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Sec Football 2014

Sec Football 2014

SEC FOOTBALL 2014

2014-15 Post-Season Bowl Games Chuck Dunlap (Primary SEC Football Contact) • [email protected] • @SEC_Chuck Communications Office Sean Cartell (Secondary Football Contact) • [email protected] • @SEC_Sean SECsports.com • CollegePressBox.com Phone: (205) 458-3000 • Fax: (205) 458-3030 EASTERN DIVISION

SEC Pct. PF PA Overall Pct. PF PA Home Away Neutral vs. Div. Top 10 Top 25 Streak #Missouri 7-1 .875 191 153 10-3 .769 356 278 5-2 5-0 0-1 5-1 0-1 2-2 L1 Georgia 6-2 .750 310 195 9-3 .750 500 255 6-1 3-1 0-1 4-2 1-0 3-2 L1 4-4 .500 199 206 6-5 .545 335 233 3-3 2-2 1-0 4-2 1-2 1-2 L1 Tennessee 3-5 .375 204 217 6-6 .500 331 287 4-3 2-3 0-0 3-3 0-4 0-4 W1 South Carolina 3-5 .375 272 294 6-6 .500 400 374 4-3 2-3 0-0 3-3 1-1 1-3 L2 Kentucky 2-6 .250 183 300 5-7 .417 350 375 5-2 0-5 0-0 2-4 0-1 0-3 L6 Vanderbilt 0-8 .000 102 283 3-9 .250 206 399 3-5 0-4 0-0 0-6 0-1 0-4 L3 WESTERN DIVISION

SEC Pct. PF PA Overall Pct. PF PA Home Away Neutral vs. Div. Top 10 Top 25 Streak %Alabama 7-1 .875 266 154 12-1 .923 482 216 7-0 3-1 2-0 5-1 1-0 5-1 W8 State 6-2 .750 270 180 10-2 .833 446 233 7-0 3-2 0-0 4-2 3-1 3-2 L1 Ole Miss 5-3 .625 202 135 9-3 .750 365 166 6-1 2-2 1-0 3-3 2-1 3-2 W1 Auburn 4-4 .500 275 262 8-4 .667 430 313 6-1 2-3 0-0 3-3 1-2 3-3 L1 LSU 4-4 .500 153 166 8-4 .667 331 197 5-2 2-2 1-0 2-4 1-2 2-2 W1 A&M 3-5 .375 223 293 7-5 .583 413 328 3-3 3-2 1-0 2-4 2-2 2-3 L2 2-6 .250 165 177 6-6 .500 384 243 5-2 1-3 0-1 2-4 1-5 2-6 L1 # - SEC Eastern Division Champion; % - SEC Champion NOTES: vs. Top 10 and Top 25 - Record vs. teams in Top 10 and Top 25 (AP, Coaches) when game was played; Teams listed in alphabetical order unless tie-breaker applicable RECORD 12 TEAMS FROM SEC ADVANCE TO BOWLS Date/Time (ET) Stadium/Site *Matchup Network Duck Commander Dec. 27 / 3:30 p.m. Independence Stadium (49,565) / Shreveport, La. South Carolina (6-6) vs. Miami (6-6) ABC Series History: Miami leads, 8-5-2 • Last Meeting: Miami, 20-16 (1987 at ) SiriusXM: N/A Autozone Dec. 29 / 2 p.m. Liberty Bowl Memorial (62,506) / Memphis, Tenn. Texas A&M (7-5) vs. West Virginia (7-5) ESPN Series History: First Meeting SiriusXM: 83 AdvoCare V100 Texas Bowl Dec. 29 / 9 p.m. NRG Stadium (71,054) / Houston, Texas Arkansas (6-6) vs. Texas (6-6) ESPN Series History: Texas leads, 56-21 • Last Meeting: Texas, 52-10 (2008 at Austin) SiriusXM: 83 Franklin American Mortgage Dec. 30 / 3 p.m. LP Field (69,143) / Nashville, Tenn. LSU (8-4) vs. Notre Dame (7-5) ESPN Series History: Tied 5-5 • Last Meeting: LSU, 41-14 (2007 ) SiriusXM: 83 Belk Bowl Dec. 30 / 6:30 p.m. Bank of America Stadium (74,455) / Charlotte, N.C. #13 Georgia (9-3) vs. #21 Louisville (9-3) ESPN Series History: First Meeting SiriusXM: 83 Chick-fil-A Dec. 31 / 12:30 p.m. Georgia Dome (71,228) / Atlanta, Ga. #9 Ole Miss (9-3) vs. #6 TCU (11-1) ESPN Series History: Ole Miss leads, 5-1 • Last Meeting: Ole Miss, 20-7 (1983 at Fort Worth) SiriusXM: 83 Capital One Orange Bowl Dec. 31 / 8 p.m. Sun Life Stadium (76,100) / Miami Gardens, Fla. #7 Mississippi State (10-2) vs. #12 (10-3) ESPN Series History: Georgia Tech leads, 4-0 • Last Meeting: Georgia Tech, 42-31 (2009 at Starkville) SiriusXM: 83 Jan. 1 / Noon (65,657) / Tampa, Fla. #19 Auburn (8-4) vs. #18 Wisconsin (10-3) ESPN2 Series History: Tied, 1-1-1 • Last Meeting: Wisconsin, 24-10 (2006 Capital One Bowl) SiriusXM: 91 Buffalo Wild Wings Jan. 1 / 1 p.m. Florida Citrus Bowl (70,000) / Orlando, Fla. #16 Missouri (10-3) vs. #25 Minnesota (8-4) ABC Series History: Missouri leads, 4-3-1 • Last Meeting: Missouri, 34-12 (1970 at Columbia) SiriusXM: 84 Allstate Sugar Bowl Jan. 1 / 8:30 p.m. Mercedes-Benz Superdome (74,000) / , La. #1 Alabama (12-1) vs. #4 Ohio State (12-1) ESPN Series History: Alabama leads, 3-0 • Last Meeting: Alabama, 24-17 (1995 Citrus Bowl) SiriusXM: 83 TaxSlayer Bowl Jan. 2 / 3:20 p.m. Everbank Field (77,511) / Jacksonville, Fla. Tennessee (6-6) vs. Iowa (7-5) ESPN Series History: Tied, 1-1 • Last Meeting: Tennessee, 23-22 (1987 at East Rutherford Kickoff Classic) SiriusXM: 83 Jan. 3 / Noon Legion Field (71,594) / Birmingham, Ala. Florida (6-5) vs. East Carolina (8-4) ESPN Series History: Florida, 1-0 • Last Meeting: Florida, 24-17 (1983 at Gainesville) SiriusXM: 83 * - CFP Poll Final Rank (Final Poll - Dec. 7, 2014)

SECSports.com • CollegePressBox.com • SECSportsMedia.com • @SEC SEC Fan Page on Facebook 2014 SEC Football SEC Postseason Bowl Games

2014 SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE TEAM SCHEDULES AND RESULTS ALABAMA CRIMSON TIDE (12-1, 7-1 SEC) GEORGIA BULLDOGS (9-3, 6-2 SEC) Home Stadium: Bryant-Denny Stadium (101,821) Home Stadium: Sanford Stadium (92,746)

Aug. 30 [2/2] vs. West Virginia (Atlanta, Ga.) [TV: 3-6-7] 70,502 W, 33-23 Aug. 30 [12/12] CLEMSON [TV: 2-6] (16/16) 92,746 W, 45-21 Sept. 6 [2/2] FLORIDA ATLANTIC [TV: 5-6] 100,306 W, 41-0 Sept. 13 [6/6] at South Carolina* [TV: 1] (24/23) 84,232 L, 35-38 Sept. 13 [3/2] SOUTHERN MISS [TV: 3-6] 101,821 W, 52-12 Sept. 20 [13/14] TROY [TV: 5-6] 92,746 W, 66-0 Sept. 20 [3/2] FLORIDA* [TV: 1] (rv/rv) 101,821 W, 42-21 Sept. 27 [12/13] TENNESSEE* [TV: 2-6] 92,746 W, 35-32 Oct. 4 [3/1] at Ole Miss* [TV: 1] (11/11) 61,826 L, 17-23 Oct. 4 [13/12] VANDERBILT* [TV: 5-6] 92,746 W, 44-17 Oct. 11 [7/7] at Arkansas* [TV: 2-6] (rv/rv) 72,337 W, 14-13 Oct. 11 [13/10] at Missouri* [TV: 1] (23/24) 71,168 W, 34-0 Oct. 18 [7/7] TEXAS A&M* [TV: 1] (21/21) 101,821 W, 59-0 Oct. 18 [10/10] at Arkansas* [TV: 5-6] (rv/--) 54,959 W, 45-32 Oct. 25 [4/4] at Tennessee* [TV: 3-6] 102,455 W, 34-20 Nov. 1 [9/8] vs. Florida* [TV: 1] 83,004 L, 20-38 Nov. 8 [4/4] at LSU* [TV: 1](14/15) 102,321 W, 20-13 OT Nov. 8 [17/17] at Kentucky* [TV: 2-6] 60,152 W, 63-31 Nov. 15 [4/3] MISSISSIPPI STATE* [TV: 1] (1/1) 101,821 W, 25-20 Nov. 15 [16/14] AUBURN* [TV: 2-6] (9/9) 92,746 W, 34-7 Nov. 22 [2/2] WESTERN CAROLINA [TV: 5-6] 101,325 W, 48-14 Nov. 22 [9/10] CHARLESTON SOUTHERN [TV: 5-6] 92,746 W, 55-9 Nov. 29 [2/1] Auburn* [TV: 2-6] (15/16) 101,821 W, 55-44 Nov. 29 [8/9] GEORGIA TECH [TV: 5-6] (16/15) 92,746 L, 24-30 OT Dec. 6 [1/1] vs. Missouri [TV: 1] (14/13) 73,526 W, 42-13 Dec. 30 [13/13] vs. Louisville [TV: 2-6] (20/20) 6:30 p.m. First Meeting Jan. 1 [1/1] vs. Ohio State [TV: 2-6] (5/4) 7:30 p.m. CT UA leads, 3-0 Belk Bowl; Charlotte, N.C. Allstate Sugar Bowl; New Orleans, La. KENTUCKY WILDCATS (5-7, 2-6 SEC) (6-6, 2-6 SEC) Home Stadium: Commonwealth Stadium (62,093) Home Stadium(s): Reynolds Razorback (72,000); War Memorial (54,120) Aug. 30 UT MARTIN [TV: 5-6] 50,398 W, 59-14 Aug. 30 [--/rv] at Auburn* [TV: 5-6] (6/5) 87,451 L, 21-45 Sept. 6 OHIO [TV: 4-6] 51,910 W, 20-3 Sept. 6 NICHOLLS [TV: 5-6] 63,109 W, 73-7 Sept. 13 at Florida* [TV: 5-6] (rv/rv) 88,334 L, 30-36 [3 OT] Sept. 13 at Texas Tech [TV: 6-7] 60,277 W, 49-28 Sept. 27 VANDERBILT* [TV: 5-6] 56,940 W, 17-7 Sept. 20 [rv/rv] NORTHERN ILLINOIS [TV: 4-6] 67,204 W, 52-14 Oct. 4 SOUTH CAROLINA* [TV: 5-6] (rv/rv) 62,135 W, 45-38 Sept. 27 [rv/rv] vs. Texas A&M* [TV: 1] (6/7) 68,113 L, 28-35 OT Oct. 11 [rv/rv] LA MONROE [TV: 5-6] 56,676 W, 48-14 Oct. 11 [rv/rv] ALABAMA* [TV: 2-6] (7/7) 72,337 L, 13-14 Oct. 18 [rv/rv] at LSU* [TV: 5-6] (rv/rv) 101,581 L, 3-41 Oct. 18 [rv/--] GEORGIA* (Little Rock) [TV: 5-6] (10/10) 54,959 L, 32-45 Oct. 25 MISSISSIPPI STATE* [TV:1] (1/1) 64,791 L, 31-45 Oct. 25 UAB [TV: 5-6] 61,800 W, 45-17 Nov. 1 at Missouri* [TV: 5-6] (rv/rv) 62,004 L, 10-20 Nov. 1 at Miss. State* [TV: 3-6] (1/1) 63,207 L, 10-17 Nov. 8 GEORGIA* [TV: 5-6] (17/17) 60,152 L, 31-63 Nov. 15 LSU* [TV: 3-6] (20/20) 70,165 W, 17-0 Nov. 15 at Tennessee* [TV: 5-6] 102,455 L, 16-50 Nov. 22 [rv/rv] OLE MISS* [TV: 1] (8/8) 64,510 W, 30-0 Nov. 29 at Louisville [TV: 3-6] (24/23) 55,118 L, 40-44 Nov. 28 [rv/rv] at Missouri* [TV:1] (17/17) 71,168 L, 14-21 Dec. 29 vs. Texas [TV: 2-6] 8 p.m. CT UT leads, 56-21 LSU TIGERS (8-4, 4-4 SEC) Texas Bowl; Houston, Texas Home Stadium: Tiger Stadium (102,321)

AUBURN TIGERS (8-4, 4-4 SEC) Aug. 30 [13/13] vs. Wisconsin [TV: 2-6] (14/14) 71,599 W, 28-24 Home Stadium: Jordan-Hare (87,451) Sept. 6 [12/12] SAM HOUSTON STATE [TV: 5-6] 100,338 W, 56-0 Sept. 13 [10/9] -MONROE [TV: 4-6] 101,194 W, 31-0 Aug. 30 [6/5] ARKANSAS* [TV: 5-6] (--/rv) 87,451 W, 45-21 Sept. 20 [8/8] MISSISSIPPI STATE* [TV: 2-6] (rv/rv) 102,321 L, 29-34 Sept. 6 [5/5] SAN JOSE STATE [TV: 3-6] 87,451 W, 59-13 Sept. 27 [17/18] NEW MEXICO STATE [TV: 5-6] 101,987 W, 63-7 Sept. 18 [5/5] at Kansas State [TV: 2-6] (20/20) 53,046 W, 20-14 Oct. 4 [15/15] at Auburn* [TV: 2-6] (5/5) 87,451 L, 7-41 Sept. 27 [5/5] LOUISIANA TECH [TV: 5-6] 87,451 W, 45-17 Oct. 11 [rv/rv] at Florida* [TV:5-6] 88,014 W, 30-27 Oct. 4 [5/5] LSU* [TV: 2-6] (15/15) 87,451 W, 41-7 Oct. 18 [rv/rv] KENTUCKY* [TV: 5-6] (rv/rv) 101,581 W, 41-3 Oct. 11 [2/2] at Mississippi State* [TV: 1] (3/6) 62,945 L, 23-38 Oct. 25 [24/23] OLE MISS* [TV: 2-6] (3/3) 102,321 W, 10-7 Oct. 25 [5/6] SOUTH CAROLINA* [TV: 5-6] 87,451 W, 42-35 Nov. 8 [14/15] ALABAMA* [TV: 1] (4/4) 102,321 L, 13-20 OT Nov. 1 [4/4] at Ole Miss* [TV: 2-6] (7/9) 62,090 W, 35-31 Nov. 15 [20/20] at Arkansas* [TV: 3-6] 70,165 L, 0-17 Nov. 8 [3/3] TEXAS A&M* [TV: 1] (rv/--) 87,451 L, 38-41 Nov. 27 [rv/rv] at Texas A&M* [TV: 2-6] (rv/rv) 105,829 W, 23-17 Nov. 15 [9/9] at Georgia* [TV: 2-6] (16/14) 92,746 L, 7-34 Dec. 30 [22/23] Notre Dame [TV: 2-6] 2 p.m. CT Tied, 5-5 Nov. 22 [16/17] SAMFORD [TV: 4-6] 87,451 W, 31-7 Music City Bowl; Nashville, Tenn. Nov. 29 [15/16] at Alabama* [TV: 2-6] (2/1] 101, 821 L, 44-55 Jan. 1 [19/19] vs. Wisconsin [TV: 3-6] (17/17) 11 a.m. CT Tied, 1-1-1 OLE MISS REBELS (9-3, 5-3 SEC) Outback Bowl; Tampa, Fla. Home Stadium: Vaught-Hemingway Stadium (60,580)

