We barely had the time to catch our breath during one of the wildest weekends in college football history, but here’s what we’re not overreacting to in the SEC after Week 6:

Texas A&M’s passing offense: Wide receivers dropped passes, Kenny Hill was shaky throughout and the wide-open Texas A&M offense went into panic mode early against a dominant Mississippi State team Saturday afternoon. For the second consecutive game, the Aggies’ high-powered attack looked beatable and this time, there was no fourth-quarter (and overtime) magic to escape defeat. We didn’t feel the effort warranted a complete tumble in the AP Poll (from No. 6 to 14), but reactionary losses happen often when two ranked teams battle in the SEC. Texas A&M thrives off quick passes to the boundary and when teams tackle well, that strength’s taken away. A rhythm was never established. Much of Hill’s yardage came during garbage time in an otherwise disappointing performance from the offense.

Treon Harris being Florida’s season-saver at quarterback: No one can deny the true freshman provided an instant spark for Kurt Roper’s offense off the bench in the fourth quarter on Saturday, but the overall sample size is simply too small thus far to deem Harris as the Gators’ next great passer. It’s clearly a confidence issue at this point with incumbent Jeff Driskel and another player breathing down his neck further complicates the issue. Driskel’s ineptitude has forced the coaching staff’s hand (notably Will Muschamp) to play Harris and when he has stepped on the field, he’s performed well. There’s clearly a quarterback controversy in Gainesville, but let’s wait and see how it shakes out before we crown Harris the everyday starter after leading two fourth-quarter scoring drives against an opponent which hasn’t seen a winning season since 2009.

Kentucky’s 4-1 start: The Wildcats (4-1, 2-1) are a missed call at Florida away from being 5-0 and nationally-ranked, but the season-defining stretch in the SEC is still to come. A win over South Carolina moved Kentucky into contender status in the Eastern Division, a much-needed momentum boost for a program that was coming off its first league victory in 2.5 years. A road game against LSU in two weeks kicks off a four-game stretch against conference heavyweights prior to finishing up with Tennessee and Louisville. If Kentucky can split those four games, which includes matchups with Mississippi St. and Georgia, Mark Stoops will be in national coach of the year talks and the Wildcats could be division champs.

Tennessee’s perceived improvement under Butch Jones: A promising 2-0 start has quickly turned into a 2-3 implosion for Jones in Knoxville, a result of faulty play up front and the inability to execute in late-game situations. Is that the sign of a team on the rise? During consecutive SEC losses, the Vols have been in position to make their move on Georgia and Florida but have squandered multiple opportunities in the fourth quarter. Saturday’s loss to the Gators was gut-wrenching after Tennessee dominated defensively for most of the game — 9-0 lead after three quarters — against a handicapped offense. Florida’s lone touchdown drive came on a short field after Justin Worley was sacked and stripped by Jalen Tabor. The Gators cashed in the gift and picked off Worley late to win the game. How long can Jones continue Tennessee’s recruiting success without results on the field and at what point do moral victories still retain value?