Every year, college football brings fans some of the best finishes in sports.

Although there was no band serving as an obstacle on the field or no field-goal attempt returned for a TD on the final play of a game pitting bitter rivals, 2015 gave us some of the most memorable miracle finishes ever. Interestingly, two of them featured the Michigan Wolverines.

Here are the top college football miracle finishes in 2015:

Miami’s TD return as time expired at Duke: The Hurricanes had a tumultuous season, which led to coach Al Golden being fired after the team’s seventh game. Miami’s eighth game was a 30-27 miracle victory over the Blue Devils.

Duke appeared to win the game on a TD with 6 seconds left, but a kickoff return with eight laterals gave Miami the game-winning TD.

After a lengthy review, the call stood despite a penalty flag initially being thrown on the play. The next day, the ACC revealed the officials should have called an illegal block in the back on Miami. There was also a point prior to one of the eight laterals where the Hurricanes ball-carrier’s knee hit the ground. The play should have been over at that point.

Regardless, the victory helped Miami win four of its last five in the ACC.

Michigan’s dropped punt snap vs. Michigan State: If not for this miracle, the Spartans wouldn’t have won the Big Ten East, gone on to win the Big Ten championship or been awarded a spot in the College Football Playoff.

Michigan led Michigan State by nine points with just over nine minutes to go. Michigan State scored a TD and kicked an extra point to bring the Spartans within two. But with just 10 seconds left, all the Wolverines had to do was successfully punt the ball away on fourth down and perhaps defend a Hail Mary pass.

On the punt attempt, however, Michigan punter Blake O’Neill fumbled the ball and Michigan State’s Jalen Watts-Jackson picked up the loose ball and followed a Spartan convoy into the end zone as time expired.

Michigan’s goal-line stand vs. Minnesota: A week later and on the same night as Miami’s eight-lateral kickoff TD, Michigan pulled off its own miracle.

The Wolverines took a three-point lead with under five minutes to go in the fourth quarter. But on the ensuing drive, the Golden Gophers appeared to score the winning TD with 19 seconds to go. After a review, the officials ruled that Minnesota WR Drew Wolitarsky was out of bounce at the Michigan 1-yard line.

Rather than kick the field goal to tie, Minnesota went for the win. Michigan stuffed the quarterback sneak and time ran out.

Georgia Tech’s ‘kick-six’: ESPN’s Mike Tirico coined the phrase “kick-six” when the Baltimore Ravens knocked off the Cleveland Browns on Monday Night Football on a blocked field goal returned for a TD.

Over a month, Georgia Tech had its own “kick-six.”

With the game tied at 16, Florida State attempted a 56-yard field goal with six seconds left. Georgia Tech blocked the kick. Lance Austin picked up the loose ball for the Yellow Jackets and returned it 78 yards for the winning TD.

Oregon beats Arizona State in 3-overtime thriller: Oregon suffered early-season losses to Michigan State, Utah and Washington State. But the Ducks won their last six regular-season games — the most memorable at Tempe.

On fourth-and-goal at the Arizona State 9 with 23 seconds remaining and the Ducks down seven, QB Vernon Adams scrambled to his right and launched a prayer back across his body. Two Oregon players collided while jumping for the ball in the end zone. Somehow, Dwayne Stanford came down with it for the game-tying TD.

In the first two overtimes, each team scored a TD. Oregon started with the ball in triple overtime. On second-and-5 at the 20, Adams found WR Bralon Addison in the back of the end zone. On the replay, it looked like Addison’s foot may have been just out of bounds, but there wasn’t indisputable evidence to overturn the call.

Oregon then intercepted Arizona State on its possession to win, 61-55.

Arkansas converts fourth-and-25 at Ole Miss: The biggest miracle in the 2015 SEC season lifted the Razorbacks past the Rebels.

Arkansas faced a fourth-and-25 in overtime, trailing by seven. Brandon Allen threw a 10-yard pass to TE Hunter Henry, who blindly threw the ball backward as he fell to the ground. Alex Collins picked up the loose ball and ran for the first down. A few plays later, Arkansas won with a TD and a 2-point conversion.

The loss cost Ole Miss a trip to the SEC Championship Game and gave Alabama a path to the conference title and the national championship.