It turns out Jordan Spieth is actually human.

The 22-year-old phenom has had plenty to cheer about in his young career, but his collapse at the Masters was arguably the biggest in the history of the sport.

Spieth held a five-shot lead going into the back nine at Augusta National on Sunday. However, by the time he stepped up at the 13th tee, he was amazingly three shots back. He would eventually finish in a tie for 2nd, three strokes back of Danny Willett.

Stroke is an appropriate word for a shot in golf as each one makes you feel like you want to die, as one hilarious comedian once put it.

Spieth’s tumble made us wonder about some of the biggest collapses involving SEC teams in recent years. In other words, teams that held leads rather late in a game only to see them completely fizzle away.

Here are 20 that came to mind over the last decade. Which ones do you remember?

2006: No. 13 Tennessee 51, No. 10 Georgia 33

The Bulldogs held a 24-7 lead on the Vols, but a 1-yard TD run from Arian Foster with less than a minute before halftime sparked the rally. Erik Ainge and UT would score 44 of the next 53 points to stun UGA in Athens. Not long after this game, quarterback Matt Stafford took over the reigns from Joe Tereshinski.

2006: No. 9 LSU 23, Ole Miss 20 (OT)

The Rebels had a 20-7 lead on the No. 9 team in the country in Death Valley. However, JaMarcus Russell threw one TD pass to Early Doucet with 8:46 remaining before finding Dwayne Bowe with 14 seconds left to tie the game. Ole Miss remarkably blocked the extra point attempt to send it to OT, but the Tigers pulled it out in the first period in extra time.

2006: Georgia 31, No. 14 Virginia Tech 24 (Chick-Fil-A-Bowl)

There’s a couple Chick-Fil-A Bowls in here. This one saw Georgia trailing Sean Glennon and Virginia Tech 21-3 at halftime. However, the Dawgs scored 28 of the next 31 points after capitalizing on 3 INTs off Glennon.

2007: No. 21 Kentucky 42, Arkansas 29

The Razorbacks were up 20-7 on the Wildcats with a little under six minutes left until the break. That was before Andre Woodson and company broke out to score 35 of the final 44 points. Arkansas had regained the lead 29-21, but 3 TDs in the final eight minutes, including a go-ahead 32-yard strike from Woodson to Keenan Burton, proved too much for the Hogs.

2007: No. 19 Tennessee 25, Vanderbilt 24

The Commodores had their in-state rivals against the ropes in Nashville, holding a 24-9 lead entering the fourth quarter. However, Ainge evaporated it with two quick touchdown passes, then Daniel Lincoln’s 33-yard kick with under three minutes left helped the Vols pull out the 1-point win.

2007: Mississippi State 17, Ole Miss 14

The Rebels took a 14-0 lead in the Egg Bowl with under eight minutes left, but it wouldn’t hold up. RB Anthony Dixon ran one in from 4 yards out, then a 75-yard punt return TD by Derek Pegues with about two-and-a-half minutes left squared it before Adam Carlson drilled a 48-yarder with 12 seconds left to boost the Bulldogs.

2008: Arkansas 31, LSU 30

These two teams have had some crazy games, and this Razorbacks rally just added to the history. The Tigers went up 30-14 shortly after halftime Jordan Jefferson found Brandon LaFell for a 32-yard TD. However, Arkansas pulled to within 30-24 before Casey Dick hit London Crawford for a 24-yard TD with 21 seconds left in the thriller.

2009: Kentucky 34, Georgia 27

The Bulldogs were up 27-13 against a struggling Wildcats offense, but 4 turnovers would doom Georgia in this one. UK rallied on the road by finishing the game with 21 unanswered points. The game-tying score came when Morgan Newton, who finished with 137 passing yards on the day, got 60 of them when he found RB Derrick for a long score. He threw another to WR Randall Cobb early in the fourth quarter, and Georgia had no response.

2010: No. 2 Auburn 28, No. 9 Alabama 27

Alabama ambushed Auburn by jumping out to a 24-0 lead in Tuscaloosa against Cam Newton and the Tigers. However, Auburn scored 28 of the last 31 points, with Newton scoring all four (3 passing, 1 rushing). Newton connected with Emory Blake on a 36-yard TD before a 70-yard strike to Zachery Terrell shortly after halftime stunned the Roll Tiders. That preserved Auburn’s undefeated season on the way to the national title.

2011: No. 10 Arkansas 29, Ole Miss 24

The Rebels raced out to an early 17-0 lead, but the Razorbacks roared back by scoring 29 unanswered points. RB Dennis Johnson finished with 160 yards and a score on just 15 carries to deny the Oxford faithful any shot at pulling off an upset of a top 10 rival.

2011: No. 8 Arkansas 31, Vanderbilt 28

That same season, the Razorbacks came back on the Commodores in dramatic fashion. Down 21-7, Arkansas found some mojo after QB Tyler Wilson’s 11-yard TD pass to Jarius Wright with five seconds left before halftime. The Hogs were still down 28-20 entering the fourth quarter, and the ‘Dores were driving. However, RB Zac Stacy fumbled with Vandy at the 5-yard line, and Jerry Franklin picked it up and took it 94 yards to the end zone. Arkansas added the 2-point conversion to tie it and Zach Hocker’s field goal midway through the period provided the final margin.

