There are certain things about teams in every conference that resemble another school halfway across the country. It may be traditions among fans, coaches that have backgrounds at the same schools, or even enrollment numbers and SAT scores.

Certain schools in each conference tend to have similar personalities and traits that set them apart from their conference brethren.

Here are conference cousins who have things in common with another Power 5 school:

Alabama: Ohio State. They’re both in the top five of schools with the most national championships, and they have two of the best active coaches in the game. The Tide and Buckeyes also have a traditional uniform and helmet combination. Steeped in tradition, each spring Alabama’s captains of the previous year’s football team leave their hand and cleat-prints in the sidewalk outside Denny Chimes, a campus landmark. Similarly, Ohio State players named to an All-American team get a tree planted in their honor in Buckeye Grove. Each band is also worth watching at halftime, and they each have memorable names: The Million Dollar Band and The Best Damn Band in the Land.

Arkansas: Iowa. The state schools have both largely had seasons of less than 10 wins, but every so often mix in an 11-2. Case in point, since 2006, Arkansas has three double-digit win seasons, but otherwise less than nine wins. Iowa, meanwhile, under Kirk Ferentz has two double-digit win seasons since 2005, and just one nine-win season otherwise. I would also be crazy not to mention that Bret Bielema played at Iowa, too.

Auburn: Clemson. These two have long drawn similarities and comparisons with one another. On the surface, they appear to be “the little brother” to their prime rival, but have held their own and then some in the rivalry. Well-known Southern writer and humorist Lewis Grizzard famously called Clemson “Auburn with a lake.” The first three head coaches of the Clemson football program were all Auburn graduates: W.M. Williams, John Penton and Walter Merritt Riggs. They are both land-grant institutions, and John Heisman also coached football at both schools.

Florida: Oregon. Despite what Florida has done recently, both have a reputation and tradition for innovative offenses and products like Nike and Gatorade. Both fan bases are younger because of recent success. Before 1990, Florida didn’t have much tradition. But with the arrival of Steve Spurrier, the Gators won at least nine games from 1990 through 2001, won six SEC championships and the 1996 national championship. Oregon similarly turned a corner with Chip Kelly with three straight 12-win seasons, including wins in the Rose Bowl and Fiesta Bowl.

Georgia: Texas. Traditional programs that have had success, and view themselves as more classy to their hated rival. The Athens and Austin music scenes also have something in common, and the cities, while Austin is much larger, are liberal bastions in historically deep red political areas. There’s also something to be said about Mack Brown and Mark Richt being nice guys who won some, especially early, but not enough to satisfy the most demanding fans.

Kentucky: Indiana. To a large portion of fan bases in Kentucky and Indiana, football season is only a slight distraction as a warmup to Midnight Madness. They are, at their core, basketball schools who put a much smaller spotlight on football. While Kentucky has made hay at the Music City Bowl, Indiana had a brief surge in success in recent years at the Foster Farms Bowl and Pinstripe Bowl.

LSU: Florida State. Both are in-state capitals, not traditional college towns, and they, of course, have the Jimbo Fisher connection. They have notable live mascots in Osceola and Renegade and Mike the Tiger. They each have three national championships and have won two of them each in the last 18 years. They also have national power baseball programs.

Missouri: Boston College. Both are non-traditional members of their respective conferences largely driven by conference expansion and television markets. Each also has plenty of interest and success in men’s basketball. Missouri has enjoyed more success in the last decade plus, especially in conference, but Boston College had a 10-win and an 11-win season in 2006 and 2007.

Mississippi State: Kansas State. The two land-grant universities once scheduled a home and home series on Twitter with their athletics directors at the time. Now, both athletic directors are in the SEC: Scott Stricklin (Florida) and John Currie (Tennessee).

They also have used Aggies as their nickname earlier in their history.

Ole Miss: Virginia. Known for high society tailgates, there’s no shortage of wine and cheese crowds with bow ties, seersuckers and high-class dresses. Plus best-selling author John Grisham has a home in each state. Virginia had a modicum of success in the late 1980s and mid-1990s, but Ole Miss has had somewhat more success, though just two 10-win seasons since the 1970s.

South Carolina: Oklahoma State. Both programs had coaches in early 2000s that helped them get to respectability (Lou Holtz and Les Miles) and the next coach, Steve Spurrier and Mike Gundy, took the program to the next level. They’ve each also battled a perception that they haven’t won as much as their in-state rival, especially when it comes to championships.

Tennessee: Michigan. These two had loads of success in the 1990s and were often connected through their stadium competition to see who could add more seats each year. Michigan finished the six-game home slate in 1998 with a season average of 110,965 fans per game, which broke Tennessee’s NCAA record. How did Charles Woodson beat Peyton Manning for the 1997 Heisman Trophy again?

Texas A&M: Michigan State. Each viewed as the little brother school in their own state, they’ve also both enjoyed recent success. The Spartans have had five double-digit win seasons since 2010, while A&M has enjoyed an 11-win season and four bowl wins since 2011. According to U.S. News and World Report in 2015, both had a 66 percent fall acceptance rate, and a 51 percent four-year graduation rate.

Vanderbilt: Duke. The private institutions have each had a bit of a resurgence in recent years on the football field, but have long been compared in academics. In 2015, according to U.S. News and World Report, Duke’s tuition and fees was $51,265, while Vanderbilt’s was $45,610. They also each have less than 7,000 undergraduate students.