Alabama has one of the most storied histories in college football, so a look through its record book for unbreakable records is a somewhat daunting task.

While sifting through the numerous accolades of some of the program’s all-time greats, there are a few records that stood out about the rest. Among these, you’ll see a little bit of everything: offense, defense and special teams.

5. The Iron Bowl touchdown that Chris Davis ruined

Forgotten in the mayhem following the Chris Davis kick return at the end of the 2013 Iron Bowl was a record-setting touchdown for the Crimson Tide earlier in that quarter. Backed up to its own 1-yard line with the game tied 21-21, Alabama dialed up a play-action pass from QB AJ McCarron to WR Amari Cooper that went for a 99-yard touchdown. It was the longest passing play from scrimmage in Alabama history, and it broke the Crimson Tide record for longest touchdown pass by surpassing the 94-yard connection between Freddie Kitchens and Michael Vaughn in 1996 against Florida. The McCarron/Cooper record may one day be tied, but it would take a rule change for it to be broken.

4. Jay Barker’s winning percentage

Alabama has had its share of winners at the quarterback position over its storied history, but none have been bigger winners at the college level than Jay Barker. Over a career that spanned 38 games, Barker won a remarkable 93.4 percent of the games he started. During Alabama’s most recent run of dominance, both AJ McCarron (90 percent) and Greg McElroy (88.8) made a run at Barker’s record, but were not quite able to match his percentage. Hall of Famer Joe Namath won 87.5 percent of the time over his time with the Crimson Tide. Barker’s record 35-2-1 leaves future quarterbacks a razor thin margin for error if they want to take away this record.

3. Johnny Cain’s punting extravaganza

Here’s an interesting pair of Alabama records that may never again be approached. In 1932, Johnny Cain punted the ball 19 times in a 7-3 loss to Tennessee at Legion Field at Birmingham. According to The Tuscaloosa News, it was a game mired by inclement weather that often left the coaches punting on early downs in hopes of gaining better field position. By the end of the contest, Cain had a couple of Alabama records for punts in a game (19) and punting yards in a game (914). Since Cain was able to average 48.1 yards per kick in spite of the adverse conditions, both records are likely safe.

2. Javier Arenas’ mastery of the return game

If Alabama career kick return records ever show up in your local trivia game, there’s a good chance Javier Arenas is the answer. Arenas owns the records for both career punt return yards (1,752) and kickoff return yards (2,166). Neither is really close, either. He owns the top two spots on the individual season records for punt returns, meaning anyone that is going to pass his career mark will likely have to best those records more than once. Both of these records should be in Arenas’ name for a very, very long time.

1. Derrick Thomas: QB sacking machine

Derrick Thomas was truly a special player. Nearly 30 years later, his quarterback sack numbers accumulated while at Alabama are still staggering. In 1988, Thomas set the Alabama single-season record for sacks with 27, surpassing his previous record of 18 that he set in 1987. The closest person to this record not named “Derrick Thomas” is Emmanuel King with 11 sacks in 1983. Thomas’ career sacks total (52) seems equally untouchable. Kindal Moorehead, who tallied 25 sacks from 1998-2002, holds second place on the Crimson Tide all-time sack list. He did not make it even half way to Thomas’ total.