Week 10 had a bit of everything.

Alabama grabbed control of the SEC West with an emphatic win over LSU, Arkansas helped make that happen with a stirring overtime win at Ole Miss and Florida clinched the SEC East title with a surprisingly close win at home over Vanderbilt.

Some coaches grabbed the limelight as well, for reasons good and bad. With that in mind, let’s look back at the best, and worst, from the week that was:

GOOD MOVE

It’s easy to sit here 48 hours removed from the game and give credit to Arkansas coach Bret Bielema for his decision to go for two not once, but twice, in the first overtime session at Ole Miss.

However, even if it had failed the second time, it was still a good decision.

Playing on the road in a game that his team should have already lost in regulation — and again on the miracle lateral on fourth-and-25 — Bielema saw a chance for his team to win the game. And he took it.

Extending the game against a superior team (on paper) in their stadium is not what a coach should be looking to do. Love him or hate him, Bielema has guts. And he proved it again on Saturday night.

BAD MOVE

There are a few things that Ole Miss fans might point out about coach Hugh Freeze’s game management in the loss to Arkansas, but one play near the end of regulation was particularly confusing.

Ole Miss had the ball on the Arkansas 49-yard line, facing a fourth-and-6 with around 15 seconds left. In a tie game, a punt is really the only play as you don’t want to risk giving the other team the ball near midfield with a chance to get a field goal attempt in the final seconds.

Instead, Freeze went for it. Chad Kelly’s pass was broken up, and Arkansas took over. Brandon Allen completed a pass down to the Ole Miss 30-yard line, called a timeout and set up a potential game-winning kick.

Ole Miss blocked it to force that fateful overtime, but it shouldn’t have come to that.

Bielema’s aggression was good. In this case, Freeze’s was not.

GOOD MOVE

Alabama defensive coordinator Kirby Smart has been linked with just about every high-profile coaching job there is for the past few seasons.

Saturday night, facing the nation’s best running back in LSU’s Leonard Fournette, he showed what all the fuss is about.

The Crimson Tide had an outstanding plan to shut down Fournette and the Tigers offense, holding the standout running back to 31 yards on 19 carries.

It was a dominating performance for Alabama, and Smart’s fingerprints were all over that defensive effort.

Somewhere, his agent is smiling.

BAD MOVE

Texas A&M defensive coordinator John Chavis’ unit has proven that it can get after a quarterback in the passing game, but in a stunning 26-10 home loss to Auburn, the Aggies once again showed their complete inability to stop the running game.

Texas A&M quarterback Kyler Murray’s 3 interceptions stole the headlines, but the fact that the Aggies allowed Auburn to roll up 311 yards on the ground is the real story of this game. After that effort, Texas A&M is now last in the SEC against the run.

There’s enough talent in College Station to expect more from the Aggies defense, and I think the coaching staff must bear some of the blame.