s game and limited the Mustangs to just 241 yards of offense. The defensive line combined for five of the Aggies’ season-high eight sacks and disrupted the flow of SMU’s offense.

LINEBACKERS — Auburn: Led by Kris Frost, the Tigers did an excellent job wrapping up Kansas State’s run-heavy offense and limiting the Wildcats to just 14 points on the road last week. Bill Snyder’s squad managed just 40 yards rushing, well below their season average of 236.

DEFENSIVE BACKS — Alabama: Landon Collins and the rest of the Crimson Tide secondary recorded their first two interceptions of the season and made sure Florida quarterback Jeff Driskel wasn’t going to beat them down the field, limiting the Gators to just four completions of more than 10 yards.