Think you know Aggies football? Even if you consider yourself an expert on Texas A&M’s football program, there’s plenty of information from the team’s long and storied history you may not know. After all, it’s hard to keep track of every tidbit since 1894.

Here are 20 facts you may or may not know about Aggies football:

.584 winning percentage: The Aggies have an all-time record of 702-454-47 over their 112 seasons, good for a winning percentage of .584, per the school’s official record keeping

36 bowls: Texas A&M has appeared in 36 bowl games in its history, posting a 17-19 record (.472 winning percentage).

3 national titles: The school claims three national titles: 1919, 1927 and 1939. The Aggies also went undefeated in 1917, giving them another unclaimed title.

Highest rankings: Speaking of the 1939 season, that year marks the Aggies’ highest finish in the AP poll, as they closed the year at No. 1. The next-highest finish is No. 5, which the Aggies have done twice: 1956 under Bear Bryant and 2012 under Kevin Sumlin.

Conference titles: The Aggies have won 18 conference titles across the Southwest Conference and the Big 12, winning 17 SWC titles and one in the Big 12.

Shutout seasons: The two most dominant seasons in Texas A&M history are 1917 and 1919. In both of those years, Texas A&M didn’t allow a single point and went undefeated, compiling an 18-0 record across the two years.

31 coaches: Since 1894, Texas A&M has employed 31 head coaches. Charles Moran has the highest winning percentage at .800 over six seasons, while R.C. Slocum holds the school’s wins record with 123 wins over 14 seasons.

Heisman winners: There are two Heisman Trophy winners in school history: halfback John David Crow in 1957 and quarterback Johnny Manziel in 2012. Crow rushed for 562 yards and five touchdowns, threw for five more scores and recorded five interceptions on defense. Manziel put up staggering offensive numbers, setting several freshman national records while becoming the first freshman to win the award.

Bednarik winner: One of the most unlikely stars in Texas A&M history is linebacker Dat Nguyen, the 1998 Bednarik Award winner and the only player in school history to take the honor. Born in a Vietnamese refugee center in Arkansas, Nguyen was thought to be too small to play linebacker at the college level. He proved critics wrong at every level, making 51 starts at Texas A&M before going onto a successful pro career with the Dallas Cowboys.

Single-game records: Manziel holds the school record for single-game total yardage, with a 576-yard effort against Louisiana Tech on Oct. 13, 2012. That performance broke the record he set just a few weeks earlier against Arkansas on Sept. 29, 2012, when he went for 557 total yards. In fact, Manziel holds the top six spots on Texas A&M’s single-game yardage list, as well as eight of the top 10.

All-time passer: While Manziel dominates the single-game and single-season records at Texas A&M, it’s actually Jerrod Johnson, who played at the school from 2007-10, who holds many of the school’s career passing marks. He holds the records for most yards, completions, attempts and touchdown passes.

Junction Boys: Perhaps the most famous team in Aggies history is “the Junction Boys,” the nickname given to Bear Bryant’s first team at Texas A&M. The training camp that summer started with more than 100 players, and somewhere between 27-35 players “survived” the camp. The Aggies went 1-9 in Bryant’s first year, and that team became the subject of a book and later movie.

Home sweet home: Texas A&M’s stadium, Kyle Field, was originally built in 1905, with bleachers that accommodated 500 fans. It was unofficially named for professor E.J. Kyle, but the nickname stuck. From that original capacity, the stadium will now hold more than 102,000 fans once the current renovations to the stadium are completed.

110,633 strong: On Oct. 11, 2014, the Aggies shattered school, SEC and Texas state records for attendance. For the game against Ole Miss, 110,633 fans packed into Kyle Field, breaking Texas A&M’s own school and state record set two weeks prior against Rice, as well as the previous SEC record of 109,061 set in 2004 at Neyland Stadium. It’s tough to imagine anyone breaking the record, as Kyle Field is shrinking in capacity from 2014 to 2015 by about 4,000 seats.

NFL star: Although he’s only been in the NFL three years, Ryan Tannehill has been the Aggies’ most successful quarterback at the professional level. In his three seasons since being drafted by the Miami Dolphins in the first round, Tannehill has started all 48 of his career games. Interestingly enough, Tannehill played just one full year at quarterback for the Aggies after moving to wide receiver early in his career.

Reveille: The Aggies have had a live dog named Reveille as their mascot since 1931, although there was a seven-year gap after Reveille I passed away in 1944. The first Reveille was a small black and white mutt, found when a group of Texas A&M band members hit the dog on their way back to campus. Since Reveille III, the mascot has been a female Collie. The dogs have been donated from states like Florida, Ohio, Kansas and Oklahoma.

Aggie Band: The Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band was originally formed in 1894 and has performed at every home game since the football program’s inception. The corps of cadets, which is comprised of 400 or more members, is considered the largest marching band in North America.

Most draft picks: The most draft picks from a single Texas A&M team is nine, when nine players were drafted from the 1968 team in the 1969 NFL Draft. The highest pick of that bunch was defensive end Rolf Kruger, drafted with the 35th pick in the second round.

Highest draft pick: The highest NFL draft pick in school history is No. 2 overall, an honor shared by four players: fullback John Kimbrough in 1941, linebacker Quinten Coryatt in 1992, linebacker Von Miller in 2011 and offensive tackle Luke Joeckel in 2013. The Aggies have never had a Mr. Irrelevant, the player taken with the final pick in the draft.

Lone Star rivals: The Aggies’ biggest rivalry against Texas is currently dormant. The Longhorns hold a 76-37-5 lead all time over Texas A&M. The Aggies’ longest win streak in the series is six games, which they pulled off from 1984-89. Texas has the longest win streak in series history, a 10-game streak from 1957-66.