FLORIDA GATORS (6-5, 4-4 SEC) Aug. 28 [18/19] vs. Boise State (Atlanta, Ga.) [TV: 2-6] (rv/rv) 32,823 W, 35-13 Home Stadium: Ben Hill Griffin Stadium at Florida Field (88,548) Sept. 6 [15/17] at Vanderbilt* [TV: 2-6] 43, 260 W, 41-3 Sept. 13 [14/15] LOUISIANA-LAFAYETTE [TV: 5-6] 60,937 W, 56-15 Aug. 30 [rv/rv] IDAHO [TV: 4-6] No Contest Sept. 27 [10/11] MEMPHIS [TV: 8-6] 61,291 W, 24-3 Sept. 6 [rv/rv] EASTERN MICHIGAN [TV: 5-6] 81,049 W, 65-0 Oct. 4 [11/11] ALABAMA* [TV: 1] (3/1) 61,826 W, 23-17 Sept. 13 [rv/rv] KENTUCKY* [TV: 5-6] 88,334 W, 36-30 [3 OT] Oct. 11 [3/4] at Texas A&M* [TV: 2-6] (14/14) 110,633 W, 35-20 Sept. 20 [rv/rv] at Alabama* [TV: 1] (3/2) 101,821 L, 21-42 Oct. 18 [3/3] TENNESSEE* [HC] [TV: 2-6] 62,081 W, 34-3 Oct. 4 at Tennessee* [TV: 5-6] 102,455 W, 10-9 Oct. 25 [3/3] at LSU* [TV: 2-6] (24/23) 102,321 L, 7-10 Oct. 11 LSU* [TV: 5-6] (rv/rv) 88,014 L, 27-30 Nov. 1 [7/9] AUBURN* [TV: 2-6] (4/4) 62,090 L, 31-35 Oct. 18 MISSOURI* (Homecoming) [TV: 3-6](--/rv) 89,117 L, 13-42 Nov. 8 [12/13] PRESBYTERIAN [TV: 5-6] 60,546 W, 48-0 Nov. 1 at Georgia* [TV: 1] (9/8) 83,004 W, 38-20 Nov. 22 [8/8] at Arkansas* [TV: 1] (rv/rv) 64,510 L, 0-30 Nov. 8 [rv/--] at Vanderbilt* [TV: 5-6] 35,191 W, 34-10 Nov. 29 [18/19] MISSISSIPPI STATE* [TV: 1] (4/4) 62,058 W, 31-17 Nov. 15 [--/rv] SOUTH CAROLINA * [TV: 5-6] 85,088 L, 20-23 OT Dec. 31 [9/12] TCU [TV: 2-6] (6/6) 11:30 a.m. CT UM, 5-1 Nov. 22 EASTERN KENTUCKY [TV: 5-6] 83,399 W, 52-3 Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl; Atlanta, Ga. Nov. 29 at Florida State [TV: 2-6] (1/2) 82,885 L, 19-24 Jan. 3 vs. East Carolina [TV: 2-6] Noon ET UF, 1-0 Birmingham Bowl; Birmingham, Ala. 2014 SEC Football SEC Postseason Bowl Games

2014 SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE TEAM SCHEDULES AND RESULTS MISSISSIPPI STATE BULLDOGS (10-2, 6-2 SEC) TENNESSEE VOLUNTEERS (6-6, 3-5 SEC) Home Stadium: Davis Wade Stadium at Scott Field (61,337) Home Stadium: Neyland Stadium (102,455)

Aug. 30 [rv/rv] SOUTHERN MISS [TV: 5-6] 61,889 W, 49-0 Aug. 31 UTAH STATE [TV: 5-6] 102,455 W, 38-7 Sept. 6 [rv/rv] UAB [TV: 8] 57,704 W, 47-34 Sept. 6 [rv/--] ARKANSAS STATE [TV: 5-6] 99,538 W, 34-19 Sept. 13 [rv/rv] at South Alabama [TV: 9-6] 38,129 W, 35-3 Sept. 13 [rv/rv] at Oklahoma [TV: 6-7] (4/3) 85,622 L, 10-34 Sept. 20 [rv/rv] at LSU* [TV: 2-6] (8/8) 102,321 W, 34-29 Sept. 27 at Georgia* [TV: 2-6] (12/13) 92,746 L, 32-35 Oct. 4 [12/14] TEXAS A&M* [TV: 2-6] (6/7) 61,113 W, 48-31 Oct. 4 FLORIDA* [TV: 5-6] 102,455 L, 9-10 Oct. 11 [3/6] AUBURN* [TV: 1] (2/2) 62,945 W, 38-23 Oct. 11 CHATTANOOGA [TV: 5-6] 93,097 W, 45-10 Oct. 25 [1/1] at Kentucky* [TV: 1] 64,791 W, 45-31 Oct. 18 at Ole Miss* [TV: 2-6 ] (3/3) 62,081 L, 3-34 Nov. 1 [1/1] ARKANSAS* [TV: 3-6] 63,207 W, 17-10 Oct. 25 ALABAMA* [TV: 3-6] (4/4) 102,455 L, 20-34 Nov. 8 [1/1] TENNESSEE-MARTIN [TV: 5-6] 61,421 W, 45-16 Nov. 1 at South Carolina* [TV: 5-6] 81,891 W, 45-42 OT Nov. 15 [1/1] at Alabama* [TV: 1] (4/3) 101,821 L, 20-25 Nov. 15 KENTUCKY* [TV: 5-6] 102,455 W, 50-16 Nov. 22 [4/4] VANDERBILT* [TV: 5-6] 60,493 W, 51-0 Nov. 22 MISSOURI* [TV: 2-6] (19/20) 95,821 L, 21-29 Nov. 29 [4/4] at Ole Miss* [TV: 1] (18/19) 62,058 L, 17-31 Nov. 29 at Vanderbilt* [TV: 5-6] 40,350 W, 24-17 Dec. 31 [8/8] vs. Georgia Tech [TV: 2-6] 7 p.m. CT GT, 4-0 Jan. 2 vs. Iowa [TV: 2-6] 3:20 p.m. ET Tied, 1-1 Orange Bowl; Miami Gardens, Fla. TaxSlayer Bowl; Jacksonville, Fla.

MISSOURI TIGERS (10-3, 7-1 SEC) TEXAS A&M AGGIES (7-5, 3-5 SEC) Home Stadium(s): Memorial Stadium - Faurot Field (72,000) Home Stadium: Kyle Field (106,000)

Aug. 30 [24/rv] SOUTH DAKOTA STATE [TV: 4-6] 60,589 W, 38-18 Aug. 28 [21/20] at South Carolina*[TV: 5-6] (9/9) 82,847 W, 52-28 Sept. 6 [24/22] at Toledo [TV: 2-6] 24,196 W, 49-34 Sept. 6 [9/13] LAMAR [TV: 5-6] 104,728 W, 73-3 Sept. 13 [20/22] CENTRAL FLORIDA [TV: 5-6] 60,348 W, 30-10 Sept. 13 [7/8] RICE [TV: 3-6] 103,867 W, 38-10 Sept. 20 [18/19] INDIANA [TV: 5-6] 66,455 L, 27-31 Sept. 20 [6/7] at SMU [TV: 3-6-7] 34,820 W, 58-6 Sept. 27 [rv/rv] at South Carolina* [TV: 2-6] (13/15) 83,493 W, 21-20 Sept. 27 [6/7] vs. Arkansas* [TV: 1] (rv/rv) 68,113 W, 35-28 OT Oct. 11 [23/24] GEORGIA* [TV: 1] (13/10) 71,168 L, 0-34 Oct. 4 [6/7] at Mississippi State* [TV: 2-6] (12/14) 61,113 L, 31-48 Oct. 18 [--/rv] at Florida* [TV: 3-6] 89,117 W, 42-13 Oct. 11 [14/14] OLE MISS* [TV: 2-6] (3/4) 110,633 L, 20-35 Oct. 25 [rv/rv] VANDERBILT* (HC) [TV: 5-6] 65,264 W, 24-14 Oct. 18 [21/21] at Alabama* [TV: 1] (7/7) 101, 821 L, 0-59 Nov. 1 [rv/rv] KENTUCKY* [TV: 5-6] 62,004 W, 20-10 Nov. 1 [--/rv] LOUISIANA MONROE[TV: 5-6] 100,922 W, 21-16 Nov. 15 [rv/rv] at Texas A&M* [TV: 5-6] (rv/rv) 104,756 W, 34-27 Nov. 8 [rv/--] at Auburn* [TV: 1] (3/3) 87,451 W, 41-38 Nov. 22 [19/20] at Tennessee* [TV: 2-6] 95,821 W, 29-21 Nov. 15 [rv/rv] MISSOURI* [TV: 5-6] (rv/rv) 104,756 L, 27-34 Nov. 28 [17/17] ARKANSAS* [TV:1] (rv/rv) 71,168 W, 21-14 Nov. 27 [rv/rv] LSU* [TV: 2-6] (rv/rv) 105,829 L, 17-23 Dec. 6 [14/13] vs. Alabama [TV: 1] (1/1) 73,526 L, 13-42 Dec. 29 vs. West Virginia [TV: 2-6] 1 p.m. CT First Meeting Jan. 1 [16/14] vs. Minnesota [TV: 7-6] (rv/rv) Noon CT MIZ, 4-3-1 Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl; Orlando, Fla. VANDERBILT COMMODORES (3-8, 0-8 SEC) Home Stadium: Vanderbilt Stadium (40,350) SOUTH CAROLINA GAMECOCKS (6-6, 3-5 SEC) Home Stadium: Williams-Brice Stadium (80,250) Aug. 28 [rv/--] TEMPLE [TV: 5-6] 31,731 L, 7-37 Sept. 6 OLE MISS* [TV: 2-6](15/17) 43,260 L, 3-41 Aug. 28 [9/9] TEXAS A&M [TV: 5-6] (21/20) 82,847 L, 28-52 Sept. 13 UMASS [TV: 8] 33,386 W, 34-31 Sept. 6 [21/21] EAST CAROLINA [TV: 4-6] 80,899 W, 33-23 Sept. 20 SOUTH CAROLINA* [TV: 5-6] (14/16) 34,441 L, 34-48 Sept. 13 [24/23] GEORGIA* [TV: 1] (6/6) 84,232 W, 38-35 Sept. 27 at Kentucky* [TV: 5-6] 56,940 L, 7-17 Sept. 20 [14/16] at Vanderbilt* [TV: 5-6] 34,441 W, 48-34 Oct. 4 at Georgia* [TV: 5-6] (13/12) 92,746 L, 17-44 Sept. 27 [13/15] MISSOURI* [TV: 2-6] (rv/rv) 83,493 L, 20-21 Oct. 11 CHARLESTON SOUTHERN [TV: 8-6] 26,738 W, 21-20 Oct. 4 [rv/rv] at Kentucky* [TV: 5-6] 62,135 L, 38-45 Oct. 25 at Missouri* [TV: 5-6] (rv/rv) 65,264 L, 14-24 Oct. 18 [rv/--] FURMAN [TV: 5-6] 78,101 W, 41-10 Nov. 1 OLD DOMINION [TV: 4-6] 28,966 W, 42-28 Oct. 25 at Auburn* [TV: 5-6] (5/6) 87,451 L, 35-42 Nov. 8 FLORIDA* [TV: 5-6] (rv/--) 35,191 L, 10-34 Nov. 1 TENNESSEE* [TV: 5-6] 81,891 L, 42-45 OT Nov. 22 at Mississippi State* [TV: 5-6] (4/4) 60,493 L, 0-51 Nov. 15 at Florida* [TV: 5-6] (--/rv) 85,088 W, 23-20 OT Nov. 29 TENNESSEE* [TV: 5-6] 40,350 L, 17-24 Nov. 22 SOUTH ALABAMA [TV: 8-6] 78,201 W, 37-12 Nov. 29 at Clemson [TV: 2-6] (23/24) 82,720 L, 17-35 Dec. 27 vs. Miami [TV: 7-6] 3:30 p.m. ET UM, 8-5-2 Independence Bowl; Shreveport, La.

