Here’s a look at some notable streaks that were extended or shattered by the SEC teams that were in action in Week 9.

Arkansas allowed 519 total yards to Tennessee-Martin in the Razorbacks’ 62-28 win over the Skyhawks. Arkansas had gone 19 straight games without allowing that many yards in a regulation game dating back to Week 1 of last season against Auburn, which put up 595 yards on the Hogs.

Auburn had gone 296 consecutive plays without turning the ball over dating back to its game against Mississippi State on Sept. 26 before Sean White was intercepted by Ole Miss’ Tony Bridges in the first quarter on Saturday. That streak was the Tigers’ longest over the last 30 years.

Florida WR Antonio Callaway has put up back-to-back 100-yard receiving games. Callaway is one of only two true freshman in school history to record 100-yard receiving games along with Reidel Anthony in 1994. However, Saturday’s 110-yard effort against Georgia is his third 100-yard game, while Anthony only had two in 1994.

Georgia only managed 223 total yards of offense against Florida on Saturday, its fewest since recording 221 yards against Vanderbilt on Oct. 19, 2013, a span of 25 games.

Kentucky is now guaranteed to not post a winning record in SEC play for a 38th consecutive season, extending the league record. The Wildcats would’ve had to win their last three SEC games to end the streak. Kentucky hasn’t finished .500 or better against SEC competition in a season since going 6-0 in 1977.

Ole Miss WR Laquon Treadwell has recorded at least 100 receiving yards and a touchdown in four straight games, the first SEC player with that long of a streak since Florida’s Reche Caldwell in 2001.

South Carolina snapped its streak of seven straight games (every game previously this season) in which it trailed at halftime. The Gamecocks went into the break knotted at 21-21 with the Aggies in the eventual 35-28 loss.

Tennessee return specialist Evan Berry recorded his third kickoff return for a touchdown this season against Kentucky, with Saturday’s coming in the 100-yard variety. Berry’s score equals former Vols star Willie Gault’s three kick return touchdowns, a school record that stood for 35 years without any company since 1980. Berry and Gault’s three touchdowns are also tied for the SEC single-season record for kickoff return touchdowns along with Georgia’s Brandon Boykin and Vanderbilt’s Warren Norman, who both matched the feat in 2009.

Texas A&M QB Kyler Murray passed for 223 yards and a touchdown while rushing for 156 yards and a touchdown. The last SEC player to pass for at least 200 yards and a TD while rushing for at least 150 and a TD was Tennessee’s Josh Dobbs against South Carolina (301 passing yards, 2 TDs; 166 rushing yards, 3 TDs), and that was on Nov. 1 of last season, one day shy of exactly 365 days.

Vanderbilt went 33 straight offensive plays without even crossing into No. 18 Houston’s territory in Saturday’s 34-0 loss. The Commodores didn’t do so until 12:08 remaining in the third quarter.