Week 10 had its share of both predictable results  — Alabama and Georgia roll — and a few surprises (Missouri shines and Auburn comes back). We’ll try to sort it out with our weekly power rankings, breaking down what we’ve seen so far.

After a wild Week 10, here’s how we’ve got it:

14. Arkansas (2-7, off this week)

While Arkansas has frequently played like it had a week off, this week, they actually did.

13. Tennessee (4-5, beat Charlotte 14-3)

Well, it was a win. That said, Tennessee managed less than 200 total yards against a team that gave up 45 points at home to Appalachian State. That gaudy 0.8 yards per carry leaves the Vols sitting at 13th.

12. Mississippi (5-4, lost to South Carolina 48-44)

Mississippi taketh, and Mississippi giveth away. The Rebels are a genuinely fun team to watch, and they racked up 616 total yards against South Carolina, but they gave up 48 points and lost the game. If the SEC became an arena football league, Mississippi would move up a couple spots.

11. Vanderbilt (4-5, off this week)

We’ll just pretend we didn’t put Auburn below the Commodores. Didn’t happen.

10. South Carolina (5-3, beat Mississippi 48-44)

It was a nice with for the Gamecocks, but giving up 600-plus yards of offense is generally not going to leave them in good shape.

9. Auburn (6-3, beat Texas A&M 28-24)

Well, it was an impressive comeback win, but it’s also pretty much the first time since Week 1 that Auburn has looked halfway like we expected before the season. It’s hard to imagine a sloppy first three quarters leaving them in any position to beat Georgia or Alabama.

8. Texas A&M (5-4, lost to Auburn 28-24)

On the other hand, Texas A&M spent most of this game looking like the better team (yardage advantage was 421-278), but found a way to turn this into a loss. It’s still a work in progress for Jimbo Fisher, but this is a game that he certainly won’t expect to lose beyond 2018.

7. Missouri (5-4, beat Florida 38-17)

It feels like Mizzou should move way up the rankings, but it’s hard to justify them above any of the teams ahead of them except Florida. They put together a complete game in this one, outgainining the Gators by 148 yards, going 11-for-18 on third down and holding the Gators to 3-for-15 on third-down conversions.

6. Florida (6-3, lost to Missouri 38-17)

Florida’s defense hasn’t found the consistency needed to be a better than a middle-of-the-pack SEC team. On a given day, sure, they can beat LSU. On another given day, they can lose by three scores to Missouri at home. Giving up 221 rushing yards to a team with Drew Lock at quarterback just doesn’t cut it.

5. Mississippi State (6-3, beat La. Tech 45-3)

The Bulldogs continued their offense resurgence, running and passing at will. Granted, it’ll be different next week at Tuscaloosa, but Mississippi State looks poised to otherwise finish the season strong and leave Joe Moorhead in a good spot moving forward.

4. Kentucky (7-2, lost to Georgia 34-17)

There are some big gaps in these rankings. Kentucky would have massive trouble with LSU, but at the same time, it’s hard to move the Wildcats down because they beat Mississippi State comfortably, won at Florida, won at Missouri, and beat South Carolina. For the only time this season, Kentucky looked truly outmatched, but they certainly match up better with their remaining opponents (Tennessee, Middle Tennessee and Louisville).

3. LSU (7-2, lost to Alabama 29-0)

So LSU lost to Alabama by 29, but beat Georgia by 20, which means Georgia will lose to Alabama by… No, it really doesn’t work that way. The Crimson Tide were we thought they were and LSU, confronted with a game that required a superhuman effort, instead looking pretty predictable and mediocre. But Alabama does that to plenty of teams.

2. Georgia (8-1, beat Kentucky 34-17)

The last two weeks reflect the fact that there’s a huge talent gap between Georgia and the rest of the SEC East. They’re not at Alabama’s level in terms of consistency, but in a perfect storm situation, they could beat the Tide. That doesn’t sound like much, but there aren’t a half-dozen teams in college football who can even say that.

1. Alabama (9-0, beat LSU 29-0)

This looked like the biggest challenge on Alabama’s schedule. Not so much. Can they really stroll through college football so easily that their inability to find a kicker will never matter? It’s starting to look that way.