With less than two months before the 2017 SEC Media Days, it’s worth looking back at the 2016 season in the SEC and some of the wild statistics that came out of that campaign. Here are 10 you should remember from last season:

16 – Nick Fitzgerald rushing TDs

In its first season following Dak Prescott’s impressive run as quarterback, Mississippi State dropped off a bit, finishing 6-7, yet Fitzgerald emerged as one of the best QBs in the SEC. Among the impressive numbers for Fitzgerald, the best one may be this: an SEC-leading 16 rushing touchdowns. It was the most rushing TDs by an SEC quarterback since Texas A&M’s Johnny Manziel had 23 in 2012 on his way to winning the Heisman Trophy.

12 – SEC bowl teams

The SEC sent 12 of its 14 teams to a bowl game, tying the NCAA record.

The other time this occurred was 2014.

That conference? The SEC.

125 – Total tackles by Vanderbilt’s Zach Cunningham

The junior linebacker, a consensus first-team All-American, led the SEC in total tackles. The 125 tackles by Cunningham were the most by a Vanderbilt player in a season since Moses Osemwegie had 126 in 2003. Cunningham had 94 tackles against teams that finished with a winning record last season. Only one player in the entire FBS had more – Clemson’s Ben Boulware.

2 – Longest win streak by an SEC team entering 2017

Two SEC teams will enter the 2017 season with a two-game win streak, and they’re not Alabama, nor Auburn, nor Georgia, nor Florida. The only SEC teams to win their regular-season finale and their bowl game were LSU and Mississippi State.

3 – Consecutive seasons Bama wins offensive player honor

For a coach whose reputation is built on defense, Alabama’s Nick Saban sure has a knack for producing quality offensive players lately. When freshman quarterback Jalen Hurts captured the SEC Offensive Player of the Year award in 2016, it marked the third consecutive season a Crimson Tide player has captured the conference’s top offensive honor. In 2015 it was running back Derrick Henry and in 2014 wide receiver Amari Cooper.

3.99 – Yards per play allowed by Alabama

Of the many stats one can use to illustrate the dominance of the Crimson Tide’s defense in 2016, this one seems to jump off the page. Not only was it tops in the entire FBS, only two other teams in the nation allowed fewer than 4.5 yards a play – Michigan and Ohio State. It was the lowest such average by an FBS team since 2012, when Florida State allowed just 3.85 yards per play.

8 – Red Zone touchdowns allowed by LSU

There was a lot of turmoil and controversy surrounding the LSU program in 2016, highlighted by the in-season coaching change from Les Miles to Ed Orgeron. But one constant was the Tigers’ defense, once again one of the best in the nation, leading the FBS in fewest TDs allowed — 16.

But the craziest stat of all surrounding the LSU defense was this: opponents only scored eight TDs in 33 trips into the Red Zone. That’s a TD percentage of less than 25 percent! Only one other school in the FBS even had an opponent Red Zone TD percentage under 40 percent — Ohio State at 38 percent.

10 – Carries by Guice in first three games vs FBS opponents

That’s right, the leading rusher in the SEC, the guy who finished with nearly 1,400 yards on the ground, had the following numbers in his first three games against FBS competition last season:

Wisconsin: 2 carries, 3 yards

Mississippi State: 5 carries, 19 yards

Auburn: 3 carries, 62 yards

However, over his last eight games, Derrius Guice — who did have 155 yards rushing in Week 2 against FCS foe Jacksonville State — was as productive as any back in the nation, rushing for 1,148 yards and 14 TDs.

4 – Tennessee wins after trailing by double digits

It’s easy to forget that even though Tennessee’s season did not live up to the preseason hype of winning the SEC East, the Volunteers were the talk of the conference in the first month of the season.

Tennessee got off to a 5-0 start, but it was the way it got to that perfect start that kept everyone’s attention. In four of those five wins, the Vols had to rally from a double-digit deficit. They were the first SEC school to have four such wins in a season since Auburn in 2010 (per ESPN Stats & Information Group).

The last of those four double-digit comeback wins was the best of them all, rallying from a 17-0 deficit to beat Georgia 34-31 on a 43-yard Hail Mary TD pass from Joshua Dobbs to Jauan Jennings on the game’s final play.

11 – Defensive touchdowns scored by Alabama

Finding ways to label the Alabama defense in 2016 as the greatest in school history, as many suggested, fans turned to this ridiculously impressive stat: the Crimson Tide defense scored 11 touchdowns last season.

When you add in punt return scores, the Tide scored 15 non-offensive touchdowns. Or, an average of one non-offensive TD a game. Over a six-game stretch from Sept. 17 through Oct. 22, Alabama scored at least one non-offensive TD every game.