Every basketball program in America has their signature moment (how about Florida’s game-winning 3 in overtime late Friday night to advance to the Elite Eight?), the one they show video clips of to recruits or forever freeze in time in athletic department hallway displays. But only some of those programs are lucky enough to have those moments be crystallized in March Madness lore.

In the SEC, Kentucky basketball has enough magical March moments to stuff into an hour-long highlight reel, with a little brilliance left on the cutting room floor. South Carolina just had its treasured NCAA Tournament moment last Sunday in Greenville when it knocked off heavily favored Duke. Florida has its back-to-back crowns from a decade ago. Maybe more magic awaits; all three advanced to the Elite Eight, just the second time the SEC has had three go that far since the tournament expanded in 1985.

LSU has Shaq and Pistol Pete to trot out from its archives. Missouri basketball echoes with Norm Stewart’s successful forays into March. Wimp Sanderson and his plaid jackets got Alabama to the Big Dance eight times in 12 years, with five trips to the Sweet 16.

But delirious, March Madness-type moments don’t just live in March or in basketball circles. Every SEC football program has had their March Madness-esque snapshot, a quintessential play that stands out above all the others. So we’ve picked out that one play or moment for each SEC football program.

Alabama: The Goal Line Stand

Alabama’s list of treasured moments is so long that its March Madness-type moment doesn’t even come from this current, epic run of dominance. Instead, we jump in the time machine and travel back to Jan. 1, 1979, at the Superdome in New Orleans, where the Crimson Tide stemmed the tide and turned away Penn State at the doorstep of the end zone to prevail 14-7 in the Sugar Bowl and capture its 10th national title, the fifth under Bear Bryant. All at once, The Goal Line Stand gave Bama another title and symbolized what the program has always prided itself in: toughness, resilience and excellence.

Arkansas: Burnett’s Championship Dash

Legendary Razorbacks coach Frank Broyles provided the state with its crowning football moment at the 1965 Cotton Bowl. Arkansas outlasted Nebraska 10-7, with Bobby Burnett’s 3-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter putting the Hogs over the top and taking them to the top of the college football world. Burnett’s burst to glory capped an 80-yard drive and put the finishing touches on an 11-0 season. Later that night, No. 1 Alabama fell to Texas in the Orange Bowl, Arkansas was the last undefeated team in the country, and the Football Writers Association of America and the Helms Athletic Foundation voted the Hogs national champs for the 1964 season.

Auburn: Bo Over the Top

The iconic Bo Jackson gave the passionate fans of The Plains so many thrills they probably lost count during those glorious years in the mid-80s. But Jackson lifted Auburn’s faithful to its highest degree of euphoria when he leaped up and over the defense of rival Alabama in the 1982 Iron Bowl. Jackson was only a freshman in ’82, a long way from his Heisman Trophy senior season, but he showed he was ready for the big stage right away, scoring from the 1-yard line on fourth down to give Auburn a 23-22 lead with 2:26 left. The Tigers held on to win by that score, and even though it only left both teams 7-3 it was Auburn’s newfound legend beating the hated rival for the first time in a decade in the most thrilling fashion imaginable.

Florida: Spurrier Returns to The Swamp

The Gators arrived as a powerhouse when Steve Spurrier led them to the 1996 national title. A decade later, the legend with the visor returned to Gainesville for the first time as the coach at South Carolina and was on the other side of a thrilling Florida moment. Spurrier had beaten the Gators the year before in 2005 in Columbia, so UF was going for payback and to preserve its national title hopes, already having lost to Auburn a month earlier. Naturally, the 2006 epic was on national TV and came down to the final play, when Jarvis Moss blocked a potential 48-yard winning field goal as The Swamp shook. UF then ran the table, routing Ohio State to win the national title and adding another crown in 2008. Without Moss’ block, maybe neither championship happens under Urban Meyer?

Georgia: Herschel Runs Over Bates

Like Jackson at Auburn, Herschel Walker was Georgia’s 1980s football legend. And like Jackson, Walker could appear superhuman at times, including in the very first game of his brilliant Bulldogs career. On Sept. 6, 1980, the would-be hero was a fourth-string running back who introduced himself to Tennessee, the SEC and the nation in stunning fashion. Trailing 15-2 late in the third quarter in Knoxville, Walker took a pitch and scored from 16 yards out, running over future Dallas Cowboys teammate Bill Bates and swinging the momentum of the game. Walker added the game-winning score five minutes later, but it was his first TD that had people talking, that day and now.

