Think you know Volunteer football? Even if you consider yourself an expert on Tennessee’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 1891.

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

811 wins: In more than 120 years of football at the University of Tennessee, the Volunteers have claimed 811 wins and an all-time win percentage of .660. Tennessee has the 11th most wins of any program in NCAA history and the second most among SEC teams behind only Alabama.

General Neyland: Robert Neyland led the Volunteers for 21 years in three different stints between 1926 and 1952. He won four national championships, six conference titles and posted an all-time record of 173-31-12 (resulting in a win percentage of .801). However, Neyland was more than just a Hall of Fame coach and the namesake of Tennessee’s Neyland Stadium. He served in World War I and World War II, and retired with the rank of brigadier general, which is why he’s remembered as General Neyland.

Pride of the Southland: Tennessee’s marching band, the Pride of the Southland, actually predates the football program all the way back to 1869, when it was a part of the university’s military department, which would later become its ROTC program. The band gave itself the name Pride of the Southland in October of 1949 while it awaited its turn to practice on Leigon Field for Tennessee’s showdown with Alabama later that day. Alabama called its marching band the Million Dollar Band, which inspired UT’s marching band to come up with a name of its own. After UT’s band was announced as the Pride of the Southland, the name stuck, and the Pride of the Southland still performs at every home football game and forms the T that the Vols run through as they take the field at Neyland Stadium.

Rocky Top: Despite what many believe, Rocky Top is not the official fight song of the University of Tennessee (that song is titled Down the Field). However, it has become UT’s unofficial fight song since the 1970s after it debuted as a Bluegrass track by the Osborne Brothers. Rocky Top is now one of Tennessee’s state songs, and it serves as a beloved rallying cry for UT fans as well as a tune despised by the rest of the SEC. Check out the original version of Rocky Top below:

Running through the T: The tradition of running through the T began in 1965 as the brainchild of then-coach Doug Dickey. The Pride of the South would form a large T resembling the one on UT’s helmets, with the base beginning at the entrance of the Vols’ locker room. The Volunteers would run out of their locker room from the East sideline, run up the stem of the T then out the side and then back to the East end zone. But in 1985 the locker room was moved to the North end zone, and Tennessee began making its famous left turn from the stem of the T down one side toward the sideline. In 2010, UT switched sidelines, and the team has made a right turn through the T ever since.

Six national titles: Tennessee has won six national championships in its history, the first coming in 1938 and the first four occurring between ’38 and 1951. The Vols won their other titles in 1967 and 1998, and that 31-year gap between titles from ’67 to ’98 is the longest in program history.

SEC pace setters: Tennessee claims 13 SEC championships in the 82-season history of the conference, the second-most by any school behind only Alabama and its 24 conference titles. Tennessee’s last conference title came in 1998, and Alabama has won the SEC four times since then.

BCS pioneers: Tennessee’s most recent national championship came in 1998, one year after legendary quarterback Peyton Manning left for the NFL. Led by Tee Martin, the Vols closed the year with a perfect 13-0 record, including a win over Mississippi State in that year’s SEC championship game. Tennessee was then given a berth in the inaugural BCS championship game, which it won over Florida State by a finals score of 23-16.

The other title-winning coach: Phillip Fulmer won Tennessee’s most recent national championship, and Neyland won the first four in school history. But one of the more forgotten title teams in Tennessee’s program history is the 1967 team, led by Dickey. That team lost twice during the season, including in the Orange Bowl to close the year, but was still named the No. 1 team in the Litkenhous poll, allowing UT to claim its fifth-ever title at that point in its history.

Bowling regulars: Tennessee is tied for the third-most bowl appearances in NCAA history with 50, trailing only Alabama (59) and Texas (52). Tennessee is tied for third with Georgia, and its 26 all-time bowl victories rank sixth all-time behind Alabama (34), USC (32), Oklahoma (28), Georgia (27) and Texas (27). The Vols are 26-24 all-time in bowl games, good for a win percentage of .510.