Team’s AP & Coaches’ Poll Rankings Listed Before Opponent’s Name & Opponents’ Rankings Listed after its Name (at time of game) December 6 • SEC Football Championship Game • Atlanta • Georgia Dome • 4 p.m. ET • CBS Sports TV Key - (1) CBS; (2) ESPN; (3) ESPN2; (4) ESPNU; (5) SEC Network; (6) WatchESPN; (7) ABC; (8) FS South, Southwest and SUN Sports; (9) ESPNews * - SEC Game 2014 SEC Football SEC Postseason Bowl Games

2014 SEC WEEK-BY-WEEK SCHEDULES AND RESULTS Aug. 28 *Kentucky 45, South Carolina 38 [TV: 5-6] (62,135) Nov. 29 *Texas A&M 52, South Carolina 28 [TV: 5-6] (82,847) *Mississippi State 48, Texas A&M 31 [TV: 2-6] (61,113) *Alabama 55, Auburn 44[TV: 2-6] (101,821) Temple 37, Vanderbilt 7 [TV: 5-6] (31,731) *Ole Miss 31, Mississippi State 17 [TV: 1] (62,058) Ole Miss 35, Boise State 13 (Atlanta) [TV: 2-6] (32,823) Oct. 11 *Tennessee 24, Vanderbilt 17 [TV: 5-6] (40,350) *Alabama 14, Arkansas 13 [TV: 2-6] (72,337) Florida State 24, Florida 19 [TV: 2-6] (82,485) Aug. 30 *Mississippi State 38, Auburn 23 [TV: 1] (62,945) Georgia Tech 30, Georgia 24 OT [TV: 5-6] (92,746) *Auburn 45, Arkansas 21 [TV: 5-6] (87,451) *LSU 30, Florida 27 [TV: 5-6] (88,014) Louisville 44, Kentucky 40 [TV: 3-6] (55,118) Alabama 33, West Virginia 23 (Atlanta) [TV: 3-6-7] (70,502) *Georgia 34, Missouri 0 [TV: 1] (71,168) Clemson 35, South Carolina 17 [TV: 2-6] (82,720) Idaho at Florida [TV: 4-6] (No Contest) *Ole Miss 35, Texas A&M 20 [TV: 2-6] (110,633) Georgia 45, Clemson 21 [TV: 2-6] (92,746) Kentucky 48, LA Monroe 14 [TV: 5-6] (56,676) Dec. 6 Kentucky 59, UT-Martin 14 [TV: 5-6] (50,398) Tennessee 45, UT Chattanooga 10 [TV: 5-6] (93,097) SEC Championship Game (Atlanta) LSU 28, Wisconsin 24 (Houston) [TV: 2-6] (71,599) Vanderbilt 21, Charleston Southern 20 [TV: 8-6] (26,738) Alabama 42, Missouri 13 [TV: 1] (73,526) Mississippi State49, Southern Miss 0 [TV: 5-6] (61,889) Missouri 38, South Dakota State 18 [TV: 4-6] (60,589) Oct. 18 Dec. 27 *Alabama 59, Texas A&M 0 [TV: 1] (101,821) Duck Commander Independence Bowl • Shreveport, La. Aug. 31 *Georgia 45, Arkansas 32 (Little Rock) [TV: 5-6] (54,959) South Carolina vs. Miami [TV: 7-6] (3:30 p.m. ET) Tennessee 38, Utah State 7 [TV: 5-6] (102,455) *Missouri 42, Florida 13 [TV: 3-6] (89,117) *LSU 41, Kentucky 3 [TV: 5-6] (101,581) Dec. 29 Sept. 6 *Ole Miss 34, Tennessee 3 [TV: 2-6] (62,081) Autozone Liberty Bowl • Memphis, Tenn. *Ole Miss 41, Vanderbilt 3 (LP Field) [TV: 2-6] (43,260) South Carolina 41, Furman 10 [TV: 5-6] (78,101) Texas A&M vs. West Virginia [TV: 2-6] (1 p.m. CT) Alabama 41, Florida Atlantic 0 [TV: 5-6] (100,306) Arkansas 73, Nicholls 7 [TV: 5-6] (63,108) Oct. 25 AdvoCare V100 Texas Bowl • Houston, Texas Auburn 59, San Jose State 13 [TV: 3-6] (87,451) *Alabama 34, Tennessee 20 [TV: 3-6] (102,455) Arkansas vs. Texas [TV: 2-6] (8 p.m. CT) Florida 65, Eastern Michigan 0 [TV: 5-6] (81,049) *Auburn 42, South Carolina 35 [TV: 5-6] (87,451) Kentucky 20, Ohio 3 [TV: 4-6] (51,910) *Mississippi State 45, Kentucky 31 [TV: 1] (64,791) Dec. 30 LSU 56, Sam Houston 0 [TV: 5-6] (100,338) *LSU 10, Ole Miss 7 [TV: 2-6] (102,321) Franklin American Music City Bowl • Nashville, Tenn. Mississippi State 47, UAB 34 [TV: 8] (57,704) *Missouri 24, Vanderbilt 14 [TV: 5-6] (65,264) LSU vs. Notre Dame [TV: 2-6] (2 p.m. CT) Missouri 49, Toledo 24 [TV: 2-6] (24,196) Arkansas 45, UAB 17 [TV: 5-6] (61,800) South Carolina 33, East Carolina 23 [TV: 4-6] (80,899) Belk Bowl • Charlotte, N.C. Tennessee 34, Arkansas State 19 [TV: 5-6] (99,538) Nov. 1 Georgia vs. Louisville [TV: 2-6] (6:30 p.m. ET) Texas A&M 73, Lamar 3 [TV: 5-6] (104,728) *Mississippi State 17, Arkansas 10 [TV: TV-3-6] (63,207) *Auburn 35, Ole Miss 31[TV: 2-6] (62,090) Dec. 31 Sept. 13 *Florida 38, Georgia 20 (Jacksonville) [TV:1] (83,004) Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl • Atlanta, Ga. *Florida 36, Kentucky 30 3OT [TV: 5-6] (88,334) *Missouri 20, Kentucky 10 [TV: 5-6] (62,004) Ole Miss vs. TCU [TV: 2-6] (11:30 a.m. CT) *South Carolina 38, Georgia 35 [TV: 1] (84,232) *Tennessee 45, South Carolina 42 OT [TV: 5-6] (81,891) Alabama 52, Southern Miss 12 [TV: 3-6] (101,821) Texas A&M 21, UL Monroe 16 [TV: 5-6] (100,922) Capital One Orange Bowl • Miami Gardens, Fla. Arkansas 49, Texas Tech 28 [TV: 6-7] (60,277) Vanderbilt 42, Old Dominion 28 [TV: 4-6] (28,966) Mississippi State vs. Georgia Tech [TV: 2-6] (7 p.m. CT) LSU 31, UL Monroe 0 [TV: 4-6] (101,194) Ole Miss 56, UL Lafayette 15 [TV: 5-6] (60,937) Nov. 8 Jan. 1 Mississippi State 35, South Alabama 3 [TV: 9-6] (38,129) *Alabama 20, LSU 13 OT [TV: 1] (102,321) Outback Bowl • Tampa, Fla. Missouri 30, UCF 10 [TV: 5-6] (60,348) *Texas A&M 41, Auburn 38 [TV: 1] (87,451) Auburn vs. Wisconsin [TV: 3-6] (11 a.m. CT) Oklahoma 34, Tennessee 10 [TV: 6-7] (85,622) *Florida 34, Vanderbilt 10 [TV: 5-6] (35,191) Texas A&M 38, Rice 10 [TV: 3-6} (103,867) *Georgia 63, Kentucky 31 [TV: 2-6] (60,152) Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl • Orlando, Fla. Vanderbilt 34, UMass 31 [TV: 8] (33,386) Ole Miss 48, Presbyterian 0 [TV: 5-6] (60,546) Missouri vs. Minnesota [TV: 7-6] (Noon CT) Mississippi State 45, UT Martin 16 [TV: 5-6] (61,421) Sept. 18 Allstate Sugar Bowl • New Orleans, La. Auburn 20, Kansas State 14[TV: 2-6] (53,046) Nov. 15 Alabama vs. Ohio State [TV: 2-6] (7:30 p.m. CT) *Alabama 25, Mississippi State 20 [TV: 1] (101,821) Sept. 20 *Arkansas 17, LSU 0 [TV: 3-6] (70,165) Jan. 2 *Alabama 42, Florida 21 [TV: 1] (101,821) *Georgia 34, Auburn 7 [TV: 2-6] (92,746) TaxSlayer Bowl • Jacksonville, Fla. *Mississippi State 34, LSU 29 [TV: 2-6] (102,321) *South Carolina 23, Florida 20 OT [TV: 5-6] (85,088) Tennessee vs. Iowa [TV: 2-6] (3:20 p.m. ET) *South Carolina 48, Vanderbilt 34 [TV: 5-6] (34,441) *Tennessee 50, Kentucky 16 [TV: 5-6] (102,455) Arkansas 52, N. Illinois 14[TV: 4-6] (67,204) *Missouri 34, Texas A&M 27 [TV: 5-6] (104,756) Jan. 3 Georgia 66, Troy 0 [TV: 5-6] (92,746) Birmingham Bowl • Birmingham, Ala. Indiana 31, Missouri 27 [TV: 5-6] (66,455) Nov. 22 Florida vs. East Carolina [TV: 2-6] (Noon ET) Texas A&M 58, SMU 6 [TV: 3-6-7] (34,820) *Arkansas 30, Ole Miss 0 [TV: 1] (64,510) *Mississippi State 51, Vanderbilt 0 [TV: 5-6] (60,493) * SEC Game Sept. 27 *Missouri 29, Tennessee 21 [TV: 2-6] (95,821) *Texas A&M 35, Arkansas 28 OT (Arlington) [TV: 1] (68,113) Alabama 48, Western Carolina 14 [TV: 5-6] (101,325) NOTE: *Georgia 35, Tennessee 32 [TV: 2-6] (92,746) Auburn 31, Samford 7 [TV: 4-6] (87,451) Home team game time listed. Home team underlined. *Kentucky 17, Vanderbilt 7 [TV: 5-6] (56,940) Florida 52, Eastern Kentucky 3 [TV: 5-6] (83,399) *Missouri 21, South Carolina 20 [TV: 2-6] (83,493) Georgia 55, Charleston Southern 9 [TV: 5-6] (92,746) SEC team game time listed if non-conference game. Auburn 45, Louisiana Tech 17 [TV: 5-6] (87,451) South Carolina 37, South Alabama 12 [TV: 8-6] (78,201) LSU 63, New Mexico St 7 [TV: 5-6] (101,987) Ole Miss 24, Memphis 3 [TV: 8-6] (61,291) Nov. 27 *LSU 23, Texas A&M 17 [TV: 2-6] (105,829) Oct. 4 *Ole Miss 23, Alabama 17 [TV: 1] (61,826) Nov. 28 *Auburn 41, LSU 7 [TV: 2-6] (87,451) *Missouri 21, Arkansas 14 [TV: 1] (71,168) *Florida 10, Tennessee 9 [TV: 5-6] (102,455) *Georgia 44, Vanderbilt 17 [TV: 5-6] (92,746)

TV Key - TV Key - (1) CBS; (2) ESPN; (3) ESPN2; (4) ESPNU; (5) SEC Network; (6) WatchESPN; (7) ABC; (8) FS South, Southwest and SUN Sports; (9) ESPNews 2014 SEC FOOTBALL SCHEDULE

Date Aug. 30 Sept. 6 Sept. 13 Sept. 20 Sept. 27 Oct. 4 Oct. 11 Oct. 18 Oct. 25 Nov. 1 Nov. 8 Nov. 15 Nov. 22 Nov. 29 Team WEST FLORIDA SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI WESTERN FLORIDA OLE MISS ARKANSAS TEXAS A&M TENNESSEE LSU AUBURN ALABAMA VIRGINIA ATLANTIC MISS STATE CAROLINA Tuscaloosa Oxford Fayetteville Tuscaloosa Knoxville Baton Rouge Tuscaloosa Atlanta, Ga. Tuscaloosa Tuscalooa Tuscaloosa Tuscaloosa MISSISSIPPI MISSOURI AUBURN NICHOLLS TEXAS TECH N. ILLINOIS TEXAS A&M ALABAMA GEORGIA UAB LSU OLE MISS ARKANSAS STATE Columbia Auburn Fayetteville Lubbock Fayetteville Arlington, Texas Fayetteville Little Rock Fayetteville Fayetteville Fayetteville Starkville (Nov. 28) KANSAS STATE LOUISIANA MISSISSIPPI SOUTH ARKANSAS SAN JOSE STATE LSU OLE MISS TEXAS A&M GEORGIA SAMFORD ALABAMA AUBURN Manhattan TECH STATE CAROLINA Auburn Auburn Auburn Oxford Auburn Athens Auburn Tuscaloosa (Sept. 18) Auburn Starkville Auburn EASTERN SOUTH EASTERN FLORIDA IDAHO KENTUCKY ALABAMA TENNESSEE LSU MISSOURI GEORGIA VANDERBILT FLORIDA MICHIGAN CAROLINA KENTUCKY STATE Gainesville Gainesville Tuscaloosa Knoxville Gainesville Gainesville Jacksonville Nashville Gainesville Gainesville Gainesville Tallahassee SOUTH CHARLESTON GEORGIA CLEMSON TROY TENNESSEE VANDERBILT MISSOURI ARKANSAS FLORIDA KENTUCKY AUBURN GEORGIA CAROLINA SOUTHERN TECH Athens Athens Athens Athens Columbia Little Rock Jacksonville Lexington Athens Columbia Athens Athens SOUTH MISSISSIPPI UT MARTIN OHIO FLORIDA VANDERBILT LA MONROE LSU MISSOURI GEORGIA TENNESSEE LOUISVILLE KENTUCKY CAROLINA STATE Lexington Lexington Gainesville Lexington Lexington Baton Rouge Columbia Lexington Knoxville Louisville Lexington Lexington MISSISSIPPI NEW MEXICO TEXAS A&M WISCONSIN SAM HOUSTON LA MONROE AUBURN FLORIDA KENTUCKY OLE MISS ALABAMA ARKANSAS LSU STATE STATE College Station Houston, Texas Baton Rouge Baton Rouge Auburn Gainesville Baton Rouge Baton Rouge Baton Rouge Fayetteville Baton Rouge Baton Rouge (Nov. 27) BOISE STATE MISSISSIPPI VANDERBILT UL-LAFAYETTE MEMPHIS ALABAMA TEXAS A&M TENNESSEE LSU AUBURN PRESBYTERIAN ARKANSAS OLE MISS Atlanta, Ga. STATE Nashville Oxford Oxford Oxford College Station Oxford Baton Rouge Oxford Oxford Fayetteville (Aug. 28) Oxford SOUTHERN SOUTH MISSISSIPPI UAB LSU TEXAS A&M AUBURN KENTUCKY ARKANSAS UT MARTIN ALABAMA VANDERBILT OLE MISS MISS ALABAMA STATE Starkville Baton Rouge Starkville Starkville Lexington Starkville Starkville Tuscaloosa Starkville Oxford Starkville Mobile SOUTH DAKOTA SOUTH ARKANSAS TOLEDO UCF INDIANA GEORGIA FLORIDA VANDERBILT KENTUCKY TEXAS A&M TENNESSEE MISSOURI STATE CAROLINA Columbia Toledo Columbia Columbia Columbia Gainesville Columbia Columbia College Station Knoxville Columbia Columbia, S.C. (Nov. 28) TEXAS A&M SOUTH SOUTH EAST CAROLINA GEORGIA VANDERBILT MISSOURI KENTUCKY FURMAN AUBURN TENNESSEE FLORIDA CLEMSON Columbia ALABAMA Columbia Columbia Nashville Columbia, S.C. Lexington Columbia Auburn Columbia Gainesville Clemson CAROLINA (Aug. 28) Columbia UTAH STATE ARKANSAS UT SOUTH OKLAHOMA GEORGIA FLORIDA OLE MISS ALABAMA KENTUCKY MISSOURI VANDERBILT TENNESSEE Knoxville STATE CHATTANOOGA CAROLINA Norman Athens Knoxville Oxford Knoxville Knoxville Knoxville Nashville (Aug. 31) Knoxville Knoxville Columbia S. CAROLINA MISSISSIPPI LSU TEXAS LAMAR RICE SMU ARKANSAS OLE MISS ALABAMA LA MONROE AUBURN MISSOURI Columbia STATE College Station College Station College Station Dallas Arlington, Texas College Station Tuscaloosa College Station Auburn College Station A&M (Aug. 28) Starkville (Nov. 27) TEMPLE SOUTH CHARLESTON OLD MISSISSIPPI OLE MISS UMASS KENTUCKY GEORGIA MISSOURI FLORIDA TENNESSEE VANDERBILT Nashville CAORLINA SOUTHERN DOMINION STATE Nashville Nashville Lexington Athens Columbia Nashville Nashville (Aug. 28) Nashville Nashville Nashville Starkville

