After every weekend of games, you always hear about the performances of stars like Dak Prescott and Amari Cooper. But there are also the performances you don’t hear as much about, coming from some under-the-radar SEC players — the sleepers.

Who were the best of the Saturday Sleepers from Week 11? Take a look.

OTARO ALAKA

Alaka came out of nowhere to star for the Texas A&M defense in the Aggies stunning upset of the Auburn Tigers Saturday on the Plains. The freshman linebacker only recorded four tackles, but he added two forced fumbles, a tackle for loss, two quarterback hurries and a pass breakup in the victory. Alaka did a little bit of everything, and his two forced fumbles (part of three forced by A&M on the day, all recovered by the Aggies) helped A&M hold on to its lead as Auburn mounted a fourth quarter rally.

KYLE ALLEN

Understanding it’s impossible for an SEC quarterback to fly under the radar, Allen came out of nowhere to play the game of his life in just his second career start as a collegiate. After barely throwing for 100 yards at home against Louisiana-Monroe last week, Allen completed 19 of 29 passes for 277 yards and four touchdowns on the road against Auburn. He committed just one turnover all game, and A&M needed all 41 of its points on offense to hang on to a three-point victory. Kevin Sumlin made a bold move in changing quarterbacks mid-season, but Allen had his coach look like a genius in Saturday’s win.

LORENZO CARTER

Carter made himself at home in the Kentucky backfield as Georgia ripped the Wildcats apart in a 63-31 victory in Lexington.   The freshman linebacker hadn’t recorded more than three tackles in any game in his collegiate career, but he recorded nine in the Bulldogs’ victory Saturday. More impressive, he added 3.5 tackles for loss, 2.5 sacks and a quarterback hurry to his already impressive stat line, keeping Kentucky’s offense out of sync for most of the second half. The Cats were out-scored 28-7 in the second half, thanks in large part to the chaos Carter created on Georgia’s defense.

MARK DODSON/JORDAN WILKINS

Ole Miss may have faced an FCS opponent in Presbyterian on Saturday, but the Rebels posted their best rushing performance of the season without their top two tailbacks in I’Tavius Mathers and Jaylen Walton. Playing in their place, Dodson and Wilkins were electric in the Rebels’ victory, combining to rush for 299 yards and three touchdowns on just 13 carries. Dodson carried the ball three times for 128 yards and two touchdowns, and didn’t even play in the second half of the game. Wilkins ran 10 times for 171 yards and a touchdown, averaging better than 17 yards per carry in his own right. As a team, Ole Miss rushed for more than 400 yards, which is more yards than it had rushed for in its previous two games combined. The Rebels finally found production in the run game, and it came in the form of two unlikely backups 11 weeks into the season. Better late than never, right?

JARRAN REED

Reed, a junior defensive lineman for the Alabama Crimson Tide, had just 19 tackles in seven games entering Saturday’s showdown with LSU. However, he saved his best game of the year for Alabama’s most important contest thus far, recording 15 tackles and a tackle for loss in the Tide’s come-from-behind win over the Tigers in Death Valley. He helped limit a potent LSU rushing attack to just 3.3 yards per carry, and played a role in disturbing Tigers’ quarterback Anthony Jennings, who completed just 8 of 26 passes on the evening. Alabama kept its playoff hopes alive with the victory, and Reed definitely played a large role as a disruptive force in the trenches.