Ranking Heisman Trophy winners is a little like judging the Miss America pageant. You can rank them any way you like, but they’re all drop-dead gorgeous.

That’s true of everyone that’s ever picked up a Heisman Trophy. You don’t win one of those by being merely good, you have to be one of the game’s greats.

There have been 14 players (if we count John David Crow from pre-SEC Texas A&M — and why wouldn’t we?) from SEC schools that have captured college football’s most coveted award.

They are:

1942 – Frank Sinkwich, Georgia
1957 – John David Crow, Texas A&M
1959 – Billy Cannon, LSU
1966 – Steve Spurrier, Florida
1971 – Pat Sullivan, Auburn
1980 – George Rogers, South Carolina
1982 – Herschel Walker, Georgia
1985 – Bo Jackson, Auburn
1996 – Danny Wuerffel, Florida
2007 – Tim Tebow, Florida
2009 – Mark Ingram, Alabama
2010 – Cam Newton, Auburn
2012 – Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M
2015 — Derrick Henry, Alabama

That means, in an effort to rank them 1-10, I’m guaranteed to leave out four outstanding players. And there’s no chance of ever reaching a consensus on a definitive top 10, is there?

Probably not. But while we’re waiting around for bowl games, let’s try it anyway:

10. Billy Cannon, LSU (1959): Cannon was the star of LSU’s 1958 national championship team, finishing third in the Heisman voting. He won it the following season with 598 rushing yards, 161 receiving yards and one amazing 89-yard punt return that beat Ole Miss 7-3 on Halloween night.

9. Frank Sinkwich, Georgia (1942): Sinkwich was the league’s first winner, and the native of Croatia was a dual-threat quarterback way before it became en vogue. He rushed for 828 yards and 17 touchdowns and passed for an SEC-record 1,456 yards and nine more scores for the 1942 Bulldogs, who capped off an 11-1 season with a Rose Bowl win over UCLA.

8. Steve Spurrier, Florida (1966): Before he became “The Head Ball Coach,” Spurrier was a pretty good quarterback. He passed for 2,012 yards and 16 TDs — numbers that ranked in the top 10 nationally — while leading the Gators to an 8-2 mark in 1966. He later coached another Heisman winner, Danny Wuerffel, in Florida’s 1996 national title season.

7. George Rogers, South Carolina (1980): The best player in Gamecocks history, Rogers capped off a stellar career with the Heisman in 1980. He led the nation with 1,781 yards and 14 TDs, powering South Carolina to an 8-3 record. He beat out a stacked field for the award, edging Pitt defensive end Hugh Green, Georgia’s Herschel Walker, Purdue’s Mark Herrmann and BYU’s Jim McMahon.

6. Bo Jackson, Auburn (1985): In addition to being a  favorite Tecmo Bowl player, Jackson won the award with a dominating season for Auburn in 1985. He rushed for 1,786 yards and 17 TDs to win the one of the closest Heisman races in history. Jackson earned 317 first-place votes and 1,509 total points in the voting, just beating out Iowa quarterback Chuck Long, who tallied 286 No. 1 votes and 1,464 points. He went on to become an all-pro in both football and baseball.

6. Danny Wuerffel, Florida (1996): The trigger man of Spurrier’s “Fun ‘N Gun” offense, Wuerffel piled up 3,625 passing yards and 39 TDs to lead the Gators to their first national championship. He had a strong case for the award in his junior year as well (3,266 yards and 35 TDs), when he was the SEC Player of the Year, Davey O’Brien Award winner and Sammy Baugh Trophy recipient.

5. Derrick Henry, Alabama (2015): Henry’s stats this season are already gaudy, and he has at least one game left to pad the numbers. He’s rushed for 1,986 yards and 23 TDs this season — and has gotten better down the stretch. In the last two games (against Auburn and Florida), he carried the football 90 times for 460 yards and two scores. If he adds 200 more yards, a few TDs and a national title to his resume, we may have to tear this list up and start over.

4. Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M (2012): Before he was “Johnny Football,” Manziel was a three-star recruit that redshirted in the 2011 season — Mike Sherman’s last in College Station. New coach Kevin Sumlin handed him the starting job and he ran with it. He racked up a league-record 5,116 total yards (3,706 passing and 1,410 rushing), tossed 26 TD passes and scored 21 more on the ground. With those numbers, he became the first freshman to win the award.

3. Herschel Walker, Georgia (1982): His 1982 season was outstanding, rushing for 1,752 yards and 16 TDs, but he probably could have won the award in all three of his Georgia seasons. He ran for 1,616 yards and 15 TDs as a freshman and 1,891 yards and 18 scores as a sophomore. He remains the only player to ever finish in the top three in the voting as a freshman, sophomore and junior.

2. Tim Tebow, Florida (2007): The polarizing Tebow was the first sophomore to win the award in 2007 with 3,286 yards and 32 TDs through the air while adding 895 yards and a SEC-record 23 TDs on the ground. He also helped the Gators win national titles as a freshman and as a junior. All told, he accounted for 12,233 yards and 142 TDs in his outstanding career.

1. Cam Newton, Auburn (2010): Newton took the long road to college football stardom, starting at Florida with a stop at Blinn College before winding up at Auburn. He played only one season on the Plains, but it was a good one. Newton passed for 2,854 yards and 30 TDs while rushing for a staggering 1,473 yards and 20 more TDs. He was the first SEC quarterback to top 2,000 yards passing and 1,000 yards rushing, and those numbers helped Auburn improve from 8-5 in 2009 to 14-0 — good for a BCS National Championship.