A lot has taken place in the Southeastern Conference since the 2007 season.

Over the past 10 seasons many coaches have left, some retired or were fired and two teams came into the conference. One coach has dominated while others are trying to get to the pinnacle of the sport.

Along the way, since 2007, each school has produced prestigious and meaningful wins. Let’s take a look at the best for each.

Alabama – 2009 vs. Florida

It might seem odd to place a SEC Championship Game win over any of the four national championships Alabama has captured since 2007, but this victory over Tim Tebow and the defending national champion Gators launched the Tide’s decade of dominance.

Arkansas – 2011 vs. Kansas State

The Razorbacks have seen many ups and downs since last winning the SEC West in 2006. Since 2007, Arkansas benefited from Bobby Petrino taking over for Houston Nutt, but Petrino’s abrupt ending in Fayetteville set the program back. The most prestigious win came in 2011, when Arkansas’ only losses came to the two teams that played for the national championship: Alabama and LSU. The Razorbacks defeated Kansas State 29-16 in the Cotton Bowl to close out the season.

Auburn – 2010 vs. Oregon

Auburn had been close to winning the national championship before. Most notably in 1993 and 2004. The 2010 season was special. Cam Newton engineering the comeback win at Alabama certainly could have qualified as the most prestigious, but toppling Oregon for the national title gave gave Auburn its first since 1957.

Florida – 2008 vs. Oklahoma

The Gators won their third national championship in program history and the duo of Urban Meyer and Tim Tebow won their second in three seasons. The 2008 season is the last time Florida won either the SEC or national championship — and the last time an East team won the SEC title.

Georgia – 2007 vs. Hawaii

Georgia produced numerous highlights since 2007, but it has not won the SEC championship since 2005. (The Bulldogs lost the SEC championship game in 2011 and 2012.) The 41-10 Sugar Bowl win over undefeated and No. 10-ranked Hawaii in the 2007 season is Georgia’s most prestigious in the past decade.

Kentucky – 2007 vs. LSU

Andre Woodson threw three touchdown passes, including the game-winner to Steve Johnson in triple overtime to knock off the No. 1-ranked Tigers 43-37. How shocking was it? Kentucky hadn’t beaten a No. 1-ranked team since 1964, and LSU went on to win the national championship that season. Kentucky ended its 8-5 season by beating Florida State in the Music City Bowl.

LSU – 2007 vs. Ohio State

LSU has made the national championship game once since their last national championship in 2007. The Tigers defeated Ohio State in the 2007 BCS national championship game. The other national championship game appearance came in the 2011 season when the Tigers lost their rematch with Alabama.

Mississippi State – 2007 vs. Alabama

Sylvester Croom made it two consecutive wins over his alma mater. The Bulldogs took down Alabama in Nick Saban’s first season in Tuscaloosa and have not defeated the Crimson Tide since.

Missouri – 2014 vs. Arkansas 

Missouri found a way to pull out a victory over their SEC-rival Arkansas in 2014. Arkansas led 14-6 after three quarters and Missouri had to make a comeback in the fourth quarter to win the SEC East. The Tigers did so by scoring 15-unanswered points to win 21-14 and clinched the SEC East in back-to-back seasons. Doing that topped the Tigers’ 2010 win over No. 1 Oklahoma.

Ole Miss – 2015 vs. Oklahoma State

Ole Miss knocked off Alabama in 2014 and 2015 but couldn’t turn either into an SEC West title. Therefore, let’s give the nod to the Rebels’ dominant Sugar Bowl performance. It was all Ole Miss in the 48-20 win over Oklahoma State. Chad Kelly threw for 302 yards and four touchdowns. It was the Rebels’ first time at the Sugar Bowl since 1970.

South Carolina – 2010 at Florida

Earlier in the year, South Carolina stunned No. 1-ranked Alabama at Williams-Brice. Certainly that’s a candidate for the program’s most prestigious win, but the Gamecocks promptly lost the next week, at Kentucky, so the euphoria didn’t last long.

In mid-November, the Gamecocks went to The Swamp and clinched the SEC East for the first time in school history. Steve Spurrier called on Marcus Lattimore to carry the ball 40 times for 212 yards and scored three touchdowns in the monumental 36-14 win.

Tennessee – 2016 vs. Florida

One could argue that Tennessee’s biggest win since the 2007 season was defeating Kentucky in 2007 in four overtimes to clinch the SEC East championship – that’s how far down the Vols’ program has been in the past decade and Tennessee is still trying to win the division again. But with Tennessee ending an 11-year losing streak to their arch-rival Florida, the 38-28 victory in 2016 is easily above any other since 2007.

Texas A&M – 2012 at Alabama

The Aggies entered the SEC in 2012 – and they did so in fashion. Johnny Manziel hit the college football scene as a redshirt freshman and did so by winning the Heisman Trophy. Although the Aggies did not win the SEC West, Texas A&M rolled into Bryant-Denny Stadium and knocked off the No. 1 Crimson Tide in November. Manziel passed for 252 yards and 2 touchdowns in the upset.

Vanderbilt – 2013 vs. Houston

The James Franklin-era in Nashville was capped by a 41-24 win over Houston in the Birmingham Bowl. With the win, the Commodores secured back-to-back 9-win seasons under Franklin and 24 wins in three seasons. The win marked the end of a run that might not be duplicated by Vanderbilt again.

Vandy’s win over Tennessee in 2016 was almost as important. The Commodores would have qualified for a bowl at 5-7 anyway because of their strong APR score, but the 45-34 upset in Nashville pushed them to 6-6 and an automatic berth.