2014 SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME • DECEMBER 6 • ATLANTA, GA. 2014-15 BOWL SCHEDULE

Date / Time (ET) ...... Bowl ...... Matchup ...... Site ...... TV Sat., Dec. 20, 11 a.m...... R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl...... EĞǀĂĚĂǀƐ͘>ŽƵŝƐŝĂŶĂͲ>ĂĨĂLJĞƩĞ ...... New Orleans, La...... ESPN Sat., Dec. 20, 2:20 p.m...... Gildan ...... Utah State vs. UTEP ...... Albuquerque, N.M...... ESPN Sat., Dec. 20, 3:30 p.m...... Royal Purple ...... Utah vs. Colorado State...... Las Vegas, Nev...... ABC Sat., Dec. 20, 5:45 p.m...... ...... Western Michigan vs. Air Force ...... Boise, Idaho ...... ESPN Sat., Dec. 20, 9:15 p.m...... Raycom Media Camellia Bowl ...... South Alabama vs. Bowling Green ...... Montgomery, Ala...... ESPN Mon., Dec. 22, 2 p.m...... Miami Beach Bowl ...... BYU vs. Memphis ...... Miami, Fla...... ESPN Tue., Dec. 23, 6 p.m...... Boca Raton Bowl...... Marshall vs. Northern Illinois ...... Boca Raton, Fla...... ESPN Tue., Dec. 23, 9:30 p.m...... ^ĂŶŝĞŐŽŽƵŶƚLJƌĞĚŝƚhŶŝŽŶWŽŝŶƐĞƫĂŽǁů ...... Navy vs. San Diego State ...... San Diego, Calif...... ESPN Wed., Dec. 24, 12 p.m...... Popeyes Bahamas Bowl...... Central Michigan vs. Western Kentucky.....Nassau, Bahamas ...... ESPN Wed., Dec. 24, 8 p.m...... Hawai’i Bowl ...... Fresno State vs. Rice ...... Honolulu, Hawaii ...... ESPN Fri., Dec. 26, 1 p.m...... Zaxby’s Heart of Dallas Bowl ...... Illinois vs. Louisiana Tech...... Dallas, Texas ...... ESPN Fri., Dec. 26, 4:30 p.m...... ...... Rutgers vs. North Carolina ...... Detroit, Mich...... ESPN Fri., Dec. 26, 8 p.m...... Bitcoin St. Petersburg Bowl ...... N.C. State vs. UCF ...... St. Petersburg, Fla...... ESPN Sat., Dec. 27, 1 p.m...... presented by Northrop Grumman ...... ŝŶĐŝŶŶĂƟǀƐ͘sŝƌŐŝŶŝĂdĞĐŚ ...... Annapolis, Md...... ESPN Sat., Dec. 27, 2 p.m...... Hyundai ...... Arizona State vs. Duke...... El Paso, Texas...... CBS Sat., Dec. 27, 3:30 p.m...... Duck Commander Independence Bowl ...... Miami (Fla.) vs. South Carolina ...... Shreveport, La...... ABC Sat., Dec. 27, 4:30 p.m...... New Era ...... Boston College vs. Penn State ...... Bronx, N.Y...... ESPN Sat., Dec. 27, 8 p.m...... EĂƟŽŶĂůhŶŝǀĞƌƐŝƚLJ,ŽůŝĚĂLJŽǁů...... Nebraska vs. USC ...... San Diego, Calif...... ESPN Mon., Dec. 29, 2 p.m...... AutoZone Liberty Bowl...... Texas A&M vs. West Virginia ...... Memphis, Tenn...... ESPN Mon., Dec. 29, 5:30 p.m...... ZƵƐƐĞůůƚŚůĞƟĐŽǁů ...... Oklahoma vs. Clemson ...... Orlando, Fla...... ESPN Mon., Dec. 29, 9 p.m...... ĚǀŽĂƌĞsϭϬϬdĞdžĂƐŽǁů...... Arkansas vs. Texas ...... Houston, Texas ...... ESPN Tue., Dec. 30, 3 p.m...... Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl ...... Notre Dame vs. LSU ...... Nashville, Tenn...... ESPN Tue., Dec. 30, 6:30 p.m...... Belk Bowl ...... Georgia vs. Louisville...... ŚĂƌůŽƩĞ͕E͘͘...... ESPN Tue., Dec. 30, 10 p.m...... Foster Farms Bowl...... Maryland vs. Stanford ...... Santa Clara, Calif...... ESPN Wed., Dec. 31, 12:30 p.m...... ŚŝĐŬͲĮůͲWĞĂĐŚŽǁů ...... Ole Miss vs. TCU...... Atlanta, Ga...... ESPN Wed., Dec. 31, 4 p.m...... VIZIO ...... Boise State vs. Arizona ...... Glendale, Ariz...... ESPN Wed., Dec. 31, 8 p.m...... Capital One Orange Bowl...... Mississippi State vs. Georgia Tech...... Miami Gardens, Fla...... ESPN Thu., Jan. 1, 12 p.m...... Outback Bowl ...... Auburn vs. Wisconsin ...... Tampa, Fla...... ESPN2 Thu., Jan. 1, 12:30 p.m...... 'ŽŽĚLJĞĂƌŽƩŽŶŽǁůůĂƐƐŝĐ...... Michigan State vs. Baylor ...... Arlington, Texas...... ESPN Thu., Jan. 1, 1 p.m...... ƵīĂůŽtŝůĚtŝŶŐƐŝƚƌƵƐŽǁů ...... Missouri vs. Minnesota ...... Orlando, Fla...... ABC Thu., Jan. 1, 5 p.m...... presented by Northwestern Mutual...... #3 Florida State vs. #2 Oregon ...... Pasadena, Calif...... ESPN Thu., Jan. 1, 8:30 p.m...... Allstate Sugar Bowl ...... #4 Ohio State vs. #1 Alabama ...... New Orleans, La...... ESPN Fri., Jan. 2, 12 p.m...... >ŽĐŬŚĞĞĚDĂƌƟŶƌŵĞĚ&ŽƌĐĞƐŽǁů ...... ,ŽƵƐƚŽŶǀƐ͘WŝƩƐďƵƌŐŚ ...... Fort Worth, Texas ...... ESPN Fri., Jan. 2, 3:20 p.m...... TaxSlayer Bowl ...... Iowa vs. Tennessee ...... Jacksonville, Fla...... ESPN Fri., Jan. 2, 6:45 p.m...... Valero ...... Kansas State vs. UCLA...... San Antonio, Texas ...... ESPN Fri., Jan. 2, 10:15 p.m...... TicketCity Cactus Bowl ...... Washington vs. Oklahoma State...... Tempe, Ariz...... ESPN Sat., Jan. 3, 12 p.m...... Birmingham Bowl ...... East Carolina vs. Florida ...... Birmingham, Ala...... ESPN Sun., Jan. 4, 9 p.m...... GoDaddy Bowl ...... Toledo vs. Arkansas State ...... Mobile, Ala...... ESPN Mon., Jan. 12, 8:30 p.m...... ŽůůĞŐĞ&ŽŽƚďĂůůWůĂLJŽīEĂƟŽŶĂůŚĂŵƉŝŽŶƐŚŝƉ'ĂŵĞ ...... Rose Bowl/Sugar Bowl winners...... Arlington, Texas...... ESPN

FOOTBALL BOWL ASSOCIATION As of Dec. 7, 2014 footballbowlassociation.org | @collegebowls 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games DUCK COMMANDER INDEPENDENCE BOWL

• SOUTH CAROLINA vs MIAMI • December 27 • 3:30 p.m. ET • Shreveport, La. • Independence Stadium (49,565)

LIVE TV: ABC (Dave Neal, play-by-play; , analyst; Laura Rutledge, sidelines)

SOUTH CAROLINA GAMECOCKS (6-6, 3-5 SEC) MIAMI HURRICANES (6-6, 3-5 ACC) Head Coach: (Florida, ‘67) Head Coach: Al Golden (Penn State, ‘91) Overall/Years: 225-84-2 (.727) / 10th Season Overall/Years: 56-54 (.509) / 9th Season South Carolina/Years: 83-45 (.648) / 25th Season Miami/Years: 28-21 (.571) / 4th Season In Bowl Games: 10-10 (.500) In Bowl Games: 0-2 (.000) National Rankings: Not Ranked National Rankings: Not Ranked South Carolina Bowl Appearances: 19 Miami Bowl Appearances: 38 South Carolina Bowl Record: 7-12 (.368) Miami Bowl Record: 19-18 (.514)

KEY PLAYERS KEY PLAYERS

QB Dylan Thompson (6-3, 218, Sr., Boiling Springs, S.C.) QB Brad Kaaya (6-4, 209, Fr., West Hills, Calif.) The SEC’s leader in passing yards per game, averaging 273.3 yards per contest ... The 2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Rookie of the Year ... Has passed for University Ranks among the top-20 nationally in passing (24), passing yards (3,280) of Miami freshman records of 2,962 yards and 25 touchdowns ... Posted an ACC-best and passing yards per game ... Is 9-6 all-time as a starter for the Gamecocks and has pass efficiency rating of 148.2 ... A true freshman, Kaaya was named starting quarter- started each of his team’s 12 games this season ... Has completed 248-of-417 passes back during fall training camp and made his career debut in season opener at Louisville this year ... Set the school single-season passing yards record, surpassing the 3,206 ... Has completed 202-of-345 passes for 2,962 yards ... Is averaging 246.8 passing yards logged by Todd Ellis in 1987 ... Has thrown for better than 300 yards three times yards per game ... Ranks among the top-20 nationally in both passing efficiency and this season and five times in his career. passing TDs ... Averaging 14.66 passing yards per completion, which ranks ninth na- tionally and first in the ACC. WR/AP Pharoh Cooper (5-11, 201, So., Havelock, N.C.) A first-team All-SEC selection at and a second-team All-SEC selection RB Duke Johnson (5-9, 206, Jr., Miami, Fla.) as an all-purpose athlete in 2014 ... The Gamecocks’ top receiver with 60 receptions Recipient of the Brian Piccolo Award, given to the ACC’s Most Courageous Football for 966 yards with eight touchdowns ... Has also rushed 24 times for 198 yards with Player ... A first-team All-ACC selection ... Suffered a fractured fibula and a dislocated two scores ... Ranks second in the SEC in both receiving yards (966) and receving ankle in November 2013 and returned to full speed this season ... Finished the regular yards per game (80.5) ... Ranks among the top-35 nationally in receiving yards, receiv- season ranked second among ACC rushers with 1,520 yards in 12 games ... Is 12th ing yards per game and receiving touchdowns ... Ranks 10th in the SEC in all-purpose nationally in rushing yards and is averaging 6.97 rush yards per carry, which leads the yards per game with 103.5. ACC and is seventh-best in the nation ... Set Miami’s all-time career rushing record with 3,387 yards ... Posted six consecutive games of 100 or more rushing yards at one LB Skai Moore (6-2, 213, So., Cooper City, Fla.) point in the season ... Averaging 126.7 rushing yards per game, which is 14th nationally Leads the Gamecocks and ranks ninth in the SEC in total tackles per game with and has scored 10 TDs on the ground this year. 7.5 ... Has totaled 82 total tackles on the year with two tackles for loss ... Has three in- terceptions on the season, which ranks ninth in the SEC ... Has led his team in tackles WR Phillip Dorsett (5-10, 195, Sr., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) six times this season, including a career-best 10 tackles against both Georgia and A second-team All-ACC selection at wide receiver ... Has started each of Miami’s Clemson. 12 games this season ... Posted a league-best 26.6 yards per catch and led the Hur- ricanes with nine receiving touchdowns ... Ranks sixth in the ACC with an average of PK Elliott Fry (6-0, 165, So., Frisco, Texas) 68.8 receiving yards per game. A second-team All-SEC selection as a placekicker in 2014 ... Was one of 20 semi- finalists for the ... Is 17-for-22 in field-goal attempts this season LB Denzel Perryman (6-0, 242, Sr., Coral Gables, Fla.) and is 32-of-40 for his career ... Currently ranks tied for 10th in SEC history in career A first-team All-ACC selection at ... A finalist for the 2014 field-goal percentage at 80.0 ... Has connected on a school-record 96 consecutive ... Leads the Hurricanes in total tackles with 102 ... Has also posted a squad-best 8.5 extra points ... Has tallied 99 points this season. tackles for loss and recorded 2.0 sacks ... Ranks ninth in the ACC and 67th nationally in total tackles ... Forced three , broke up four passes and snagged an inter- ception during the course of the year ... Started all 12 games for Miami.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Miami leads 8-5-2 CATEGORY SOUTH CAROLINA MIAMI SERIES: South Carolina and Miami are meeting for the 16th time in the history of the SCORING OFFENSE 33.3 (6) [35] 29.9 [58] two programs, but the first time since 1987 ... The two teams last played December 5, TOTAL OFFENSE 450.8 (5) [30] 431.0 [45] 1987, a contest that Miami won 20-16, en route to a national championship for the Hur- RUSHING 169.4 (8) [58] 179.9 [48] ricanes ... This will mark just the third meeting between the two teams since 1960. PASSING 281.4 (2) [20] 251.1 [45] GAME NOTES: South Carolina will be making its 20th all-time bowl appearance and SCORING DEFENSE 31.2 (12) [91] 24.3 [44] the Gamecocks are 7-12 all-time in postseason bowls ... This will mark the Gamecocks' TOTAL DEFENSE 433.6 (13) [91] 327.6 [14] seventh-consecutive bowl appearance, extending their school record ... South Carolina RUSHING 214.4 (13) [107] 143.5 [38] has won seven of its last 11 bowl games ... Miami is making its 38th all-time bowl ap- pearance, holding a 19-18 overall record in those games ... The Hurricanes will compete PASSING 219.2 (9) [52] 184.1 [9] in a postseason bowl for the second consecutive year after missing appearances in TURNOVER MARGIN -0.33 (12) [89] +0.08 [55] 2011 and 2012 ... The Gamecocks defeated Wisconsin in the Capital One Bowl last year, while the Hurricanes lost to Louisville in the Russell Athletic Bowl a year ago. 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games AUTOZONE LIBERTY BOWL

• TEXAS A&M vs. WEST VIRGINIA • December 29 • 2 p.m. ET • Memphis, Tenn. • Liberty Bowl (62,506) LIVE TV: ESPN (Clay Matvick, play-by-play; Anthony Becht, analyst; Dawn Davenport, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Mark Neely, play-by-play; , analyst; Niki Noto, sidelines) SIRIUS/XM: 83 TEXAS A&M AGGIES (7-5, 3-5 SEC) WEST VIRGINIA MOUNTAINEERS (7-5, 5-4 Big 12) Head Coach: Kevin Sumlin (Purdue, ‘88) Head Coach: (Iowa Wesleyan, ‘93) Overall/Years: 62-28 (.689) / 7th Season Overall/Years: 28-22 (.560) / 4th Season Texas A&M/Years: 27-11 (.711) / 3rd Season West Virginia/Years: Same In Bowl Games: 3-1 (.750) In Bowl Games: 1-1 (.500) National Rankings: Not Ranked National Rankings: Not Ranked Texas A&M Bowl Appearances: 35 West Virginia Bowl Appearances: 32 Texas A&M Bowl Record: 16-19 (.457) West Virginia Bowl Record: 14-18 (.438)

