Undefeated seasons and multiple national championships are spectacular for many programs and conferences around the country. In the SEC, they’re prerequisites even among the teams ranked in the second half of the league all-time.

Texas A&M, Arkansas and Missouri all wracked up conference titles before joining the SEC, where it’s hard to stack up hardware unless you’re one of the best in the country every year.

We’ve ranked every current SEC team since the inception of the programs across five major categories: national titles, conference titles, all-time winning percentage, Associated Press Top 25 finishes and consensus All-Americans.

We’ve already revealed the teams we rank No. 11-14. Today we’ll uncover the four teams we slotted in the middle to bottom-middle all-time.

10. MISSOURI

Total Points: 43
Claimed National Titles: 0 (T11th)
Conference Titles: 15 (3rd)
All-Time Winning Percentage: .552 (10th)
Top 25 Finishes: 19 (10th)
Consensus All-Americans: 14 (9th)

The Tigers never have claimed a national championship, and haven’t been able to break through with an SEC title despite back-to-back division crowns. But Mizzou displayed dominance at times in the original Big Eight (12 of the team’s 15 conference titles), which separates it historically from programs like Mississippi State, South Carolina and Kentucky.

Current coach Gary Pinkel has outperformed historical precedence by far, and very well could be the greatest coach in team history.

9. OLE MISS

Total Points: 42
Claimed National Titles: 3 (T3rd)
Conference Titles: 6 (11th)
All-Time Winning Percentage: .561 (9th)
Top 25 Finishes: 24 (9th)
Consensus All-Americans: 12 (10th)

The Rebels haven’t had many standout individual talents. The ’15 iteration may have as many as any team in the program’s history with four potential first-round picks. The team’s 12 total consensus All-Americans pale in comparison to some of the SEC’s best.

But Ole Miss does claim three national championships from the days of coach John Vaught, finishing a combined 30-1-1 in ’59, ’60 and ’62.

Ironically, though the Rebels rank near the top of the SEC in national titles, the team ranks near the bottom on conference titles with just six. Ole Miss hasn’t earned that distinction since 1963.

8. ARKANSAS

Total Points: 36
Claimed National Titles: 1 (T9th)
Conference Titles: 13 (T7th)
All-Time Winning Percentage: .596 (7th)
Top 25 Finishes: 28 (7th)
Consensus All-Americans: 24 (6th)

Historically, the Razorbacks are consistently average. For a team that’s been an SEC member for more than two decades, that’s a pretty good distinction.

Granted, all 13 of Arkansas’ conference titles came during the Southwest Conference days, most under legendary head coach Frank Broyles, including the 11-0 team that can claim a national championship in 1964.

The Razorbacks have produced an impressive collection of standout players in the form of consensus All-Americans, most recently punt returner Joe Adams. The team’s 28 season-ending finishes in the AP Top 25 also represents an above-average number for a power-conference team.

7. TEXAS A&M

Total Points: 29
Claimed National Titles: 3 (T3rd)
Conference Titles: 18 (2nd)
All-Time Winning Percentage: .602 (8th)
Top 25 Finishes: 26 (8th)
Consensus All-Americans: 22 (8th)

The Aggies are a middle of the pack SEC team all-time with the exception of championships. Historically, the Aggies have produced those in bunches.

One of the most consistent programs in college football, Texas A&M won at least one Southwest Conference title every decade from the 1910s to the 1990s. The team also claims three national championships, including a stellar 11-0 season in ’39 that ended with a Sugar Bowl victory against then-SEC power Tulane.