Wrapping up our wall-to-wall coverage of the 2015 NFL draft, here are 20 interesting SEC-centric facts:

20. Leading the way for total draft selections in each division was Florida (8) and Alabama (7).

19. More than 55 undrafted free agents from the SEC have signed contracts. In addition, several players including quarterbacks Blake Sims and Justin Worley, were invited to team tryouts this week.

18. Vanderbilt’s streak of having a player drafted ended at three years. Last season, Jordan Matthews (second round) was the Commodores’ highest selection since 2012.

17. Ole Miss had one or fewer players drafted for the fifth straight year. Cornerback Senquez Golson was the Rebels’ lone representative, coming off the board in the second round to the Pittsburgh Steelers. Projected late-round selection All-American safety Cody Prewitt did not hear his name called. Next season, Ole Miss could have as many as four first-rounders.

16. The SEC’s seven first-round picks was its lowert number since the 2010 draft which also featured seven opening round selections.

15. Florida State’s 11 draft picks ended the SEC’s 11-year reign at the top as the nation’s top professional talent producer. The Seminoles’ 29 total picks in a three-year span is the most ever.

14. Only four LSU players were drafted, the fewest during the Les Miles’ era and lowest since three players — Marcus Spears, Corey Webster and Travis Daniels — were picked in 2005.

12. Alabama safety Landon Collins became the league’s first opening pick in the second round since former Crimson Tide linebacker DeMeco Ryans was drafted by the Houston Texans at No. 33 overall in 2006.

11. The 2015 draft featured an SEC running back taken in each round.

10. Five Mississippi State players were taken in the first six rounds in 2015, a school record. The Bulldogs fell one selection shy of tying the 20-year old school mark for most draft picks.

9. South Carolina appears to have created a cross-country pipeline to San Francisco. With two selections on Saturday, the 49ers have drafted four Gamecocks since 2013 and have signed another — quarterback Dylan Thompson — to a free agent contract. They also drafted South Carolina safety Chris Culliver with a third-round pick in 2011.

8. Counting transfer wideout Dorial-Green Beckham, Mizzou’s six draft selections was the most for the Tigers since 1981.

7. Florida’s had a player selected in an SEC-record 64 consecutive drafts.

6. Todd Gurley became the first running back taken in the first round since Alabama’s Trent Richardson in 2012. Wisconsin’s Melvin Gordon, the 2014 Doak Walker Award winner, went five picks later to the San Diego Chargers.

5. Selected fourth overall by the Oakland Raiders, Amari Cooper became Alabama’s 17th first-round pick since 2009, the most in the SEC over that span.

4. Tennessee was shut out of the draft for the first time since 1963 after cornerback Justin Coleman was skipped over several times for other defensive backs on the final day.

3. Thirteen SEC linebackers were selected, a position-best for the conference. Offensive linemen came in second with 11 total picks.

2. Jacksonville’s selection of Florida defensive end Dante Fowler on Thursday marked the 10th consecutive year a different SEC program has garnered the league’s top selection. The stretch began with Vanderbilt quarterback Jay Cutler in 2006.

1. For the ninth consecutive year, the SEC was responsible for the most draft selections (54), a modern era draft record.