Never won a Heisman: For all its impressive success on the gridiron, one achievement lacking from Tennessee’s record book is a Heisman Trophy winner. Peyton Manning finished second in the Heisman voting as a senior in 1997, losing to Charles Woodson, who remains the only defensive player to win the award. Manning won the Maxwell Award that year and remains the most recent Volunteer to contend for the Heisman.

52 straight drafts: Tennessee has had at least one player drafted in 52 consecutive NFL Drafts, and that streak can be extended to 53 in the 2015 draft at the end of the month. The Vols’ top prospect is corner Justin Coleman, who is projected as a late-round selection. Tennessee’s last first round pick came in 2014 when offensive tackle Ja’Wuan James was taken by the Miami Dolphins. UT’s last top 5 selection was safety Eric Berry in 2010, and its last No. 1 selection was Manning in 1998.

Scoreless season: In 1939, Neyland’s Vols capped off a perfect 10-0 regular season without allowing a single point the entire year. Tennessee outscored its opponents that year by a combined score of 212-0, earning a trip to the Rose Bowl. Ironically, Tennessee was the team shut out in that game, falling 14-0 to then-No. 3 USC, which was playing a virtual home game (especially considering the means of commercial travel in 1939).

Inaugural member of the SEC: Tennessee was one of the 13 original members of the SEC, which formed in December of 1932 when the Southern Conference split into the Southeastern and Southwestern Conferences. The Volunteers are also one of 10 founding members still in the SEC, along with Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi State, Ole Miss and Vanderbilt.

The Third Saturday in October: The rivalry between Alabama and Tennessee has been one of the SEC’s best during its history. The programs with the two most conference titles all-time have squared off 91 times through the years, beginning in 1901, when the team’s tied 6-6 in their first-ever meeting. They played on the third Saturday in October each year from 1901-1992 (hence the name of the rivalry), but that tradition was brought to a halt in ’92 when the SEC split into two divisions with UT and Alabama on opposing sides. Now those two foes are permanent cross-division rivals, but they’ve only been able to play on the third Saturday in October six times since the split into divisions.

Third Saturday in September: Tennessee and Florida have controlled the SEC East since it was formed in 1992, leading to one of the SEC’s new, exciting rivalries of the last 25 years. The two teams only met 21 times from their first meeting in 1916 (a 24-0 win by UT) until 1991, but now they play every year, almost always on the third Saturday in September, as divisional foes.

Streaking past Big Blue: Another one of Tennessee’s oldest rivalries is against border rival Kentucky, as the two teams have met 110 times in the last 114 seasons (no team has faced Tennessee more times than Kentucky). However, Tennessee has owned the Wildcats historically, winning 77 of those 110 meetings (a .741 win percentage) and limiting UK to just 24 victories (a .259 win percentage). Tennessee won 26 straight meetings in this series from 1985-2010, and by the end of the streak it was the longest active winning streak by one FBS opponent against another. UK snapped the streak in a bizarre 10-3 game in 2011, but UT has won three straight since then to take 29 of the last 30 showdowns with the Cats.

Owning the home state: Tennessee’s second-oldest rival is in-state conference foe Vanderbilt, located in Nashville, less than 200 miles from Knoxville. The Vols and Commodores have faced 108 times in the history of their rivalry, and like Kentucky, Tennessee has dominated Vandy since the two joined the SEC. The Vols have won 74 of 108 all-time meetings (a .685 win percentage) and they’ve kept Vandy to only 29 wins (a .269 win percentage).

22 Hall of Famers: The Volunteers claim 19 players in the College Football Hall of Fame as well as four coaches, but because Bowden Wyatt is inducted as both a player and a coach, that leaves a total of 22 UT inductees.

The city of Neyland: Neyland Stadium has been expanded a handful of times throughout the years, and it now claims a capacity of 102,455. When every seat in the stadium is filled, it becomes the seventh most populated city in all of Tennessee. For what it’s worth, the actual seventh largest city in Tennessee, Franklin, has a population just below 69,000 people, more than 30,000 behind a sold out Neyland Stadium. Tennessee’s largest crowd for a game was 109,061 for a showdown with then-No. 11 Florida. The Vols were ranked No. 13 at the time and won the game 30-28 to stay undefeated two games into the season.