KEY PLAYERS KEY PLAYERS

WR/AP Speedy Noil (5-11, 185, Fr., New Orleans, La.) WR Kevin White (6-3, 210, Sr., Plainfield, N.J.) An SEC All-Freshman Team selection as both a wide receiver and an all-purpose A first-team All-Big 12 selection at wide receiver ... A finalist for the 2014 Biletnikoff athlete in 2014 ... Leads his team in all-purpose yards (1,322), kickoff return yards (575 Award ... Set a West Virginia school record with seven consecutive games of 100 or yards), and punt return yards (178) ... Averages 15.9 yards every time he touches the more receiving yards to start the season ... Has 1,318 receiving yards this year, which ball ... Has at least one catch in every game he has played this season ... Ranks sev- is the second-most in a single season in program history ... Second in the Big 12 Con- enth in the nation in punt return average (12.7) and is 18th nationally in combined kick ference and seventh in the nation in receiving yards per game at 109.8 ... Ranks fifth return yardage (753) ... Seventh in the SEC this season in all-purpose yardage ... His nationally in receptions per game with 8.5 ... Has a Big-12-leading 10 receiving touch- 1,322 all-purpose yards rank No. 5 by a freshman in Texas A&M history ... He is the downs on the year ... Has started all 12 games this season for the Mountaineers. fifth freshman Aggie to reach the 40-catch plateau. K Josh Lambert (5-11, 215, So., Garland, Texas) PK Josh Lambo (6-0, 220, Sr., Middleton, Wisc.) A second-team All- selection in 2014 ... A finalist for the Lou The SEC leader this season in field-goal percentage at 85.7 (12-of-14), which ranks Groza Award ... Is the national leader in field goals per game (2.25) ... Set the NCAA eighth nationally ... Averages 1.09 field goals per game ... Leads his team with 89 points record for field goals made of 40 yards or more in a single season (15) ... Tied a school responsible for this season ... Was a first-round pick of FC Dallas of Major League Soc- record with a 55-yard, game-winning field goal against Texas Tech on Oct 11 ... Has cer in 2008 before joining Aggies as a non-scholarship player in 2012 connected on 27-of-36 field goal attempts this season ... Ranks seventh in the Big 12 in points responsible for with 122 this season. DL Myles Garrett (6-5, 255, Fr., Arlington, Texas) A second-team All-SEC and SEC All-Freshman Team selection in 2014 ... Second DB Karl Joseph (5-11, 196, Jr., Orlando, Fla.) in the SEC and sixth in the nation in sacks per game at 1.0 ... Set the SEC freshman A first-team All-Big 12 Conference selection in 2014 ... Has started all 37 games of record of eight sacks in his ninth game of 2014, setting the previous record held by his career ... Has logged 82 tackles this season, including 55 solo stops, four tackles 2014 NFL Draft top pick of South Carolina ... Leads the Aggies in for loss, three pass breakups, two forced fumbles and an ... Ranks 16th in sacks (11.0), tackles for loss (12.5) and quarterback hurries (9) ... Ranks the Big 12 this season in total tackles. eighth on his team and second among Aggie defensive linemen with 50 total tackles ... Matched Texas A&M’s freshman sacks record (5.5) in the first three games of his DL Shaq Riddick (6-6, 242, Sr., Akron, Ohio) career ... Garrett’s sister Brea is a thrower on Texas A&M’s national champion track The Big 12 Conference Defensive Newcomer of the Year for 2014 ... Ranks fifth in and field team. the Big 12 with seven sacks on the season ... Had three sacks and four tackles of WVU’s upset of Baylor on Oct. 18, becoming the first Mountaineer since 2011 to post DB Howard Matthews (6-2, 210, Sr., League City, Texas) at least three sacks in a single game ... Has 26 tackles on the season, including 10 Leads the Aggies this season with 82 total tackles, including 2.5 tackles for loss tackles for loss. ... Has logged a squad-best eight pass breakups this season.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: First Meeting CATEGORY TEXAS A&M WEST VIRGINIA SERIES: Texas A&M and West Virginia will be meeting for the first time in the history of SCORING OFFENSE 34.4 (5) [31] 33.2 [36] the two programs. TOTAL OFFENSE 449.3 (6) [31] 502.1 [11] RUSHING 142.8 (12) [91] 187.5 [42] GAME NOTES: Texas A&M is making its 36th all-time bowl appearance with an all- PASSING 306.4 (1) [12] 314.6 [9] time postseason bowl record of 16-19 ... The Aggies are making their sixth consecutive bowl game appearance, which is a program record ... Texas A&M has won three con- SCORING DEFENSE 27.3 (11) [70] 26.2 [60] secutive bowl games, including a victory over Duke in last year’s Chick-fil-A Bowl ... TOTAL DEFENSE 449.0 (14) [101] 388.6 [58] West Virginia is making its 33rd all-time postseason bowl appearance ... The Moun- RUSHING 223.5 (14) [111] 162.6 [66] taineers are 14-18 all-time in bowl games ... West Virginia’s last bowl appearance was a loss to Syracuse in the 2012 New Era Pinstripe Bowl. PASSING 225.5 (12) [63] 226.0 [64] TURNOVER MARGIN -0.58 (13) [109] -1.25 [120] 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games ADVOCARE V100 TEXAS BOWL

• ARKANSAS vs. TEXAS • December 29 • 9 p.m. ET • Houston, Texas • NRG Stadium (71,054) LIVE TV: ESPN (Dave Pasch, play-by-play; , analyst; Tom Luginbill, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (, play-by-play; John Congemi, analyst; Kayce Smith, sidelines) SIRIUS/XM: 83 ARKANSAS RAZORBACKS (6-6, 2-6 SEC) (6-6, 5-4 Big 12) Head Coach: (Iowa, ‘92) Head Coach: (Central Arkansas, ‘82) Overall/Years: 77-39 (.664) / 9th Season Overall/Years: 43-22 (.662) / 5th Season Arkansas/Years: 9-15 (.375) / 2nd Season Texas/Years: 6-6 (.500) / 1st Season In Bowl Games: 2-4 (.333) In Bowl Games: 3-2 (.600) National Rankings: Not Ranked National Rankings: Not Ranked Arkansas Bowl Appearances: 39 Texas Bowl Appearances: 52 Arkansas Bowl Record: 13-23-3 (.372) Texas Bowl Record: 27-23-2 (.538)

KEY PLAYERS KEY PLAYERS

TE (6-5, 250, So., North Little Rock, Ark.) RB Malcolm Brown (5-11, 222, Sr., Cibolo, Texas) An All-SEC second team selection in 2014 ... Has totaled 495 receiving yards with A second-team All-Big 12 Conference selection for the second consecutive year ... two touchdowns on the year ... Has collected multiple receptions in nine straight games Leads his team in rushing yards (683) and has six touchdowns on the ground ... Ranks while effectively moving the chains for the Razorbacks ... This season, 15 of his re- 11th on the school’s career rushing yards list (2,653) ... Ranks sixth in the Big 12 in ceptions have come on third down and all 15 have led to first downs ... Has also caught rushing yards and eighth in rushing yards per game (56.9) ... Averaging 4.45 yards per and converted all four passes intended for him on fourth down this season. carry, which is seventh in the Big 12.

RB Alex Collins (5-11, 215, So., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) QB Tyrone Swoopes (6-4, 243, So., Whitewright, Texas) Ranks second on Arkansas’ team and fifth in the SEC in rushing yards with 1,024 Passing for an average of 196.0 yards per game this season and is averaging 11.15 so far this season ... Is second in the SEC in rushing touchdowns (11) and rushing yards per completion ... Has passed for 2,352 yards so far this season with 13 touch- yards per game (85.3) ... Ranks among the top-15 in the SEC in total offense, averag- downs ... Averaging 220.5 yards of total offense ... Has thrown for better than 300 yards ing 85.3 yards per game ... Ran for a career-high 212 yards with two touchdowns on three occasions this season ... Has also rushed for 294 yards this season on the against Texas Tech ... Has scored in five of his last six games for the Razorbacks. ground.

LB Martrell Spaight (6-2, 231, Sr., North Little Rock, Ark.) DT (6-2, 320, Jr., Brenham, Texas) An All-SEC first team selection in 2014 ... The leading tackler in the SEC with 123 A first-team All-Big 12 Conference selection in 2014 ... A finalist for both the Nagurski total stops, which currently ranks him 16th nationally with 10.3 tackles per game ... His Award and the ... Leads his team in tackles for loss (14) and sacks 123 tackles are the most by a Razorback since Caleb Miller collected 133 in 2003 ... (6.5), and is tied for first with six quarterback hurries ... His sack total leads the Big 12 Has started all 12 games and played a role in four turnovers, recording one intercep- Conference ... Has accumulated 64 total tackles on the season .... Ranks among the tion, two forced fumbles and a recovery on the year ... The first Arkansas line- school’s all-time top-10 career leaders in rushing yards and is one of only 18 players backer to be selected to the Coaches All-SEC first team since Tony Bua in 2003. in school history to eclipse the 2,000-yard career rushing mark.

DE Trey Flowers (6-3, 270, Sr., Huntsville, Ala.) CB Quandre Diggs (5-10, 195, Sr., Angleton, Texas) An All-SEC second team selection in 2014 ... Spearheads a vastly improved A second-team All-Big 12 Conference selection in 2014 ... Is fourth on the team in Arkansas defense that successfully shut out back-to-back ranked SEC opponents in tackles (68) and has posted three and five pass breakups ... Ranks tied No. 20 LSU (Nov. 15, 17-0) and No. 8 Ole Miss (Nov. 22, 30-0) ... Has tallied a team- for ninth on the school's career interceptions list (11) and tied for 10th in pass breakups leading 13.5 tackles for loss and five sacks this season. Flowers’ 17 career sacks (36). ranks ninth in program history and third among SEC active career leaders.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Texas leads series 56-21 CATEGORY ARKANSAS TEXAS SERIES: Arkansas and Texas are meeting for the 78th time in the history of the two SCORING OFFENSE 32.0 (7) [45] 22.6 [101] programs ... The Razorbacks and Longhorns previously were Southwest Conference TOTAL OFFENSE 410.6 (8) [58] 360.5 [101] rivals and met annually from 1932-1991 ... The last meeting between the teams was a RUSHING 220.3 (4) [26] 148.7 [85] 52-10 Texas victory on Sept. 27, 2008. PASSING 190.3 (11) [97] 211.8 [81] GAME NOTES: Arkansas is making its 40th all-time postseason bowl appearance and SCORING DEFENSE 20.3 (5) [15] 23.3 [33] the program’s first since the 2011 season when Arkansas defeated No. 11 Kansas State TOTAL DEFENSE 345.4 (7) [24] 348.3 [26] in the Cotton Bowl ... The Razorbacks are 13-23-3 all-time in bowl games ... Texas is RUSHING 124.0 (3) [22] 162.1 [64] making its 53rd bowl appearance, the second-highest total on the NCAA all-time list ... The Longhorns are 27-23-2 all-time in postseason bowl games ... It will be Texas’ 20th PASSING 221.4 (10) [56] 186.3 [12] bowl game matchup with a SEC opponent, with the Longhorns holding a 11-7-1 record. TURNOVER MARGIN +0.42 (6) [34] -0.08 [67] 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games FRANKLIN AMERICAN MORTGAGE MUSIC CITY BOWL

• LSU vs. NOTRE DAME • December 30 • 3 p.m. ET • Nashville, Tenn. • LP Field (69,143) LIVE TV: ESPN (Mark Jones, play-by-play; Rod Gilmore, analyst; Jessica Mendoza, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Mark Neely, play-by-play; David Diaz-Infante analyst; Dawn Davenport, sidelines) SIRIUS/XM: 83 LSU TIGERS (8-4, 4-4 SEC) NOTRE DAME FIGHTING IRISH (7-5) Head Coach: (Michigan, ‘76) Head Coach: Brian Kelly (Assumption, ‘83) Overall/Years: 131-49 (.728) / 14th Season Overall/Years: 215-77-2 (.735) / 25th Season LSU/Years: 103-28 (.786) / 10th Season Notre Dame/Years: 44-20 (.688) / 5th Season In Bowl Games: 8-4 (.667) In Bowl Games: 4-3 (.571) National Rankings: CFP (23); AP (22); Amway Coaches (23) National Rankings: Not Ranked LSU Bowl Appearances: 45 Notre Dame Bowl Appearances: 33 LSU Bowl Record: 23-21-1 (.522) Notre Dame Bowl Record: 16-17 (.485)

KEY PLAYERS KEY PLAYERS

RB/AP Leonard Fournette (6-1, 230, Fr., New Orleans, La.) QB Everett Golson (6-0, 200, Sr., Myrtle Beach, S.C.) A 2014 SEC All-Freshman Team honoree at both the and all-purpose Ranks among the top-15 nationally in passing yards (3,355), passing yards per athlete positions ... A three-time SEC Freshman of the Week honoree in 2014 ... Has game (279.6) and passing touchdowns (29) ... Boasts a passing efficiency rating of amassed a team-leading 891 rushing yards on 176 carries with eight rushing touch- 144.1, which ranks 31st in the nation ... Was a semifinalist for both the downs ... His 891 yards are third most by an LSU freshman all-time ... Has logged four and the Davey O’Brien Award ... Has passed for better than 300 yards five times this 100-yard rushing games, including 146 yards in his last outing at Texas A&M ... Serves season, which ranks tied for second on Notre Dame’s all-time single-season list ... Has as LSU’s primary kickoff returner, averaging 126.8 all purpose yards per game, which thrown for at least 200 yards in 11 of 12 games this year ... Has thrown for at least ranks fourth in the SEC ... Averages 22.9 kickoff return yards per game, which is eighth three passes six times this season ... Is eighth nationally this season in in the SEC ... Is 12th in the SEC this season with 891 rushing yards on the year. points responsible for (224) ... Has also scored eighth rushing touchdowns this year.

