This was a particularly violent week of SEC football, with three player ejections for targeting in six Saturday games.

In addition, there were several plays of the was-he-out-of-bounds or did-the-ball-touch variety. A few of those led to outcomes long since forgotten by the time the games ended, but still made a major impact on the flow of the game.

Here are the most questionable calls and ejections of Week 7 in the SEC.

LEONARD FOURNETTE FUMBLED CAN’T FUMBLE

LSU earned a hard-fought 35-28 victory against previously-unbeaten Florida on Saturday night. But the Tigers nearly got into some trouble in the first quarter.

Already trailing 7-0, Leonard Fournette approached a primed Vernon Hargreaves III with two hands on the football. Hargreaves still managed a textbook strip. Defensive lineman Bryan Cox Jr. snatched the ball off the ground an instant before it touched the white paint marking the sideline.

But the officials ruled him out of bounds, and even a replay review wasn’t enough to overturn the ball. Perhaps a slight bobble after Cox Jr. barrel-rolled indicated that he didn’t have possession before tumbling out of bounds. But Florida fans have a right to be at least a little upset about this call that did not go the way of the Gators.

Instead of holding the ball near the 30-yard line in prime position to seize a 14-0 road lead, Florida eventually fell behind 21-7 and couldn’t pull off the upset.

EJECTED, PART I

South Carolina outside linebacker T.J. Holloman jolted Vanderbilt receiver Kris Kentera during the second quarter of the Gamecocks’ 19-10 win.

As the announcers noted, this was a textbook targeting call. Holloman already was jogging to the locker room by the time the officials reviewed the play and confirmed the call. Holloman led with the crown of his helmet and delivered a dangerous blow to Kentera’s temple.

EJECTED, PART II

Alabama linebacker Shaun Dion Hamilton acted as the business end of a Tide sandwich of Texas A&M defensive back Sam Moeller, whose head and torso got jostled between to players while trying to cover a return.

Hamilton got ejected, but because the play happened in the second quarter, will be eligible to play in next week’s first half against Tennessee.

EJECTED, PART III

Georgia’s Dominick Sanders got ejected on yet another easy targeting call. Leading with his shoulder, he came in too high while attempting to break up a pass and careened into Emanuel Hall’s head.

Unfortunately for the Bulldogs, Sanders got ousted in the third quarter, meaning UGA will be missing a starting defensive back for a pivotal Halloween game against Florida that could decide the SEC East.

MEMPHIS GROUNDSKEEPER FAILED TO CUT ONE BLADE OF GRASS?

Memphis beat Ole Miss, 37-24, in an upset that reverberated around college football on Saturday afternoon. Early in the game, trailing 14-0, Tigers quarterback Paxton Lynch completed a 1-yard touchdown pass to Alan Cross.

Upon review, though, it looked as if Cross may not have dragged a toe across a blade of grass in the end zone before his momentum carried him out of bounds. The replay is too close for me to make a definitive judgment.

There were plenty of big plays that turned the outcome of this game, and the Rebels offensive line and injuries on defense account for a chunk of the result. But if the team had held Memphis to a field goal here, perhaps Ole Miss would’ve retained control into halftime and beyond.

CLOTHESLINED, SORT OF

Alabama quarterback Jake Coker is one tough hombre. He proved that against Texas A&M, both by lowering his shoulder and delivering a blow to safety Justin Evans in the red zone and by absorbing tackles like the one featured here.

Defensive back Brandon Williams corralled Coker by the neck or throat on this particular tackle. It looked violent in the short sequence of frames the broadcast provided via replay.

I’m not sure if Williams should’ve incurred a penalty on this tackle, but Alabama must feel glad that Coker didn’t get hurt.

K.O. BARELY AVOIDED

Missouri led, 6-3, in the third quarter as the Tigers got set to field a Georgia punt. It appeared that the ball clipped a Mizzou player, or at least came within centimeters of doing so, and the Bulldogs pounced on the football.

The replay — courtesy of an extra zoom by the SEC Network telecast — appeared to show the ball changing directions slightly upon passing a Mizzou foot. But the officials claimed not enough evidence, and Missouri avoided a change of possession in field goal range of one of the tightest defensive struggles of the year.

UGA didn’t get the chance at a knockout blow in the form of a 25-yard touchdown drive, but eventually won, 9-6, on a short field goal.