When it comes to bragging rights amongst SEC teams, nothing stings an opponent more than being completely dominated. With that in mind, we look at the last time each SEC team pitched a shutout against a conference foe.

ALABAMA

Date: Oct. 18, 2014
Opponent: Texas A&M
Score: 59-0
Although the Crimson Tide pitched two shutouts last season, including a 38-0 demolishing of Michigan State in the College Football Playoff semifinal, you have to go back to 2014 to find the last time Alabama shut out an SEC opponent. The Aggies had no answer for the Crimson Tide on this day as Alabama amassed 602 yards of total offense. Texas A&M, meanwhile, punted the ball nine times on the day.

ARKANSAS

Date: Nov. 22, 2014
Opponent: Ole Miss
Score: 30-0
The Razorbacks found themselves on a roll in back-to-back weeks during the middle of November in 2014. One week after Arkansas shut out No. 17 LSU, 17-0, it upped the ante and steamrolled the Rebels, who were ranked eighth nationally at the time. The Razorbacks’ defense came up big in the win as it helped the team become bowl-eligible after forcing six turnovers against Ole Miss.

AUBURN

Date: Sept. 9, 2006
Opponent: Mississippi State
Score: 34-0
Fire up your DeLorean because we have to go way back in time to rehash the Tigers’ last shutout against an SEC opponent. Auburn last pitched one when it went on the road and blanked Mississippi State, 34-0, in the second week of the 2006 season. Brad Lester and Brandon Cox. Do those names ring a bell? Now you younger Tigers fans ask your parents, but those were the stars of Auburn’s last shutout a decade ago.

FLORIDA

Date: Sept. 22, 2012
Opponent: Kentucky
Score: 38-0
After the game, Florida coach Will Muschamp praised his defense for shutting down the rival Wildcats. It was well deserved for the Gators’ defensive unit as it caused three turnovers and held Kentucky to 219 yards of total offense. Offensively, Florida’s production was split down the middle. Jeff Driskel threw for 203 yards, while six different Gators combined for 200 yards on the ground.

GEORGIA

Date: Oct. 11, 2014
Opponent: Missouri
Score: 34-0
Although the Bulldogs held their opponent to 7 points or fewer in four victories last season, we have to revisit the 2014 slate to find the last time Georgia pitched a shutout against an SEC foe. It was a big game for the Tigers, who had just climbed back into The Associated Press Top 25 days before hosting the Bulldogs. However, it was all Georgia once it got there as its defense held the Tigers to just 147 yards of total offense.

KENTUCKY

Date: Nov. 16, 1996
Opponent: Vanderbilt
Score: 25-0
This wasn’t easy. The last time Kentucky shut out an SEC opponent, a gallon of gas cost $1.22, and a good portion of this year’s team wasn’t even born yet! A 20-year drought seems long enough for Kentucky fans to wait, so perhaps the Wildcats will blank another opponent this fall.

LSU

Date: Aug. 30, 2007
Opponent: Mississippi State
Score: 45-0
The Tigers shut out two non-conference opponents last year, but we had to go back to the 2007 season to find the last time LSU accomplished the feat against an SEC team. Although the 2007 team is remembered for capturing a national title, it also boasted a fierce defense. Just ask the Bulldogs.

MISSISSIPPI STATE

Date: Nov. 22, 2014
Opponent: Vanderbilt
Score: 51-0
Before the Bulldogs hobbled into the offseason following a 31-17 loss to Ole Miss in the regular-season finale and a 49-34 loss to Georgia Tech in the Orange Bowl, Mississippi State took the Commodores to the woodshed in late November. It was a combined effort for the Bulldogs as the defense got three takeaways and quarterback Dak Prescott tossed three touchdowns in the win.

MISSOURI

The Tigers have yet to experience the thrill of earning a shutout in the SEC. In fact, you have to go back to Missouri’s final season in the Big 12 to find the last time the team shut out an opponent. In September during the 2011 season, the Tigers stomped Western Illinois, 69-0. However, since then, every team Missouri has faced has put points on the board.

OLE MISS

Date: Nov. 28, 2008
Opponent: Mississippi State
Score: 45-0
This was one Rebels fans will never forget. After rolling off consecutive victories over Arkansas, Auburn, Louisiana-Monroe and LSU, Ole Miss rolled past the Bulldogs in the 2008 edition of the Egg Bowl. Following the game, head coach Huston Nutt described the Rebels’ performance as “complete domination,” but that may have been an understatement.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Date: Aug. 31, 2006
Opponent: Mississippi State
Score: 15-0
Nothing beats opening a season with a shutout, and that is exactly what the Gamecocks did at the start of the 2006 slate. South Carolina forced two turnovers and held the Bulldogs to 161 yards of total offense as Steve Spurrier recorded the 150th victory of his career with this win.

TENNESSEE

Date: Nov. 22, 2003
Opponent: Vanderbilt
Score: 48-0
The 2003 season was a special one for the Volunteers, and November was no exception. Tennessee ran the gauntlet to win each of its five games in the final month of the season as this shutout helped the team improve to 9-2 on the year. Although quarterback Casey Clausen scored four touchdowns in his Rocky Top farewell, it was the Volunteers’ defense which held Vanderbilt scoreless.

TEXAS A&M

Date: Nov. 21. 2015
Opponent: Vanderbilt
Score: 25-0
Although the Commodores aren’t necessarily the class of the SEC, a shutout is a shutout, and this one had to be special for the Aggies. Texas A&M entered the 2015 season searching for its first shutout in SEC play, and it finally came when it visited to Nashville to meet Vanderbilt in late November. The Commodores couldn’t get much going on offense as they went a combined 3-for-16 on third and fourth-down tries.

VANDERBILT

Date: Nov. 3, 2012
Opponent: Kentucky
Score: 40-0
The Commodores pitched two shutouts in 2012, though, this thrashing of the Wildcats came amidst a strong finish to the season. After beating Kentucky, Vanderbilt rode the momentum to win its final three regular season games before upending North Carolina State 38-24 in the Music City Bowl. This still doesn’t mark the Commodores’ widest margin of victory against the Wildcats as Vanderbilt rocked Kentucky 45-0 way back in 1916.