Another week of SEC football has come and gone.

Week 7 included some impressive team efforts from the conference’s top contenders in each division — Alabama and Georgia — as expected. But a few other teams also stood out. Most notable was LSU, which upset 10th-ranked Auburn 27-23 in Baton Rouge on Saturday.

Several individuals also were outstanding over the weekend, and it wasn’t just offensive skill players this week. A kicker and a defensive end each made this week’s list of top performers in the SEC.

Here’s the Top 10, which, as usual, contains teams, coaches and players:

10. Mississippi State

The Bulldogs really needed to win. After getting beaten down by Georgia and Auburn, then sitting through a bye week, State fans waited a while for joy. In fact, it had been almost a month since Mississippi State beat LSU 37-7 on Sept. 16. On Saturday, Dan Mullen’s team got back to its winning ways with a convincing 35-10 victory over BYU. Quarterback Nick Fitzgerald looked wonderful on the ground, racking up 103 yards and two scores.

9. South Carolina pass rush

The Gamecocks put pressure on Tennessee’s offensive line Saturday in Knoxville. South Carolina racked up seven sacks in a 15-9 win over the Volunteers — an impressive performance from the Gamecocks’ defense for the second week in a row. That unit scored three touchdowns on Oct. 7 against Arkansas. The Vols were starting a new quarterback, Jarrett Guarantano, and the Gamecocks pressured him into two fumbles (though he recovered both).

8. Texas A&M/Daniel LaCamera

LaCamera is tied for eighth in the FBS at 2.0 field goals per game and is tied for 17th in percentage (87.5 on 14 for 16 tries).

The Aggies built off of the “moral victory” against Alabama by going into The Swamp and knocking off Florida 19-17. The Gators controlled most of the game but the Aggies got the job done when it mattered most in the fourth quarter. They couldn’t have done it without kicker Daniel LaCamera, who was a perfect 4-for-4 on field goals. LaCamera scored nine points in the fourth quarter, including the winning 32-yarder with 58 seconds left. LaCamera has been one of the SEC’s most underrated weapons this year.

7. Ralph Webb

What more can be said about Webb? It seems he has been in college for 20 years. Since Webb was a freshman, he has been Vanderbilt’s main weapon and one of the SEC’s best running backs. If anything, he’s been underrated. Webb performed well — once again — on Saturday, though his team lost to Ole Miss. Webb rushed 23 times for 163 yards and two touchdowns. Not a bad day at the office.

Credit: Matt Bush-USA TODAY Sports

6. Marquis Haynes

You would be hard-pressed to find a better individual defensive performance than the one Haynes put out on Saturday in a 57-35 win over Vanderbilt. The senior defensive end was lights out off the edge, making life difficult for Commodores quarterback Kyle Shurmur. Haynes brought Shurmur down for a sack three times and added eight total tackles, third on the team. As a unit, the Ole Miss defense had seven sacks.

5. A.J. Brown

Ole Miss quarterback Shea Patterson has made this list multiple times, so while he was also incredible on Saturday against Vanderbilt (351 yards, four TDs), let’s focus on the Rebels’ top receiver. Brown caught two touchdown passes from Patterson and had 174 receiving yards on just eight catches, or 21.8 yards per catch. It was a big day for the sophomore from Starkville.

Credit: Matt Bush-USA TODAY Sports

4. Missouri’s passing game

For the first time all season, Georgia’s defense showed a bit of weakness. The Bulldogs allowed 253 passing yards to Mizzou quarterback Drew Lock. He threw for four touchdown passes, which the ‘Dawgs hadn’t allowed to happen all season. Besides Lock’s outstanding performance, pass-catcher Emanuel Hall was notably impressive — hauling in four catches for 141 yards and two TDs. That included a beautiful 63-yard connection near the end of the first quarter.

3. D.J. Chark

Chark is atop the SEC and fifth in the nation at 18.8 yards per punt return.

LSU’s top wide receiver had another noteworthy performance in the upset win over Auburn. Chark lost a fumble, but his positive contributions far outweighed the negatives. Chark finished with 150 receiving yards on just five catches. It’s not easy to average a 30 yards per reception. Perhaps his biggest play, though, was a 75-yard punt return for a touchdown early in the fourth quarter. That was a huge play in his team’s comeback, as it pulled LSU within 23-21.

2. Georgia offense

It’s always a good day for an offense when it sets school records for yardage. That was exactly what happened Saturday in Athens when Georgia racked up a startling 696 yards of total offense in a 53-28 win over Missouri. Quarterback Jake Fromm threw for more than 300 yards for the first time in his career and the potent ‘Dawgs rushing attack amassed 370 yards. Even kicker Rodrigo Blankenship got in on the offensive fun, nailing all four of his field goal attempts.

1. Ed Orgeron

You’ve got to tip your hat to Coach O. After an impressive stretch of wins last season, Orgeron did enough as an interim coach to win over the fan base and secure the LSU head coaching gig. Tigers fans jumped off the Orgeron bandwagon in a hurry this season after LSU lost by 30 to Mississippi State and got upset by Troy at home. But now it seems the Troy loss came at the perfect time. LSU is coming off back-to-back wins — at Florida and against No. 10 Auburn. That’s a solid couple of weeks for the Bayou Bengals.