Nicknames often define games involving some of the greatest finishes in SEC history. Here are a few of our favorites:

7. ‘Punt Bama Punt’ Auburn 17, Alabama 16 — (Dec. 2, 1972): Second-ranked and unbeaten, the heavily-favored Crimson Tide built a 16-0 lead early in the fourth quarter at Legion Field before the Tigers mounted one of the most historic — and unique — comebacks in Iron Bowl history. After getting on the board with a field goal with less than 10 minutes to play, Auburn’s Bill Newton blocked punts on consecutive possessions that were both scooped up and returned for touchdowns by David Langner to give the Tigers a one-point advantage. After Langner sealed the win with an interception on Alabama’s final possession, the rumor is coach Ralph Jordan looked at his prized defender and said, “we wanted to make them punt.”

6. ‘The Immaculate Deflection’ Ole Miss 24, Mississippi State 23 (Nov. 19, 1983) — It’s one of the strangest plays you’ll ever see on film, Mother Nature backhanding a potential game-winning field goal out of the air to preserve a one-point victory for the Rebels. Mississippi State freshman kicker Artie Cosby gave his 26-yard boot plenty of leg, but the football hit a jetstream near its highest point and fell harmlessly to the turf, short of the crossbar. Wind gusts of 40 mph were reported that night.

5. ‘Hobnail Boot’ — Georgia 26, Tennessee 24 (Oct. 6, 2001): Made famous by Bulldogs play-by-play extraordinaire Larry Munson’s legendary call, Georgia’s upset of the sixth-ranked Vols seemed improbable after Tennessee seized a lead in the final minute on a 62-yard touchdown reception. David Greene, one of the top quarterbacks in Georgia history, led his team down the field and found Verron Haynes in the center of the end zone with six seconds remaining on a fullback leak play to win the game. Munson yelled into his on-air mic,”We just stepped on their face with a hobnail boot and broke their nose! We just crushed their face!”

4. ‘The Prayer at Jordan-Hare’ Auburn 43, Georgia 38 (Nov. 16, 2013) — One of the wackiest renditions of the Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry, Georgia stormed back from a 20-point deficit with 9:35 remaining in the fourth quarter before Auburn quarterback Nick Marshall completed one of the most incredible Hail Marys in SEC lore. Facing a 4th-and-18 from his own 26-yard line with 36 seconds left, Marshall launched a deep ball down the center of the field to Ricardo Louis, who caught a tipped ball off the fingers of a Georgia safety to record an improbable touchdown.

3. ‘Bluegrass Miracle’ LSU 33, Kentucky 30 (Nov. 10, 2002) — Often shown on loop on Fox Sports Net’s now defunct College Flash Classics, Kentucky coach Guy Morriss still has gotten over celebrating a bit too early during his team’s near upset of Nick Saban’s LSU Tigers at Commonwealth Stadium. After taking a 30-27 lead with 11 seconds left on a short field goal from Taylor Begley, Kentucky needed only a couple stops to preserve a dramatic win. Instead, the Tigers pulled one out of a magician’s hat with ‘Dash Right 93 Berlin’, a Hail Mary from quarterback Marcus Randall thrown in the direction of Devery Henderson. Randall’s heave from his own 18-yard line on the last play of the game was well short of the end zone, but Henderson somehow made the catch after a deflection among several Kentucky defenders and slipped through a tackle for the game-winning score. Wildcats fans, who thought the game was over, were left in complete shock at the massive pile of Tigers in the end zone. Dave Neal of Jefferson Pilot Sports couldn’t believe what he had just witnessed: “The most shocking, improbable, unbelievable sequence of events. LSU will go home with a victory.”

2. ‘Run, Lindsay, Run’ — Georgia 26, Florida 21 (Nov. 8, 1980): Lindsay Scott’s 93-yard catch-and-run in the final minute of 1980 Georgia-Florida game turned the World’s Greatest Cocktail Party up a notch when he saved the second-ranked Bulldogs’ unbeaten season. Trailing by a point in the shadow of his own end zone, Georgia quarterback Buck Belue avoided pressure and rolled out to find Lindsay in the middle of the field near the 25-yard line. Lindsay did the rest, sprinting his way past Florida’s secondary for one of the most impressive touchdowns in SEC history. Munson literally broke his chair from the excitement as he willed Lindsay the final 20 yards from the announcer’s booth. Georgia would go on to win the consensus national championship that season.

1. ‘Kick Six’ — Auburn 34, Alabama 28 (Nov. 30, 2013): Unbeaten, ranked No. 1 and protecting back-to-back national championships, Alabama found an unimaginable way to lose to Auburn at Jordan-Hare Stadium in the regular-season finale. Trailing by a touchdown with 38 seconds to play, the Tigers knotted the score at 28 on Sammie Coates’ 39-yard reception before one of the greatest plays in college football history happened a few snaps later. Lining up for the potential game-winning kick from 57 yards out, Alabama’s Adam Griffith launched one to the back of the end zone that fell short of the goal posts and into the hands of Auburn’s Chris Davis. The rest, as they say, was ‘THERE GOES DAVIS!?’ history. Davis darted his way through traffic, found the sideline and raced 109 yards for the game-winning touchdown as time expired to send the home crowd and the college football world into a frenzy.