ESPN has been counting down the SEC’s most iconic plays from the past decade, and it recently released its top five.

It’s a worthy top five.

Let’s dive in:

5. 2007 — LSU FAKES FG, SCORES TD VS. AUBURN

LSU, down by one and well inside field goal range, opted to throw a pass. Matt Flynn found Demetrius Byrd in the corner of the end zone for a 22-yard touchdown pass with one second left for a thrilling 30-24 victory over Auburn.

“I got in the huddle and that was the play call, and I knew I just had to go out there and make a play on it,” Byrd said after the game.

Understated, but true.

4. 2012 — TIPPED PASS DENIES GEORGIA IN SEC TITLE GAME

Georgia trailed Alabama 32-28 in the 2012 SEC title game, and had the ball inside the Alabama 10-yard line with 15 seconds to go. Aaron Murray tried a fade pass to Malcolm Mitchell in the end zone, but the Tide’s C.J. Mosley tipped the pass, causing it to fall short of the end zone.

Chris Conley caught it, but was tackled in bounds, ending the game. Alabama went on to defeat Notre Dame in the BCS National Championship Game.

3. 2013 — PRAYER AT JORDAN-HARE

This play caused a bunch of guys who didn’t know each other at a wedding reception in Charleston to erupt in enough shouting to halt the music on the dance floor in the adjoining room.

It was that amazing.

On 4th-and-18 with 36 seconds left, Auburn trailed Georgia by a point. Nick Marshall tossed up a prayer down the middle of the field, looking for Ricardo Louis. Louis was well covered, and Georgia’s Josh Harvey-Clemons deflected the pass.

He probably wishes he had knocked it down. The ball found its way to Louis, who scampered in for the winning score. I may have had this one a tad higher, but oh well.

2. Jan. 1, 2013 — JADEVEON CLOWNEY USES HIT STICK

Jadeveon Clowney did a number of impressive things during his South Carolina career, but his obliteration of Michigan’s Vincent Smith in the Outback Bowl is what he’s best known for.

Smith said after the game that he had been hit harder, but I find that tough to believe.

1. 2013 — THE KICK SIX

Nick Saban sent out his kicker, Adam Griffith, for a 57-yard field goal try near the end of regulation. The last thing CBS analyst Gary Danielson said before the ball was kicked was, “remember, a blocked kick can go the other way.”

The same is true for kicks that fall short.

Auburn’s Chris Davis, hanging out under his own goal post, settled under the kick and caught it 9 yards deep in the end zone.

He started running, and didn’t stop until he had reached the opposite end zone, 109 yards later, for one of the most improbable and exciting endings in Iron Bowl lore.