Eight SEC teams lost during the final weekend of the regular season.

According to ESPN’s win probability none of the eight was predicted to win, except for, strangely, Florida, which was given a 52 percent chance at home against Florida State.

So Week 13 wasn’t so much the latest edition of Blame Game preventing victory as it was Deja Doom, a case of continuing issues leading to another loss.

Florida

L 27-2 to Florida State

There’s no “O” in Fl_rida or Gat_rs or Tre_n (98 percent): We’ve harped enough on Treon Harris’ issues and ineffectiveness and how that bogs down the entire offense. All of that resurfaced Saturday in another w_eful performance.

The defense scored 2, not 20 (1 percent): Florida’s defense outscored its offense 2-0. It did everything imaginable to give the Gators a chance to win.

Kicking problems continue (1 percent): Austin Hardin missed a field goal attempt and had one blocked. Neither mattered much Saturday — in fact, the decision to kick the final one that was blocked was worse than the kick — but it might in a bowl game.

Missouri

L 28-3 to Arkansas

There’s no “O” in Miss_uri, either (100 percent): Drew L_ck completed 33 percent of his passes for 83 yards. You can blame the rain, but that probably helped the Tigers limit Brandon Allen, too.

Missouri finished the year last in scoring (13.6 points).

The Tigers scored two touchdowns, total, in their final six SEC games. It’s impossible to win like that.

Kentucky

L 38-24 to Louisville

No “D” in Wil_cats (we can do this all day) … (75 percent): Kentucky ranks 12th in the SEC in scoring defense, and the issues were never more apparent than when the rival Cardinals went on a 38-3 run after falling behind 21-0.

QB Lamar Jackson was unstoppable (more than 300 total yards, 3 TDs accounted for), but that wasn’t really a surprise if you saw the Wildcats’ game against Tennessee four weeks earlier.

Vols QB Joshua Dobbs, also a dual threat, dominated that game with his arm (2 TD passes) and legs (51 yards, 2 TDs rushing) in a 52-21 blowout that included a 42-7 run.

QB issues continue (25 percent): Drew Barker started and started well before fading faster than a Key West sunset. Patrick Towles finished — the game, and his Kentucky career — by throwing an interception two plays after completing a 53-yard pass. That sequence summed up Kentucky’s up-and-down season. Towles announced Sunday he is transferring.

Auburn

L 29-13 to Alabama

Run defense issues resurface (60): This wasn’t a new or unexpected turn of events. Louisville ran for 238 in the opener against Auburn. Leonard Fournette, back when he was Superman, ran for 244 of LSU’s 411 against the Tigers in Week 3. Arkansas topped 200 yards.

Alabama knew it could run on its rival, and Derrick Henry ran all over them. Henry carried it a school-record 46 times — one shy of the SEC record — for 271 yards.

The most unbelievable stat of the day: Alabama handed off to Henry 19 times in the fourth quarter while protecting a 19-13 lead. Their final 13 plays were all Henry runs, including the sealing 25-yard TD run in the final minute.

The Tide only ran two other plays in the entire fourth quarter: Jacob Coker ran for 1 yard and passed for 2.

Couldn’t force Coker to needing to make a play (30 percent): Has Alabama ever been more one-dimensional in the final quarter of a one-score game? Auburn’s inability to stop Henry, particularly on first and second downs, meant Coker never faced a third-and-throw situation in the fourth quarter. Coker was solid, not spectacular, effective, not explosive. More than anything, he was mistake-free because Auburn couldn’t put him in difficult positions.

Tigers not built to rally (10 percent): Auburn was outscored 27-9 in the fourth quarter of its final three SEC losses. They gained just 29 yards on their four fourth-quarter possessions against Alabama. Those “drives” ended thusly: punt, punt, downs, fumble.

Mississippi State

L 38-27 to Ole Miss

Dak was one-man show (70 percent): More often than not this season, last season, Dak Prescott was good enough to mask his teammates’ flaws, but the better teams this season were able to slow him down just enough.

In the Bulldogs’ four SEC losses, their leading runner (not including Prescott) gained 37 yards vs. LSU, 52 vs. Texas A&M, 34 vs. Alabama and 55 vs. Ole Miss.

In those four losses, Prescott was sacked 5.25 times per game — the highest average per loss in the SEC.

No answer for Chad Kelly (30 percent): Unlike Prescott, Kelly is surrounded by playmakers and protected by first-rounders. Kelly has put up bigger numbers, but his performance was nearly flawless: zero mistakes, 2 TD passes, 74 yards rushing with another TD. Jaylen Walton nearly ran for 100 yards. Damore’ea Stringfellow had his first 2-TD reception game.

Texas A&M

L 19-7 to LSU

Bad math, bad matchup (50 percent): Texas A&M has one of the SEC’s most porous rush defenses. Five SEC opponents ran for 230 or more yards. There was no doubt, if Les Miles was indeed coaching his final game, he was going hammer home the point that there was nothing wrong with Leonard Fournette or their run game. Fournette ran for 159 of the Tigers’ 244 yards.

Saturday night fever (30 percent): LSU has lost just five night games at Death Valley since Miles arrived in 2007. He walked in to a rousing ovation and walked off on his players shoulders. Afterward, Fournette told reporters that emotion carried the day — and night — in Baton Rouge.

QB roller-coaster continued (20 percent): Kyle Allen started, and started well, before his accuracy issues resurfaced. Since a masterful performance against Mississippi State on Oct. 3, Allen hasn’t completed more than 54 percent of his passes in any the four games he attempted more than 8 passes. Those incompletions led to a 4-for-15 conversion rate on third down.

Vanderbilt

L 53-28 to Tennessee

Better team won (100 percent): Butch Jones said afterward, in a bit of hyperbole, that Tennessee is one of the best teams in the country. Not quite, but the Volunteers are substantially better than the Commodores.

Yes, it was surprising Tennessee ran for 331 yards against a run defense that had allowed just one team — a healthy Georgia — to top 250 all season. But UT QB Joshua Dobbs played as well as he has since leading the Vols past Georgia on Oct. 10.

But it’s not like Vanderbilt couldn’t walk away without feeling like it accomplished something Saturday. There were tackling issues,

There were positives not necessarily reflected in the final score.

Starting with … Kyle Shurmur threw a career-high 3 TD passes and Ralph Webb ran for 149 yards to finish with 1,152 for the season. Those are two key building blocks for 2016.

South Carolina

L 37-32 to Clemson

Deshaun Watson picked Clemson: South Carolina played arguably its most inspired game of the season; certainly it played at its highest level. And then Watson showed why he is a Heisman Trophy candidate.

He made enough plays to keep the Tigers’ national championship hopes alive, and he was at his best after the Gamecocks closed within 28-25. He ran or passed for 72 of the Tigers’ 75 yards, capping the drive with a 3-yard TD run.

Watson passed for 279 yards and a TD and ran for 114 yards and 3 TDs.

Yes, Perry Orth threw a interception and the defense gave up 236 rushing yards, but those are nitpick issues.

The takeaway is South Carolina played better than it is against the No. 1-ranked team in the country. No blame, no shame.