OL La’el Collins (6-5, 321, Sr., Baton Rouge, La.) WR Will Fuller (6-0, 180, So., Philadelphia, Pa.) The SEC’s recipient of the 2014 ... A first-team All-SEC Ranks among the top-30 nationally in receiving yards per game (86.4) and recep- selection in 2014 ... Leads all LSU linemen this season in offensive snaps played at tions per game (5.9) ... Has scored 14 receiving touchdowns this season, which ranks 792 and knockdown blocks with 84.5 through 12 games ... His 84.5 knockdowns are 14th in the nation ... Has caught 71 passes for 1,037 yards (14.6 avg.) this year ... the most in a season by an LSU offensive lineman since 2011 when Will Blackwell tal- Leads his team in receptions, receiving yards and receiving TDs ... Eight of his 14 lied 112.5 in 14 games in his All-American season. touchdown grabs this year have been for more than 20 yards ... Caught a career-high three touchdown passes vs. Northwestern on Nov. 15, which moved him into sole pos- LB Kwon Alexander (6-2, 227, Jr., Oxford, Ala.) session of fourth place in school single-season history. LSU’s leading tackler with 79 stops on the year, including 7.5 tackles for loss ... Also has 1.5 sacks on the year, two forced fumbles and five quarterback hurries ... Ranks LB Jaylon Smith (6-2, 235, So., Fort Wayne, Ind.) 11th in the SEC this season with 7.2 tackles per game ... Has started in 11 of 12 games Was one of five finalists for the 2014 Butkus Award ... Leads his team with 103 total this season ... Has started 14 of LSU’s last 16 games dating back to the 2013 campaign tackles on the season, including a squad-best 8.5 tackles for loss ... Is averaging 8.6 ... Had a career-high 2.5 tackles per loss against Ole Miss on Oct. 25. tackles per game, including 5.0 solo tackles per game ... Has posted three sacks and forced one fumble ... Has charted -figure tackles on five occasions this season, LB Kendell Beckwith (6-2, 245, So., Clinton, La.) including a career-high 14 against both Stanford and USC. Second on LSU’s team with 68 total tackles, including 6.5 tackles for loss ... Has recorded two sacks, three pass breakups and has snagged an interception this sea- CB Matthias Farley (5-11, 205, Sr., Charlotte, N.C.) son ... Has started the last six games for LSU, playing in all 12 games so far this Tied for Notre Dame’s team lead in interceptions with four ... Has also charted 51 season ... Logged a career-best 10 tackles vs. Ole Miss on Oct. 25. total tackles, including 6.5 tackles for loss, and 3.5 sacks this season.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Series tied 5-5 CATEGORY LSU NOTRE DAME SERIES: LSU and Notre Dame are meeting for the 11th time in the history of the two SCORING OFFENSE 27.6 (11) [73] 33.0 [39] storied programs ... The all-time series is tied 5-5 ... It will mark the third bowl matchup TOTAL OFFENSE 383.4 (10) [77] 444.6 [34] between the two squads ... LSU and Notre Dame met in the 1997 Independence Bowl RUSHING 219.5 (5) [27] 150.8 [81] and the 2007 Sugar Bowl ... In the last meeting between the two teams, LSU defeated PASSING 163.9 (14) [114] 293.8 [16] Notre Dame 41-14 in the 2007 Sugar Bowl. SCORING DEFENSE 16.4 (2) [3] 29.3 [83] GAME NOTES: LSU is making its 15th consecutive bowl appearance and 46th overall TOTAL DEFENSE 305.8 (1) [8] 401.5 [69] ... The Tigers are 23-21-1 all-time in postseason bowl games, including a 6-3 mark RUSHING 143.5 (7) [38] 161.7 [62] under current head coach Les Miles ... Notre Dame is making its 34th all-time bowl ap- pearance and fifth consecutive ... The Irish are 16-17 all-time in postseason bowl games PASSING 162.3 (2) [4] 239.8 [84] ... Notre Dame will be looking to post bowl victories in back-to-back seasons for the first TURNOVER MARGIN +0.33 (7) [38] -0.33 [89] time since doing that in three consecutive seasons from 1991 through 1993. 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games BELK BOWL

• GEORGIA vs. LOUISVILLE • December 30 • 6:30 p.m. ET • Charlotte, N.C. • Bank of America Stadium (74,455) LIVE TV: ESPN (Anish Shroff, play-by-play; , analyst; Cara Capuano, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Tom Hart, play-by-play; Matt Stinchcomb, analyst; Heather Mitts, sidelines) SIRIUS/XM: 83 GEORGIA BULLDOGS (9-3, 6-2 SEC) LOUISVILLE CARDINALS (9-3, 5-3 ACC) Head Coach: (Miami, ‘82) Head Coach: Bobby Petrino (Carroll College, ‘83) Overall/Years: 135-48 (.742) / 14th Season Overall/Years: 92-33 (.736) / 10th Season Georgia/Years: Same Louisville/Years: 50-12 (.806) / 5th Season In Bowl Games: 8-5 (.615) In Bowl Games: 4-3 (.571) National Rankings: CFP (13); AP (13); Amway Coaches (13) National Rankings: CFP (21); AP (20); Amway Coaches (20) Georgia Bowl Appearances: 49 Louisville Bowl Appearances: 18 Georgia Bowl Record: 27-19-3 (.582) Louisville Bowl Record: 9-8-1 (.528)

KEY PLAYERS KEY PLAYERS

RB Nick Chubb (5-10, 228, Fr., Cedartown, Ga.) WR DeVante Parker (6-3, 211, Sr., Louisville, Ky.) The 2014 SEC Freshman of the Year and an All-SEC first team selection at running A second-team All-ACC selection in 2014 ... Despite playing only three conference back ... Has totaled 1,281 yards and 12 touchdowns on 186 carries (6.9 average) in games and just five games on the season, Parker is second on the team with 35 re- his first season ... Became the 12th Bulldog in history to reach 1,000 yards rushing in ceptions for 735 yards and five touchdowns ... Has registered four 100-yard games, a single season and is currently No. 10 on the all-time list ... Is second in the SEC in including a career-high 214 yards in a loss to No. 2 Florida State ... Tied the school rushing yards per game (106.8) ... Also has 18 catches for 213 yards and a pair of record for career receiving touchdowns with 33 when he tallied three in the 44-40 win scores ... Was named the SEC Freshman of the Week five times in 2014 ... Joins Gar- over Kentucky ... Missed the first seven games of the 2014 season with a broken bone rison Hearst (1990), Eric Zeier (1991), Randall Godfrey (1992), Quincy Carter (1998), in his foot ... Has scored 33 touchdowns ove rthe course of his four-year career. David Greene (2001), Knowshon Moreno (2007) and A.J. Green (2008) as Bulldogs who have been named the Freshman of the Year by the league coaches. TE Gerald Christian (6-3, 250, Sr., Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.) A third-team All-ACC selection in 2014 ... Finished fourth on his Louisville team with WR Chris Conley (6-3, 205, Sr., Dallas, Ga.) a career-high 30 receptions for 359 yards with four touchdowns. The 2014 SEC Scholar-Athlete of the Year ... Has led Georgia with 577 receiving yards and seven touchdowns in 2014 and trails only Michael Bennett with 32 catches S (6-2, 213, So., Miami, Fla.) for the Bulldogs ... For his career, Conley is ranked fifth in school history with 19 touch- The 2014 winner as the nation’s top ... Also a fi- downs to go with 113 receptions for 1,858 yards in 48 games ... Has compiled a 3.0 or nalist for the Bronco Nagurski Award and a recipient of first-team All-ACC accolades better GPA in each of his 11 academic terms at UGA, including two terms on the Dean’s ... Tied an NCAA record for interceptions in a season with 14 ... Registered intercep- List. tions in nine of 12 games this season and had multiple picks on four different occasions ... Tied a school record when he intercepted three passes vs. Boston College ... Has LB Amarlo Herrera (6-2, 231, Sr., College Park, Ga.) charted 37 tackles on the year, including three tackles for loss. An All-SEC second team selection in 2014 ... Is the team leader with 112 stops (9.3/game) in 2014, which ranks him third in the SEC ... Has a team-leading 10 tackles DE Lorenzo Mauldin (6-4, 252, Sr., Atlanta, Ga.) for loss this year, including three sacks, an interception, a forced fumble and a fumble A first-team All-ACC selection for the second consecutive year in 2014 ... Has recovery ... Has started a team-leading 42 games in his career and is 10th on the posted a career-best 45 tackles and ranks in the top-60 nationally in sacks (6.5) and school’s all-time list with 331 tackles. tackles for loss (13.0) ... Is second on his team in sacks and leads the team in tackles for loss. LB Ramik Wilson (6-2, 237, Sr., Tampa, Fla.) An All-SEC second team selection in 2014 ... Is leading the SEC with four forced fumbles and has posted a season-high 62 tackles, including 4.5 tackles for loss ... Has three interceptions this season and has recovered a fumble ... Swann’s fumble recovery turned into a record-breaking 99-yard return for a touchdown versus 15th- ranked Georgia Tech.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: First Meeting CATEGORY GEORGIA LOUISVILLE SERIES: Georgia and Louisville are meeting for the first time in the history of the two SCORING OFFENSE 41.7 (1) [8] 32.6 [41] schools ... Louisville is making its third post-season appearance against an SEC foe in TOTAL OFFENSE 454.9 (4) [28] 396.3 [68] school history, having defeated Florida 33-23 in the 2013 Sugar Bowl and Alabama 34- RUSHING 255.0 (2) [12] 149.4 [83] 7 in the 1991 Fiesta Bowl. PASSING 199.9 (9) [87] 246.8 [50] GAME NOTES: Georgia is making its 50th all-time bowl appearance ... The Bulldogs' SCORING DEFENSE 21.3 (7) [25] 20.5 [18] all-time bowl record is 27-19-3 ... This is the Bulldogs' 14th consecutive bowl appear- TOTAL DEFENSE 334.8 (5) [20] 293.3 [6] ance under Coach Mark Richt and 18th consecutive overall ... Louisville is making its RUSHING 176.4 (10) [77] 93.7 [3] 19th all-time postseason bowl appearance, and its second in the Belk Bowl ... The Car- dinals are 9-8-1 all-time in postseason bowl games ... It will be a match-up between PASSING 158.4 (1) [2] 199.6 [30] one of the nation’s top rushing offenses (Georgia - 12th nationally, 255.0 rushing yards TURNOVER MARGIN +1.25 (1) [4] +0.42 [34] per game) and one of the nation’s top rush defenses (Louisville - 3rd nationally, allowing only 93.7 rushing yards per game). 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games CHICK-FIL-A PEACH BOWL

• OLE MISS vs. TCU • December 31 • 12:30 p.m. ET • Atlanta, Ga. • Georgia Dome (71,228) LIVE TV: ESPN (, play-by-play; , analyst; , analyst; Shannon Spake, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Dave Neal, play-by-play; Andre Ware, analyst; Laura Rutledge, sidelines) SIRIUS/XM: 83

OLE MISS REBELS (9-3, 5-3 SEC) TCU HORNED FROGS (11-1, 8-1 Big 12) Head Coach: Hugh Freeze (Ferris State, ‘90) Head Coach: (Kansas State ‘83) Overall/Years: 54-21 (.720) / 6th Season Overall/Years: 130-45 (.743) / 14th Season Ole Miss/Years: 24-14 (.632) / 3rd Season TCU/Years: Same In Bowl Games: 2-0 (1.000) In Bowl Games: 7-5 (.583) National Rankings: CFP (9); AP (9); Coaches (12) National Rankings: CFP (6); AP (6); Coaches (6) Ole Miss Bowl Appearances: 36 TCU Bowl Appearances: 30 Ole Miss Bowl Record: 23-12 (.557) TCU Bowl Record: 13-15-1 (.466) Ole Miss Bowl Streak: W6 [Last: Def. Georgia Tech 25-17 in 2013 Music City Bowl] Formations: Offense - Tempo • Defense - Multiple KEY PLAYERS

KEY PLAYERS QB Trevone Boykin (6-2, 205, Jr., Dallas, Texas) CB (5-9, 176, Sr., Pascagoula, Miss.) Boykin, who finished fourth in voting, tops the Big 12 and is third A finalist for the , which goes to the national defensive nationally in total offense (363.0 yards per game)... He is on pace to become just the player of the year, Golson leads the SEC and ranks second nationally with nine third quarterback since 2009 to average over 300 yards passing (309.5) and 50 yards inter..ceptions. His theft in the back of the end zone sealed the Rebels’ 23-17 win over rushing (53.5)... The other two were Heisman Trophy winners Robert Griffin III and No. 1 Alabama... He also has 41 tackles, three TFLs, eight pass breakups and two Johnny Manziel...Boykin has set TCU single-season records for passing yards (3,714), quarterback hurries...first consensus first team All-American and first unanimous choice touchdown passes (30), total offense (4,356) and touchdowns responsible for (39). since offensive tackle in 2008. LB Paul Dawson (6-2, 230, Sr., Dallas, Texas) DT (6-4, 280, So., Loganville, Ga.) Dawson, also a first-team and USA Today All-American, is the only Nkemdiche, an AP All-SEC first team pick, anchors a formidable defensive line that player in the nation with at least 100 tackles (128), five sacks and four has created many of the Rebels’ 28 turnovers and 19 interceptions, which rank top 15 interceptions....He's also the lone Big 12 player since 2000 to accomplish the ..nationally. The monster athlete from Loganville, Georgia, was also a Rotary Lombardi feat...Dawson's 18 1/2 TFLs are tied for the most by a Horned Frog over the last six Award semifinalist and a midseason All-America and All-SEC pick. seasons... The Dallas native also has three fumble recoveries, two forced fumbles, five pass breakups and five quarterback hurries. FS Cody Prewitt (6-2, 217, Sr., Bay Springs, Miss.) Prewitt has once again been the leader of the Ole Miss defense from his free safety S Chris Hackett (6-2, 195, Jr., Tyler, Texas) spot. The Bay Springs, Mississippi, native is among the team leaders with 60 tackles, Hackett tops the Big 12 and is tied for seventh nationally with six interceptions. He 3.5 TFLs, two interceptions and two pass breakups. A semifinalist for the Jim Thorpe is fourth on TCU with 73 tackles, including 3 1/2 for loss. Award, he has also forced a fumble and recovered one, as well as returned a 75-yard interception for a touchdown in a road win at Texas A&M. PK Jaden Oberkrom (6-3, 187, Jr., Arlington, Texas) An honorable mention All-Big Ten selection in 2014 ... Leads the Hawkeyes in both QB Bo Wallace (6-4, 217, Sr., Pulaski, Tenn.) tackles (95) and interceptions (3) this season, while also sharing the team lead in Wallace, a semifinalist for the 2014 Maxwell Award and 2014 Davey O’Brien forced fumbles with two ... Scored the first touchdown on his career against Nebraska Award, is the SEC’s active leader in several stat categories...SEC active leader in this season. career total offensive yards (10,383), touchdown responsibility (81), completions (737), attempts (1,163), passing yards (9,425) and touchdown passes (62)...Wallace broke ’s school record for total offensive yards vs. Arkansas and now ranks ninth in SEC history.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Ole Miss leads, 5-1 Last Meeting: Ole Miss, 20-7 (1983 at Fort Worth) CATEGORY OLE MISS TCU

