With tons of SEC action every Saturday, there are always going to be plenty of highlight reel plays. Week 6 was filled with them, from Dak Prescott lighting it up to Todd Gurley heaving passes downfield. Of course, there are also those plays that are better off forgotten. Here at Saturday Down South, we don’t forget. Let’s run down the worst of the week that was.

5. De’Vante Harris’ afternoon at corner for Texas A&M — Dak Prescott and the Mississippi State passing game picked on the Aggies’ junior defensive back throughout the game, highlighted by a 51-yard score late in the third quarter to Fred Brown.

4. Justin Worley and Jeff Driskel throw back-to-back interceptions

Tennessee’s quarterback can’t seem to keep himself out of this column. For the second straight week, Worley was involved in this back-to-back pick scenario. After his Volunteers teammates took the ball away from Florida on one of Jeff Driskel’s three interceptions on the day, Worley went out and gave it right back, making an ill-advised back-foot throw on the very next play. It’s a habit he’ll need to shake if the Vols are going to get an SEC win.

3. Steve Spurrier’s late-game play calling

Up two touchdowns early in the fourth quarter, with their running game looking as good as it has all season, South Carolina seemed to have their game against Kentucky in hand. They couldn’t stop the Wildcats (or the Wildcat) though, allowing Kentucky to tie it up. Despite having 2:46 on the clock and 3 timeouts, Spurrier relapsed to his Fun-N-Gun days and went away from a highly successful rushing attack that was averaging more than 6 yards per carry. Carolina’s final seven offensive plays went: incompletion, incompletion, interception returned for touchdown, incompletion, completion, completion, interception. Why Spurrier went away from what got his team the lead in the first place is a mystery.

2. Alabama and Ole Miss’ kicking games

Wide right. Wide right. Wide way left. Off the left upright. Blocked. Alabama kicker Adam Griffith and his Mississippi counterpart Andrew Fletcher did not have the best of days in what turned out to be a game for the ages. With all the theatrics late, at least Fletcher’s miscues will likely fade into history, although Griffith might not be as lucky.

1. Vanderbilt quarterback reads play upside down, throws a pick-six — These kinds of things only happen at Vanderbilt. Coach Derek Mason admitted after Saturday’s loss at Georgia this quarterback Stephen Rivers incorrectly read a ’60’ as a ’90’ from his wristband, a mishap that resulted in a horrific decision and interception return for a touchdown.