Thanks a lot, SEC. Just when it started to seem like everything was logical and sorted and orderly — here came chaos. Oklahoma, where was this all season? Auburn, now you decide to play football. Florida, glad you noticed that this Lagway kid is pretty good.

Anyway, after a crazy week, there’s only a single game left to predict. Here’s our final prediction of how every SEC team finishes the regular season.

Texas (11-1, 7-1)

While there’s obviously no gimme at A&M, Texas looked like a very solid team against Kentucky. They didn’t have to dig very deep in the bag to put that game in the win column and seem to have saved some fire for the Aggies (and the SEC Championship thereafter).

Georgia (10-2, 6-2)

Georgia Tech is a legitimate team and absolutely should not be overlooked. But at Athens, that game doesn’t seem likely to be much of a contest. Then it’s on to the SEC title game vs. Texas or Texas A&M. The good news there is that even if they lose, the rash of 3rd losses in the SEC means they’re probably fine for the CFP.

Tennessee (10-2, 6-2)

The Vols have to travel to Vanderbilt, but given that the stadium will be half orange, there’s not really a road disadvantage here for the Vols. The Commodores are a solid team that won’t beat themselves, but Tennessee should have enough in the tank to wrap up their Playoff spot.

Alabama (9-3, 5-3)

This was less about the loss than about the 24-3 offensively bumbling nature of the loss. Had Ole Miss and/or Texas A&M taken care of business, Alabama might have seen a massive drop in its CFP shot. But if the Tide take care of Auburn next week, there’s still, maybe, a shot at the Playoff. Maybe?

Ole Miss (9-3, 5-3)

That hurt pretty badly. It’s hard to imagine the CFP committee putting a team that lost to Kentucky and Florida into the Playoff. The Rebels should easily have enough gas in the tank to outlast Mississippi State, but it’s a lot less likely to be meaningful than it was before this week.

Missouri (9-3, 5-3)

Despite the chaos of this week, Missouri’s situation probably isn’t any better. It looks now like the SEC will put a 9-3 team in the Playoff, but it won’t be the Tigers. A weak schedule and a lot of punching down to inferior competition will doom Mizzou.

South Carolina (9-3, 5-3)

While Clemson might be a better team on paper and they do host the game, Carolina’s momentum shifts the balance a bit. The Gamecocks could have folded but are now in position to finish the regular season on a 6-game winning streak. If LaNorris Sellers had stayed healthy all year, it’s fair to wonder how high Carolina’s ceiling might have been. Also fair to wonder if they get genuinely into the CFP hunt with another win over a ranked opponent.

Texas A&M (8-4, 5-3)

The Aggies woke up once they fell behind 21-0, but couldn’t outlast Auburn. The defense was carved up fairly well by the Tigers, who seemed to mysteriously stop turning the ball over. Texas figures to be a substantial favorite next week, even at Kyle Field. It is a game that could get A&M back into the Playoff picture, but the call here is a loss.

LSU (7-5, 4-4)

The Tigers did survive Vanderbilt, but the way that Oklahoma ran the ball against Alabama makes it likely that they can do much the same against a Tiger defense that has been pretty mediocre against the run. The last four opponents for LSU rushed for 4.9, 6.5, 6.7 and 5.1 yards per carry. That’s a recipe for another bad loss.

Florida (7-5, 4-4)

Florida didn’t come this far to lose to FSU. The November schedule that looked destined to be the doom of UF and Billy Napier will likely end up as a 3-2 run. Credit due and given to the UF athletic department for standing by their man and maybe sparking the positive string that justifies his return.

Oklahoma (7-5, 3-5)

Speaking of gutty teams coming back from the dead. If you foresaw Oklahoma running at will on Alabama and just stuffing the Tide offense, well, step up and co-write these columns for next season. They’ll be an underdog at LSU, but a team that outrushes Alabama 257-70 deserves respect.

Vanderbilt (6-6, 3-5)

The Commodores will fall to Tennessee, but as surely as all 6-6 records aren’t created equal, they had a special season that could help build their program in the long haul.

Arkansas (6-6, 3-5)

If the Hogs’ finale against Mizzou was at home, we’d pick them for a 7th win. On the road, we’ll take the Tigers, which still leaves Arkansas playing a bowl game.

Auburn (5-7, 2-6)

The offense roared to life and Alabama looks vulnerable, but given the Tigers’ massive inconsistency and the possibility that a riled-up Alabama team will want to make a CFP statement, this game still sticks in the Tide’s win column.

Kentucky (4-8, 1-7)

The Wildcats have always had their recent dominance over Louisville to sustain them through offensively-challenged falls. It doesn’t seem likely to help this year. The Cardinals are the better team and home field seemingly carries little weight in this series.

Mississippi State (2-10, 0-8)

They compete, but they won’t win over Ole Miss.