SCORING OFFENSE 30.4 (9) [55] 46.8 [2] SERIES: Ole Miss and TCU have met six times in their history, most recently in 1983, with the Rebels boasting a 5-1 all-time edge. The teams have a pair of postseason en- TOTAL OFFENSE 443.3 (7) [36] 542.2 [4] counters, both won by the Red and Blue. The first bout between the Rebels and Horned RUSHING 167.7 (9) [59] 209.3 [35] Frogs was a 13-9 Ole Miss triumph in the 1948 Delta Bowl, and in the 1956 Cotton Bowl, the Rebels prevailed 14-13. PASSING 275.6 (4) [29] 332.8 [7] SCORING DEFENSE 13.8 (1) [1] 20.3 [16] GAME NOTES: Ole Miss is 13-11 against current Big 12 schools, including a 9-3 mark in bowl games. Six of the Rebels’ last nine postseason outings have come against TOTAL DEFENSE 321.2 (4) [13] 359.5 [33] teams currently in the Big 12...Ole Miss is 10-1 in its last 11 bowl games, including a RUSHING 133.6 (5) [29] 117.1 [13] current streak of six straight victories that is tied with Florida State for best in the country. The Rebels' lone loss since 1992 was in the 2000 Music City Bowl, falling 49-38 to West PASSING 187.6 (3) [16] 242.4 [85] Virginia...This year’s squad won nine regular-season games for the first time since 2003, TURNOVER MARGIN +0.58 (4) [26] +1.50 [2] defeating three 10-win teams and four conference champions along the way... Ole Miss rose as high as No. 3 in the national rankings and finished the regular season with the nation’s top scoring defense, allowing just 13.8 points per game. 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games CAPITAL ONE ORANGE BOWL

• MISSISSIPPI STATE vs. GEORGIA TECH • December 31 • 8 p.m. ET • Miami Gardens, Fla. • Sun Life Stadium (76,100) LIVE TV: ESPN (Brent Musburger, play-by-play; , analyst; Maria Taylor, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Bill Rosinski, play-by-play; David Norrie, analyst; Joe Schad, sidelines) SIRIUS/XM: 83

MISSISSIPPI STATE BULLDOGS (10-2, 6-2 SEC) GEORGIA TECH YELLOW JACKETS (10-3, 6-2 ACC) Head Coach: Dan Mullen (Ursinas, ‘94) Head Coach: Paul Johnson Overall/Years: 46-30 (.605) / 6th Season Overall/Years: 164-74 (.689) / 18th Season MSU/Years: Same GT/Years: 57-35 (.620) / 7th Season In Bowl Games: 3-1 (.750) In Bowl Games: 1-5 (.167) National Rankings: CFP (7); AP (8); Coaches (8) National Rankings: CFP (12); AP (10); Coaches (9) Mississippi State Bowl Appearances: 18 Georgia Tech Bowl Appearances: 43 Mississippi State Bowl Record: 10-7 (.588) Georgia Tech Bowl Record: 23-19 (.548) Ole Miss Bowl Streak: W1 [Last: Def. Rice 44-7 in 2013 Liberty Bowl] Formations: Offense - Spread Multiple • Defense - 4-3 Multiple KEY PLAYERS

KEY PLAYERS QB Justin Thomas (5-11, 189, So., Prattville, Ala.) Thomas has emerged as one of the ACC's best dual-threat . The soph- QB (6-2, 230, Jr., Haughton, LA) omore, first-year starter leads the Jackets with 965 rushing yards – the third-most by Prescott, MSU’s first national player of the year finalist, earned honorable mention a Georgia Tech quarterback... He ranks eighth nationally in Total QBR (79.3), with 17 All-America honors from Sports Illustrated after tallying 3,935 yards of total offense in TD passes to just five interceptions... This season, the Prattville, Ala., native became leading State to its first 10-win regular season in school history... The 2014 Conerly the sixth Tech QB to rush for 1,000 yards in a career. Trophy winner broke 10 single-season school records, finishing November ranked fifth in the FBS in points responsible for (228) and sixth in total offense per game (327.9). OG Shaquille Mason(6-1, 300, Sr., Columbia, Tenn.) Mason has now been named to five different All-America teams... He was a first- LB Benardrick McKinney (6-5, 249, Jr., Tunica, MS) team selection by USA TODAY; a second-team honoree by Sports Illustrated, FWAA, McKinney was named a first-team All-American by the Football Writers Association and Phil Steele; and a third-team selection by the Associated Press... The Columbia, of America, Sports Illustrated and ESPN.com, while also earning second-team honors Tenn., native was a second-team All-ACC selection by both the media and the league’s from the Associated Press, Walter Camp Football Foundation and Sporting News... head coaches... Tech’s highest-gradated offensive lineman in every game this season, The Tunica, Miss., native led No. 7 Mississippi State with 61 tackles in 12 regular-sea- he has made 37 consecutive starts – the longest streak by any current Yellow Jackets. son starts... Recording 8.0 tackles for loss and 3.0 sacks, the first-team All-SEC mem- ber was the leader on a defense which finished the regular season ranked 10th DE KeShun Freeman (6-1, 236, Fr., LaGrange, Ga.) nationally in scoring defense (19.4 points allowed per game). Freeman recorded 51 tackles, 9.0 tackles for loss (35 yards), 4.5 sacks (23 yards), one fumble recovery, one forced fumble, and one blocked kick in 13 games (11 starts). OG Ben Beckwith (6-3, 306, Sr., Benton, MS) Freeman led all ACC freshmen in both TFL and sacks. He was one of four Yellow Jack- Beckwith was placed on the Associated Press All-America third team following a ets that teamed up to block six kicks – tied for the nation’s lead heading into the bowls. regular season where State finished top-20 nationally in total offense (9th, SEC-best 506.2 yards per game), scoring offense (14th, 37.2 points per game) and rushing of- LB Quayshawn Nealy (6-1, 235, Sr., Lakeland, Fla.) fense (18th, 239.8 yards per game). Nealy, who has 90 tackles and 6.0 tackles for loss, is one of only six Power-5 players with multiple defensive touchdowns in 2014 (one interception, one fumble return)... DE Preston Smith (6-6, 270, Sr., Stone Mountain, GA) The senior from Lakeland, Fla., ranks eighth nationally with three fumble recoveries, Smith ranked fourth in the conference in tackles for loss (14.5) and fifth in sacks while his eight career interceptions are tied for the most among active non-DBs in the (9.0), becoming the first defensive lineman at State to earn first-team honors since nation. Pernell McPhee in 2010...Smith became the first player in Southeastern Conference history to be named SEC Defensive Lineman of the Week for three-straight weeks earlier this season.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Georgia Tech leads, 4-0 Last: Georgia Tech, 42-31 (2009 at Starkville) CATEGORY MISSISSIPPI STATE GEORGIA TECH

SCORING OFFENSE 37.2 (2) [14] 37.0 [17] SERIES: Georgia Tech leads the all-time series with MSU, 4-0. In the last meeting, the then-25th-ranked Yellow Jackets claimed a 42-31 win in Starkville on Oct. 3, 2009 in TOTAL OFFENSE 506.2 (1) [9] 468.8 [21] Dan Mullen’s fi rst season. RUSHING 239.8 (3) [18] 333.6 [2] GAME NOTES: No. 7 Mississippi State (10-2) makes its first Capital One Orange Bowl PASSING 266.3 (5) [35] 135.2 [120] appearance since 1941 as the Bulldogs will face No. 12 Georgia Tech (10-3) on Wednesday, Dec. 31 in Sun Life Stadium...MSU’s No. 7/8 national ranking is the pro- SCORING DEFENSE 19.4 (4) [10] 25.1 [51] gram’s highest to ever enter a bowl game... The Bulldogs have spent 10 consecutive TOTAL DEFENSE 411.7 (12) [80] 396.4 [63] weeks in the top 10. MSU was No. 1 for five straight weeks...MSU claimed 10 regular RUSHING 126.5 (4) [25] 168.8 [69] season wins for the first time in school history...MSU is making is making its 18th bowl appearance and third in the Orange Bowl (1937, ‘41)...The Bulldogs are 10-7 all-time PASSING 285.2 (14) [122] 227.6 [66] in bowl games and have won six out of their last seven bowls... MSU defeated George- town, 14-7, in the Orange Bowl on Jan. 1, 1941... The Bulldogs’ first-ever bowl appear- TURNOVER MARGIN +0.08 (9) [55] +0.77 [15] ance was also the Orange Bowl, dropping a 13-12 decision to Duquesne on Jan. 1, 1937. 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games OUTBACK BOWL

• AUBURN vs. WISCONSIN • January 1 • Noon ET • Tampa, Fla. • Raymond James Stadium (65,657) LIVE TV: ESPN2 (, play-by-play; , analyst; Quint Kessenich, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Taylor Zarzour, play-by-play; , analyst; K.C. Jones, sidelines) SIRIUS/XM: 91

AUBURN TIGERS (8-4, 4-4 SEC) WISCONSIN BADGERS (10-3, 7-1 Big Ten) Head Coach: (Henderson State, ‘90) Interim Head Coach: Barry Alvarez Overall/Years: 20-6 (.769) / 2nd Season Overall/Years: 117-75-4 (.607) / 17 Seasons Auburn/Years: Same UW/Years: Same In Bowl Games: 0-1 (.000) In Bowl Games: 8-4 (.667) National Rankings: CFP (19); AP (19); Coaches (19) National Rankings: CFP (18); AP (17); Coaches (17) Auburn Bowl Appearances: 39 Wisconson Bowl Appearances: 26 Auburn Bowl Record: 22-14-2 (.605) Wisconsin Bowl Record: 12-13 (.480) KEY PLAYERS KEY PLAYERS RB Cameron Artis-Payne (5-11, 210, Sr., Harrisburg, Pa. ) RB (6-1, 213, Jr., Kenosha, Wis.) Artis-Payne leads the SEC in rushing with 1,482 yards, and 11 touchdowns, as His 2,336 rushing yards this year represent the fourth-highest total in NCAA history, Auburn moves toward its Jan. 1 Outback Bowl date with Wisconsin. and he needs one touchdown to join Oklahoma State’s and UCF’s Kevin Smith as the only players to rush for 2,000 yards and score 30 TDs in a season. ..Gor- WR Sammie Coates (6-2, 201, Jr., Leroy, Ala. ) don became the fastest player to reach 2,000 yards in a season by hitting the threshold Coates, slowed at times during the season as he recovered from a knee injury, has on his 241st carry of the season. 30 catches for 717 yards and four touchdowns.

C Reese Dismukes (6-3, 295, Sr., Spanish Fort, Ala.) LB Derek Landisch (6-0, 231, Sr., Nashotah, Wis.) The senior center was selected first-team All-American by the Football Writers As- Landisch led the team with nine sacks and 16 tackles for loss...1st Team All-Big Ten sociation of American and the Coaches Association... He was also selection. named first-team All-American by the Associated Press...He won the as college football's best college center last week and has won various other All-Amer- S Michael Caputo (6-1, 212, Jr., Imperial, Pa.) ican and All-SEC honors...Dismukes will make his 50th start as Auburn's center against Caputo was the leader from his safety spot for a defense that was the best in the Wisconsin in the Outback Bowl on Jan. 1. league during the regular season; he finished with 99 tackles.

RS (5-10, 195, Sr., LaGrange, Ga.) OL Kyle Costigan (6-5, 319, Sr., Wind Lake, Wis.) Bray returned 15 punts, this season, averaging 18.1 yards per return and he re- An ESPN All-American, Costigan helped pave the way for Gordon’s record-breaking turned two punts for touchdowns... He leads the SEC and is ranked second nation- ally in punt returns. He's second in all-purpose yards at Auburn with 813 yards. season.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Series tied 1-1-1 Last Meeting: Wisconsin 24-10 (2006 Capital One Bowl) CATEGORY AUBURN WISCONSIN

SCORING OFFENSE 35.8 (4) [22] 34.6 [29] SERIES: UW and Auburn have squared off three times prior to this season...The two teams tied 7-7 in 1931 in Madison... They met in the 2003 Music City Bowl, with the TOTAL OFFENSE 489.2 (3) [17] 464.8 [23] Tigers prevailing 28-14... Two years later, Wisconsin upset No. 7 Auburn, 24-10, in the RUSHING 258.5 (1) [11] 314.0 [3] Capital One Bowl in head coach Barry Alvarez’s final game. PASSING 230.7 (7) [63] 150.8 [117] SCORING DEFENSE 26.1 (10) [59] 20.0 [13] GAME NOTES: Two of the top tailbacks in the country will square off in the Outback Bowl...The game will feature SEC's leading rusher in Auburn's Cameron Artis-Payne TOTAL DEFENSE 388.7 (9) [59] 283.2 [4] against Big Ten rushing champ and national rushing leader Melvin Gordon...Gordon, RUSHING 149.5 (8) [46] 118.9 [17] the Big Ten offensive player of the year, has 2,336 yards and 26 touchdowns rushing. PASSING 239.2 (13) [83] 164.3 [5] Artis-Payne is 14th nationally with 1,482 yards. TURNOVER MARGIN +0.33 (7) [38] -0.46 [103] . 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games BUFFALO WILD WINGS CITRUS BOWL

• MISSOURI vs. MINNESOTA • January 1 • 1 p.m. ET • Orlando, Fla. • Citrus Bowl Stadium (70,000) LIVE TV: ABC (, play-by-play; Ed Cunningham, analyst; Jeannine Edwards, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Dave Lamont, play-by-play; Tom Ramsey, analyst) SIRIUS/XM: 84 MISSOURI TIGERS (10-3, 7-1 SEC) MINNESOTA GOLDEN GOPHERS (8-4, 5-3 Big Ten) Head Coach: (Kent State ‘73) Head Coach: Jerry Kill (Southwestern College [Kan.], ‘83) Overall/Years: 185-103-1 (.645) / 24th Season Overall/Years: 152-99 (.606) / 21st Season Missouri/Years: 112-65 (.633) / 14th Season Minnesota/Years: 25-25 (.500) / 4th Season In Bowl Games: 6-4 (.600) In Bowl Games: 0-4 (.000) National Rankings: CFP (16); AP (16); Amway Coaches (14) National Rankings: CFP (25); AP (NR); Amway Coaches (NR) Missouri Bowl Appearances: 30 Minnesota Bowl Appearances: 16 Missouri Bowl Record: 14-16 (.467) Minnesota Bowl Record: 5-11 (.313)