2012: No. 7 Georgia 41, Missouri 20

The Tigers’ first game as a member of the SEC came at home against the seventh-ranked Bulldogs, and they were eager to prove itself right away. Mizzou went up 17-9 shortly after halftime with a 69-yard TD from James Franklin to L’Damian Washington. However, Georgia would score 32 of the next 35 points. Missouri went back up 20-17 late in the third, but the Dawgs scored on four of their next five possessions en route to the win.

2012: No. 18 Florida, 37, No. 23 Tennessee 20

The Vols led 14-10 at halftime, but it was all Gators in the second half. Nothing went right after A.J. Johnson’s 1-yard TD run put Tennessee up 20-13 midway through the third quarter. It started with the missed extra point. Then, Florida’s Trey Burton raced 80 yards for a score before QB Jeff Driskel hooked up with Jordan Reed on a 23-yard TD and Frankie Hammond on a 75-yarder to shell-shock Neyland Stadium.

2012: No. 6 South Carolina 38, Kentucky 17

The Wildcats seemed prime to upset the Head Ball Coach and his top 10 team in Lexington. UK held a 17-7 lead at halftime, but the Head Ball Coach’s squad came ready to play in the second half, outscoring the ‘Cats 31-0. RB Marcus Lattimore rushed for 120 yards, including two short touchdowns in the fourth quarter to ice it. The Gamecocks had just 26 rushing yards at the break before outrushing Kentucky 174-7 afterwards.

2012: Vanderbilt 27, Ole Miss 26

The Rebels were on a roll before things fell apart. QB Bo Wallace put Ole Miss up 23-6 early in the third quarter, but the Jordan-to-Jordan connection sparked Vanderbilt’s comeback. QB Jordan Rodgers found WR Jordan Matthews for a 52-yard score as the Commodores scored 21 of the next 24 points. The game-winner from Rodgers to Chris Boyd from 26 yards out with 52 seconds left meant Vandy was bowl-eligible in back-to-back seasons for the first time in school history.

2013: No. 4 Auburn 34, No. 1 Alabama 28

The Kick Six was maybe the most memorable ending to a football game in SEC history. Auburn’s Chris Davis was taking Adam Griffith’s potential game-winning field goal attempt the entire length of the field the other way, and it became increasingly clear that “Auburn’s gonna win the football game!” Alabama did hold a 21-7 lead at one point, but this wasn’t “a collapse” in the same sense as the other teams on here that were the victim of huge rallies. Still, we had to include this one.

2013: No. 20 Texas A&M 52, No. 22 Duke 48 (Chick-Fil-A-Bowl)

The Aggies’ comeback against the Blue Devils was tied for the second-biggest comeback in SEC bowl history, behind only Georgia’s 25-point comeback against Purdue in the 2000 Outback Bowl. Johnny Manziel was down 38-17 at halftime in his final collegiate game, his team scored 21 of the first 24 points in the second half. Despite Manziel’s masterful performance (30-for-38 passing with 455 total yards of offense and 5 TDs), it was Toney Hurd Jr.’s 55-yard INT return for a TD that put the Aggies on top for good.

2013: Vanderbilt 31, No. 15 Georgia 27

The Bulldogs took a 27-14 lead into the fourth quarter against the Commodores, but Vandy was set for a turnaround. Georgia was outscored 17-0 in the final quarter as the ‘Dores picked up their first win over an AP-ranked opponent since 2008. It was also Vandy’s first win over Georgia in Nashville since 1991. The rally came despite Vanderbilt rallied despite losing starting QB Austyn Carta-Samuels in the second quarter with an injured left leg and being replaced by Patton Robinette.

2014: No. 6 Texas A&M 35, Arkansas 28 (OT)

The Razorbacks were looking to end a 13-game SEC losing streak and pick up their first win in conference play under Bret Bielema. It looked like it might happen — and against a sixth-ranked team on top of it — with the Hogs up 28-14 entering the fourth quarter. However, QB Kenny Hill found his receivers for a couple big plays, the first an 86-yarder to Edward Pope and the second a 59-yarder to Josh Reynolds with 2:08 left to force OT. Then, Hill hit Malcome Kennedy on the first play of the extra time as the Aggies survived.

2015: Florida 28, Tennessee 27

The Vols were on the verge of ending their 10-game losing streak to the Gators, up 27-14 with a little over four minutes left in the game. However, Florida capped a mammoth 17-play, 86-yard drive as QB Will Grier found WR Brandon Powell for a 5-yard TD. Then, quite unforgettably, Grier threw a dart to Antonio Callaway on fourth-and-14. The freshman turned and zipped down the sideline for the go-ahead 63-yard score as The Swamp lost its mind. Then, UT kicker Aaron Medley barely missed a potential game-winning 55-yarder as time expired.

Which collapses stand out the most?