Kentucky: Stunner in Baton Rouge

The magic in Lexington has almost all belonged to the basketball guys. But back in 1998 the Wildcats football team had a magician of its own in quarterback Tim Couch, and he directed a wild, stunning upset of nationally ranked LSU on an October Saturday night in Death Valley. Couch completed 37 of 50 passes for 391 yards and three touchdowns in front of a national TV audience not used to seeing Kentucky hang with LSU, much less beat the Tigers. But on the final play of the game, the Wildcats did, as Seth Hanson booted a 33-yard field goal at the gun to spoil a Saturday night in Baton Rouge and provide Kentucky with one of its biggest wins in school history.

LSU: The Earthquake Game

Death Valley shakes on most fall Saturday nights, but never like it did on Oct. 8, 1988, in a nationally televised game against Auburn. LSU had lost two in a row coming in, Auburn was ranked fourth and for almost 60 minutes the home team was kept off the scoreboard. But with less than two minutes left, on fourth down, Tommy Hodson found Eddie Fuller in the back of the end zone for an 11-yard score, and the extra point lifted LSU to a pulsating 7-6 victory. The crowd’s off-the-charts eruption registered as an earthquake on the seismograph at LSU’s Howe-Russell Geoscience Complex, thus the name of the iconic game.

Mississippi State: Egg Bowl Elation

The Bulldogs have only ruled the SEC West once, in 1998, and they sealed that deal in the most satisfying of ways, by winning the Egg Bowl in Oxford on Thanksgiving night in dominating fashion. J.J. Johnson ran Mississippi State right into glory that night at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium, as the Bulldogs were able to win bragging rights in their state and in their division at the same glorious moment.

Missouri: Stampede in Columbia

In only the Tigers’ second season in the SEC, they produced a “storming the field” moment that’s not far off from the storming the court scenes that take place each March during the conference tournaments, when automatic NCAA bids are won. On Nov. 30, 2013, on national TV, fifth-ranked Missouri took down No. 19 Texas A&M 28-21 to capture the SEC East crown, and the fans at Faurot Field went nuts. Missouri had shown it could compete and win big in the toughest conference in the country, and its followers just wanted to say thank you.

Ole Miss: Archie Gets Last Laugh

Tennessee fans wondered who Archie Manning was all week leading up to the game in Jackson, Miss., on Nov. 15, 1969. They even wore “Archie Who?” buttons. Sure enough, the Volunteers, unbeaten and ranked third, found out exactly the stalwart Manning was, as did their silenced fans that day. The first legendary Manning to play at Ole Miss threw one touchdown pass and ran for another in a 38-0 whitewashing of the humbled Vols. The victory launched Manning’s two-year rush to glory that saw him finish in the top five of the Heisman Trophy voting both years.

South Carolina: The Ultimate Williams-Brice Sandstorm

The Gamecocks don’t always give their top-notch fans the top-notch performances they deserve, but Williams-Brice Stadium can be a nightmare for opposing teams when South Carolina is good. And on Oct. 9, 2010, on a gorgeous Saturday afternoon in front of, yes, a national TV audience, the 19th-ranked Gamecocks showed no mercy on defending national champion and top-ranked Alabama, pulling off the 35-21 stunner. Amid that game-long (and surely night-long) celebration came the pregame Sandstorm, which was just a little louder than a typical Williams-Brice gameday. Seems like the Gamecock players took note and performed like champions.

Tennessee: Tee to Peerless

Peyton Manning piled up all the gaudy stats in Knoxville, but after he left Tee Martin came in and brought home a championship in 1998, leading the Volunteers past favored Florida State in the first BCS national championship game. The highlight of Tennessee’s euphoric night was the moment it screamed to the nation that it was going to win, when Martin found a streaking Peerless Price down the right sideline for a 79-yard score that put the Vols up 20-9 with nine minutes left. It was the signature play of a championship dream at last coming true in Knoxville, as Price piled up 199 receiving yards to break a Tennessee bowl record.

Texas A&M: 12th Man Madness

Aggies fans like to brag, or declare, or scream that the 12th Man forever belongs to College Station, not Seattle. Of all the game days the 12th Man has yelled at Kyle Field, its proudest moment came on Thanksgiving night in 1985 against hated rival Texas. An Aggies team that would go on to win the Cotton Bowl stifled the Longhorns all night in a 42-10 rout. Amid the revelry came a point in the game when Texas and quarterback Bret Stafford couldn’t hear themselves think, literally, and had to back off the line of scrimmage while Kyle Field went bonkers. When the play was finally run, the Aggies recorded a sack as more bedlam rained down.

Vanderbilt: Finally, Slaying the Vols

Vandy was riding high under James Franklin in 2012, and amid a seven-game win streak to finish off a 9-4 season, the Commodores took down rival Tennessee for their first home victory over the Vols in 30 years. It happened on national TV, and it went down in stunningly lopsided fashion, 41-18, as Nashville rocked with each Vanderbilt score. For one special, satisfying night and for one season, the best college football team in the state of Tennessee didn’t reside in Knoxville.