In a conference where a running back brought home the Heisman Trophy, wide receivers prospered as well. The 2015 season featured some of the more talented pass-catchers in the nation, producing an abundance of 100-yard games.

Here’s a look at the top five SEC players with 100-yard games:

Laquon Treadwell, Ole Miss (6): Among the list of top receivers in the SEC, nobody did it better than the talented Ole Miss wide receiver. Having declared early this month for the NFL draft, the junior set the mark with six 100-yard games in 2015. In doing so, Treadwell led the SEC with 1,153 receiving yards and 11 touchdown catches. After somewhat of a slow start, Treadwell came back from a devastating injury late in 2014 with his first 100-yard game vs. Vanderbilt in the fourth game of the 2015 season. He caught eight passes for 135 yards in the Rebels’ 27-16 victory. From there Threadwell took off. He had five consecutive games of 100-plus yards. He reached season-highs of 144 yards on 14 catches in a 37-24 loss to Memphis. Also included in that stretch were 100-plus yards vs. New Mexico State (136), Texas A&M (102), Auburn (114) and Arkansas (132). For the season, Treadwell averaged an SEC-best 90.2 yards per game.

Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina (5): Next in line is one of two receivers who had five games of 100-plus yards this season. South Carolina’s junior phenom, who is also turning pro, was one of the team’s few shining starts in 2015. Cooper caught nine passes for 100 yards in the second game of the season, a 26-22 loss to Kentucky. Like Treadwell, Cooper strung together a group of games where he rolled up 100-plus yards. There was a three-game streak vs. Missouri (102), LSU (105) and Vanderbilt (160). Then towards the end of the 2015 season, Cooper had his best game, catching 11 passes for 191 yards and a touchdown in the Gamecocks’ 23-22 loss to The Citadel. Cooper caught a 41-yard touchdown pass midway through the fourth quarter that put the Gamecocks in front, 22-17.

Fred Ross, Mississippi State (5): A late bloomer, the Mississippi State junior finished the 2015 season with a flurry. Ross had one game of 100-plus yards through the first eight games of the season. That was a 103-yard performance vs. Texas A&M in the fifth game. But beginning with a 115-yard, 11-catch game vs. Missouri, Ross proceeded to turn in four consecutive games of 100-plus yards. Those games included successful outings vs. Alabama (114), Arkansas (154) and Ole Miss (117).

Christian Kirk, Texas A&M (4): Kirk did it as a true freshman, wasting little time in becoming the Aggies’ go-to receiver. In his first game with the Aggies, Kirk hauled in six passes for 106 yards and a touchdown in a 38-17 victory over Arizona State. Kirk electrified the NRG Stadium crowd in Houston with a 79-yard touchdown play early in the second quarter as the Aggies established a 14-0 lead in the season opener. He also returned a punt for a touchdown, getting his career at Texas A&M off to a rousing start. He maintained that early-season success with consecutive games of 120 and 173 receiving yards in victories over Nevada and Arkansas, respectively. Kirk added another big game to his freshman season, hauling in nine catches for 122 yards and two touchdowns in a 41-17 victory over Western Carolina.

Josh Reynolds, Texas A&M (4): The Texas A&M junior had an up-and-down season but came up big in spots. He had back-to-back SEC games of 100-plus receiving yards, including 106 yards on just three catches vs. Arkansas and followed it with 141 yards on seven catches in a 30-17 victory over Mississippi State. Reynolds finished the season strong. He rolled up 105 yards and a touchdown on three catches in a 25-0 victory over Vanderbilt and recorded season-highs of 11 catches for 177 yards in a 27-21 loss to Louisville at the Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl.

Also of note among the top receivers in the SEC this season, Vanderbilt sophomore WR Trent Sherfield caught 16 passes for 240 yards and a touchdown in a 47-7 victory over Austin Peay.