What constitutes an upset win in the SEC?

Being a heavy underdog on the road helps or perhaps stumbling into a matchup, even on your home field, no one expects you to win.

Here are the most memorable from the last decade at each program:

Alabama: vs. No. 16 Arkansas (2007): Nick Saban’s first major win with the Crimson Tide came against the defending Western Division champs in the form of a shootout (41-38). Alabama built a 21-0 lead in the first quarter before the Razorbacks battled back with 21 consecutive points in the fourth to seize a 38-31 advantage. Following Leigh Tiffin’s 42-yard field goal with 4:20 to play that cut the deficit to four, Alabama quarterback John Parker Wilson connected with Matt Caddell for one of his four touchdown passes to win the game with eight seconds left.

Arkansas: vs. No. 17 LSU (2014): During Bret Bielema’s second season, the Razorbacks snapped a 17-game SEC losing skid with a shutout win over the Tigers. “It’s the best feeling I’ve experienced since I’ve been in college, honestly,” then-junior running back Jonathan Williams said. “The fans rushing the field, the goal posts going down, laughing and hugging my teammates and coaches, it’s just a great experience.”

Auburn: at No. 4 Florida (2007): The Tigers snapped the Gators’ 11-game winning streak and more importantly, handed Florida its first loss at Ben Hill-Griffin Stadium under Urban Meyer. Wes Byrum’s gutsy 43-yard field goal as time expired proved the final 20-17 tally and helped Auburn overcome a disappointing 3-2 start.

Florida: vs. No. 11 Georgia, Jacksonville (2014): Not only Florida demolish 11th-ranked Georgia’s road to a division title, but the Gators — under a lame duck coach — rushed for a season-best 418 yards, poking a finger in the eye of first-year defensive coordinator Jeremy Pruitt. The 38-20 decision was one of Will Muschamp’s biggest wins during his tenure, but wasn’t enough to keep his job a few weeks later.

Georgia: at No. 5 Auburn (2006): Bulldogs fans didn’t expect much when Georgia entered its late-season rivalry game at Jordan-Hare Stadium with four losses during the 2006 season, but what transpired was a league-wide shocker. A double-digit underdog, Georgia jumped out to a 30-7 halftime lead thanks to three interceptions (and a touchdown) from Tra Battle against the fifth-ranked Tigers and cruised to a 37-15 win. The implosion ended Auburn’s chances at an at-large BCS berth as one of several one-loss teams jockeying for November position.

Kentucky: vs. No. 1 LSU (2007): After scoring on their possession in the third overtime, the 17th-ranked Wildcats stopped the Tigers who tried four consecutive rushing plays to preserve a 43-37 victory. LSU recovered following the setback and eventually won the national championship that season under Les Miles.

LSU: vs. No. 3 Ole Miss (2014): Backed by a deafening crowd, the Tigers avoided a second straight loss to the Rebels with a last-second, 10-7, win over unbeaten and third-ranked Ole Miss. LSU, actually favored by a couple points in this one, came into the game 6-2 and had briefly fallen out of Top 25 two weeks prior after suffering a crushing 34-point defeat at Auburn. The Rebels had dreams of an at-large College Football Playoff berth (or perhaps as the SEC champion) before a storied foe snuffed out that end-of-season goal.

Mississippi: at No. 4 Florida (2008): As a 22-point underdog who had already lost games to Vanderbilt and Wake Forest, the Rebels forced three turnovers, overcame a 10-point halftime deficit and stopped 2007 Heisman winner Tim Tebow short on a 4th-and-1 at their own 32 yard line in the final minute to preserve a 31-30 victory. Tebow’s infamous post-game speech followed and the Gators would win their next 22 games — including the 2008 national championship — before falling to Alabama in 2009.

Mississippi State: at No. 22 Florida (2010): Shortly after the Bulldogs’ first win in Gainesville since 1965, Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen, a former Gators assistant, said “this wasn’t an upset, we expected to win” after trotting off the field following a 10-7 slugfest. It was Florida’s second consecutive home loss for the first time since 2003 and third overall for the first time since the Steve Spurrier era.

Missouri: vs. No. 1 Oklahoma (2010): Gary Pinkel’s first career win in seven tries against the unbeaten and top-ranked Sooners propelled the Tigers to the top of the Big XII standings and a No. 6 national ranking. Oklahoma came in No. 3 in the AP Poll and No. 1 in the BCS, but couldn’t recover from Mizzou’s 16-point fourth quarter.

South Carolina: vs. No. 1 Alabama (2010): The stage was set for one of the biggest wins in school history with College GameDay and the defending national champions in town matched up against one of the Gamecocks’ most talented teams under Steve Spurrier. Stephen Garcia threw three touchdown passes — including two to Alshon Jeffery — as South Carolina blasted the top-ranked Crimson Tide, 35-21. The Gamecocks would lose at unranked Kentucky the following week, but did manage their only SEC Eastern Division title that season.

Tennessee: at No. 3 LSU (2005): Trailing by three touchdowns at halftime, the Vols responded with a heroic comeback in Death Valley, downing the Tigers, 30-27, in overtime during LSU’s hurricane-delayed home opener. Ranked No. 10 and a national title contender at the time, Tennessee was led by LSU transfer quarterback Rick Clausen who led the Vols on three scoring drives in the second half to force the extra session. The more surprising ‘upset’ win may have been Tennessee’s two-point nailbiter over No. 11 South Carolina in 2013.

Texas A&M: at No. 1 Alabama (2012): Freshman Heisman winner Johnny Manziel sparked a 20-point statement in the first quarter that stunned 101,000 fans in Tuscaloosa. The top-ranked and unbeaten Crimson Tide stormed back to trail by a field goal entering the fourth quarter before Manziel capped an incredible performance with a 24-yard touchdown pass to Malcome Kennedy midway through the final frame. Deshazor Everett’s interception on 4th-and-Goal at the 2 yard line with 90 seconds left sealed Texas A&M’s memorable upset.

Vanderbilt: at No. 6 South Carolina (2007): Stumbling into Williams-Brice Stadium at 3-3 following consecutive losses to Auburn and Georgia, the Commodores managed to hand Steve Spurrier his most embarrassing home loss during his tenure with the Gamecocks. South Carolina quarterbacks Blake Mitchell and Chris Smelley combined for three interceptions and never got the offense going during a lackluster 17-6 loss. Vanderbilt’s Mackenzi Adams threw a pair of touchdown passes during a 17-point first quarter that buried the nation’s sixth-ranked team.