KEY PLAYERS KEY PLAYERS

TB/AP Marcus Murphy (5-9, 195, Sr., Desoto, Texas) TE Maxx Williams (6-4, 250, So., Waconia, Minn.) The 2014 SEC Special Teams Player of the Year ... A 2014 All-SEC first team se- The ’s Kwalick-Clark of the Year ... Earned All-Big Ten lection as both an all-purpose athlete and as a return specialist ... Emerged as one of First Team recognition from both conference media and coaches ... The first Minnesota the nation's most versatile players and dangerous return men, as he ranks second in tight end to earn the honor since in 2006 ... A finalist the SEC in all-purpose average (131.9 yds.) ... Is one of only two players in the nation ... Had 29 receptions for 471 yards (29.2 percent of team receiving yards) and seven to score TDs in 2014 via all four all-purpose categories: Rushing (4), Kickoff Returns touchdowns (63.6 percent of team receiving touchdowns) during the regular seaso ... (2), Punt Returns (1) and Receiving (1), and improved from 2nd-Team All-SEC acclaim Led all Big Ten tight ends in touchdowns and receiving yards. in 2013 ... Ranks second in the nation this season with two kickoff return TDs ... His kickoff return average of 29.9 ranks fourth nationally and leads the SEC. RB David Cobb (5-11, 220, Sr., Killeen, Texas) A second-team All-Big Ten Conference selection in 2014 ... Started all 12 games WR Bud Sasser (6-2, 210, Sr., Denton, Texas) for the Gophers and rushed 294 times for 1,548 yards with 13 touchdowns ... His 1,548 An All-SEC second team selection in 2014 ... Developed into Mizzou's top receiv- yards are a Minnesota single-season rushing record ... Had seven 100-yard rushing ing threat a year after Mizzou lost 78 percent of its receiving production from 2013 ... games ... Also caught 12 passes for 129 yards ... Received the team's Bronko Nagurski He established career bests in every category, catching 70 passes for 935 yards and Award (team most valuable player) and Bruce Smith Award (outstanding offensive 10 touchdowns, ranking second, fourth and third, respectively, in the SEC in those player) and was also named the Bob McNamara Offensive Back of the Year. categories ... Ranks 12th nationally in receiving touchdowns this season. P Peter Mortell (6-2, 192, Jr., Green Bay, Wisc.) DE (6-3, 245, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.) The Big Ten Conference’s Eddleman-Fields of the Year ... Earned All-Big The 2014 SEC Defensive Player of the Year ... A 2014 first-team All-SEC selection Ten First Team recognition from both conference media and coaches ... Is the first Min- ... A finalist for the Award ... The first-year starter set a school record nesota punter to make the All-Big Ten First Team, and the first Gopher specialist to do with 14.0 quarterback sacks, and he also totaled 21.0 tackles for loss, while ranking so since kicker Chip Lohmiller in 1986 ... His 45.5-yard punting average led the con- fifth on the team with his 61 tackles on the year ... Leads the SEC and ranks third na- ference and ranks second in Minnesota history. tionally in sacks, while he ranks second in the league, and sixth nationally in tackles for loss. LB Damien Wilson (6-2, 240, Sr., Gloster, Miss.) Named to the media's All-Big Ten First Team and the coaches' All-Big Ten Second DE Markus Golden (6-3, 260, Sr., St. Louis, Mo.) Team ... Received the team's Carl Eller Award (outstanding defensive player) and Line- An All-SEC second team selection in 2014 ... Overcame a hamstring injury which backer of the Year honors ... Tied for third in the Big Ten with 111 tackles ... Led the limited his production during the middle portion of the year, to close strong with 8.5 Gophers with 10.5 tackles-for-loss (4.0 sacks) ... Recorded one interception, three pass sacks, 16.0 tackles for loss and 68 total tackles (fourth on the team), while adding a breakups, one forced fumble and two fumble recoveries ... Started 11 of 12 games team-high nine pass break ups ... Ranks 19th nationally in tackles for loss. played.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Missouri leads 4-3-1 CATEGORY MISSOURI MINNESOTA SERIES: Missouri and Minnesota are meeting for the ninth time in the history of the SCORING OFFENSE 27.4 (13) [76] 29.3 [61] two programs ... Mizzou leads the all-time series 4-3-1 and has won each of the last TOTAL OFFENSE 361.8 (13) [100] 356.0 [105] three meetings ... The two squads last met during the 1970 season, with the Tigers de- RUSHING 165.6 (10) [60] 224.6 [25] feating the Gophers 34-12 in Columbia. PASSING 196.2 (10) [94] 131.4 [122] GAME NOTES: Missouri is making its 31st all-time bowl appearance ... The Tigers are SCORING DEFENSE 21.4 (8) [26] 23.4 [34] 14-16 all-time in postseason bowl games ... Mizzou has won two consecutive bowl TOTAL DEFENSE 344.4 (6) [23] 362.7 [37] games, defeating Oklahoma State in the Cotton Bowl last year and beating North Car- RUSHING 135.8 (6) [30] 161.2 [61] olina in the 2011 Independence Bowl ... Minnesota is making its 17th all-time postsea- son bowl appearance ... The Gophers are 5-11 all-time in bowl games ... The Buffalo PASSING 208.5 (6) [38] 201.5 [32] Wild Wings Citrus Bowl is the third straight bowl game that Minnesota will play in under TURNOVER MARGIN +0.62 (3) [24] +0.92 [11] coach Jerry Kill. 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games ALLSTATE SUGAR BOWL NATIONAL SEMIFINAL

• ALABAMA vs. OHIO STATE • January 1 • 8:30 p.m. eT • New Orleans, La. • Mercedes-Benz Superdome (74,000) LIVE TV: ESPN (, play-by-play; , analyst; , sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Bill Rosinski, play-by-play; David Norrie, analyst; Joe Schad, sidelines) SIRIUS/XM: 83 ALABAMA CRIMSON TIDE (12-1, 7-1 SEC) OHIO STATE BUCKEYES (12-1, 7-1 Big Ten) Head Coach: (Kent State, ‘73) Head Coach: Overall/Years: 177-58-1 (.751) / 19th Season Overall/Years: 140-26 (.843) / 13th Season Alabama/Years: 86-16 (.843) / 8th Season OSU/Years: 36-3 (.923) / 3rd Season In Bowl Games: 8-7 (.533) / 5-2 at Alabama (.714) In Bowl Games: 7-2 (.778) / 0-1 at Ohio State (.000) National Rankings: CFP (1); AP (1); Coaches (1) National Rankings: CFP (4); AP (5); Coaches (4) Alabama Bowl Appearances: 61 Ohio State Bowl Appearances: 45 Alabama Bowl Record: 34-23-3 (.592) Ohio State Bowl Record: 20-24 (.455) Alabama Bowl Streak: L1 [Last: Lost to Oklahoma 45-31 in 2014 Sugar Bowl] Formations: Offense - Pro Style (Multiple) • Defense - 3-4 KEY PLAYERS

KEY PLAYERS DE (6-5, 278, So., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) Bosa, who was a finalist for three major awards this season - the Lombardi, the WR (6-1, 210, Jr., Miami, Fla.) Bednarik and the Ted Hendricks, recorded 50 tackles on the year including Big Ten- Cooper, a finalist for the Heisman Trophy and recent recipient of SEC Offensive leading numbers in TFLs (20 for -114 yards in losses) and quarterback sacks (13.5 for Player of the Year honors, has caught a school- and SEC-record 115 passes for 1,656 96 yards in losses)... He ranks fifth nationally in sacks and 11th in TFLs. yards and 14 touchdowns while leading Alabama to the first . The Miami native also leads the nation in receiving yards with 1,656 while ranking sec- DT Michael Bennett (6-2, 288, Sr., Centerville, Ohio) ond in receptions per game (8.8) and yards per game (127.4). Bennett, previously named a first-team All-American, capped a fine 36-tackle, 12.5- tackle-for-loss season by setting Big Ten championship game records for TFLs (four) S (6-0, 222, Jr., New Orleans, La.) and forced fumbles (two) vs. Wisconsin. Leads the Crimson Tide in tackles (91) and interceptions (three)...Collins is a con- sensus All-American and a unanimous selection to the AP All-America team. CB Doran Grant (5-11, 193, Sr., Akron, Ohio) In 13 games Grant has recorded five interceptions, tied for the team lead, 51 tackles QB (6-0, 208, Sr., Gainesville, Ga.) (sixth), nine pass breakups and 14 passes defensed... He was chosen an OSU co- In 13 games, Sims has thrown for 3,250 yards and 26 touchdowns, breaking A.J. captain in his second year as a full-time starter. McCarron’s single-season passing record at Alabama...He has rushed for an additional 321 yards to go along with six rushing touchdowns...The MVP of the SEC Champi- OG (6-3, 300, So., Pickerington, Ohio) onship Game, Sims set the pass completion percentage mark at 85.2 percent by com- First team All-Big Ten performer that helped to anchor the line for the OSU high- pleting 23-of-27 pass attempts. scoring offense.

P JK Scott (6-4, 185, Fr., Denver, Colo.) Ranks third nationally in punting average (46.98 yards per punt), and he’s pinned 26 of his 48 punts (54 percent) inside the 20...Scott was a finalist for the Award, as well as named a first team All-American by The Sporting News.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Alabama leads, 3-0 Last: Alabama, 24-17 (1995 Citrus Bowl) CATEGORY ALABAMA OHIO STATE SERIES: Alabama and Ohio State have met three times in their storied histories, but SCORING OFFENSE 37.1 (3) [16] 45.2 [4] will be meeting for the first time since Jan. 2, 1995 (Citrus Bowl)... The Crimson Tide owns a 3-0 series lead over the Buckeyes with two of the games taking place in the TOTAL OFFENSE 490.5 (2) [16] 507.6 [8] postseason...The teams first met in the 1978 Sugar Bowl (1977 season) when the Crim- RUSHING 209.5 (6) [34] 260.8 [10] son Tide won a 35-6 verdict over the OSU in the Superdome... The squads matched up again to start the 1986 season with Alabama claiming a 16-10 win at the Meadow- PASSING 281.8 (3) [21] 246.8 [49] lands in East Rutherford, New Jersey... The Tide won the last meeting between the two SCORING DEFENSE 16.6 (3) [4] 21.2 [23] schools at the 1995 Citrus Bowl (1994 season) in Orlando, Fla., by a score of 24-17.

TOTAL DEFENSE 312.4 (3) [11] 328.0 [15] GAME NOTES: The Crimson Tide will be making a record 15th appearance in the All- state Sugar Bowl. Alabama owns the Sugar Bowl record with eight wins in the game. RUSHING 88.7 (1) [2] 139.8 [33] The last Sugar Bowl appearance for the Tide was following last season when Alabama PASSING 223.7 (11) [59] 188.2 [17] took on Oklahoma. The Crimson Tide was also hosted by the Allstate Sugar Bowl for the 2012 Allstate BCS National Championship Game, when the Crimson Tide knocked TURNOVER MARGIN -0.08 (11) [66] +0.69 [19] off LSU, 21-0, for Alabama's 14th national title. The Crimson Tide also secured national championships with wins in the Sugar Bowl in 1962, 1979, 1980 and 1993...Ohio State is 0-10 all-time versus the SEC in bowl games. 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games TAXSLAYER BOWL

• TENNESSEE vs. IOWA • January 2 • 3:20 p.m. ET • Jacksonville, Fla. • Everbank Field (77,511) LIVE TV: ESPN (Mark Jones, play-by-play; Rod Gilmore, analyst; Jessica Mendoza, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Adam Amin, play-by-play; John Congemi analyst) SIRIUS/XM: 83 TENNESSEE VOLUNTEERS (6-6, 3-5 SEC) IOWA HAWKEYES (7-5, 4-4 Big Ten) Head Coach: Butch Jones (Ferris State, ‘90) Head Coach: (UConn, ‘78) Overall/Years: 61-40 (.604) / 9th Season Overall/Years: 127-105 (.547) / 19th Season Tennessee/Years: 11-13 (.458) / 2nd Season Iowa/Years: 115-84 (.578) / 16th Season In Bowl Games: 1-2 (.333) In Bowl Games: 6-5 (.545) National Rankings: Not Ranked National Rankings: Not Ranked Tennessee Bowl Appearances: 49 Iowa Bowl Appearances: 27 Tennessee Bowl Record: 25-24 (.510) Iowa Bowl Record: 14-12-1 (.537)

KEY PLAYERS KEY PLAYERS

QB Joshua Dobbs (6-3, 216, So., Alpharetta, Ga.) QB Jake Rudock (6-3, 208, Jr., Weston, Fla.) Has played in five games this season with four starts ... Is 3-1 this season as Ten- Ranks fourth in the Big Ten Conference in passing yards per game at 218.5 .... Fifth nessee’s starting quarterback ... Has completed 96-of-156 passes for 1,077 yards with in the Big Ten in both passing yards (2,404) and passing touchdowns (16) ... Has made eight touchdowns ... Became the first Tennessee player with 300 passing yards and 24 career starts and has logged three 300-yard passing games this season ... One of 100 rushing yards in leading Tennessee to a win against South Carolina ... Also ac- eight players in school history to throw for 30 or more touchdowns and 4,000-plus yards counted for five touchdowns against the Gamecocks ... Has earned two in a career ... Is 14-10 in his career as a starter ... Has completed 211-of-337 passes Quarterback of the Week accolades this season ... Is averaging 294.0 yards of total this season (62.6 percent) with five interceptions ... Is averaging 218.5 passing yards offense per game in 2014. per game ... Has also rushed for 154 yards this season with three scores on the ground.

RB Jalen Hurd (6-3, 227, Fr., Hendersonville, Tenn.) OL (6-5, 320, Sr., Denison, Iowa) Ranks among the top-15 in the SEC this season in rushing yards (777) and rushing The 2014 Outland Trophy receipient ... Has started all 12 games this season for yards per game (64.8) ... Has scored three touchdowns on the ground this season ... the Hawkeyes and has 25 consecutive starts ... Was named the Rimington-Pace Of- Has played in 12 games with eight starts ... Has rushed for 100 or more yards on three fensive Lineman of the Year in the Big Ten Conference, while earning first-team All- occasions, which is the most 100-yard rushing games by a Tennessee true freshman Big Ten honors for the second consecutive season. since Jamal Lewis had seven in 1997 ... Ran for a career-high 125 yards against South Carolina in 2014 ... Tennessee’s leading rusher this season and also averaged 4.5 DL Drew Ott (6-4, 270, Jr., Trumbull, Neb.) yards per carry this season. A second-team All-Big Ten selection by the media in 2014 ... Has started each of his team’s 12 games this season and has made 24 consecutive starts ... Leads his DL Derek Barnett (6-3, 267, Fr., Nashville, Tenn.) team with eight sacks and currently ranks fifth in the Big Ten with 0.67 sacks per game Named to the All-SEC second team and the SEC All-Freshman Team in 2014 ...... Has 12 tackles for loss among his 55 total tackles this season ... Scored his first ca- Ranks second in the SEC with 20.5 tackles for loss and set the Tennessee record for reer touchdown on a 12-yard punt return against Nebraska and hauled in his only in- both tackles for loss and sacks (10.0) by a freshman ... The first true freshman to start terception at Maryland this season. a season opener on the defensive line in program history ... Recorded 18.0 tackles for loss in SEC games only, which was the top mark in the league ... Played in each of his SS John Lowdermilk (6-2, 210, Sr., Carrollton, Ohio) team’s 12 games and ranked fourth on the Vols with 69 tackles, which also was the An honorable mention All-Big Ten selection in 2014 ... Leads the Hawkeyes in both top rookie mark in the SEC. tackles (95) and interceptions (3) this season, while also sharing the team lead in forced fumbles with two ... Scored the first touchdown on his career against Nebraska LB Curt Maggitt (6-3, 251, Jr., West Palm Beach, Fla.) this season. A 2014 Associated Press All-SEC second team selection ... Ranks second in the SEC with 20.5 tackles for loss and set the Tennessee record for both tackles for loss and sacks (10.0) by a freshman ... Barnett's 10.0 sacks ranked third in the SEC and he also set a UT freshman record for sacks in a single game (3) ... Led the Vols with a career-best 11.0 sacks, the third-best total in the SEC this season and tied for fourth-highest total for a Tennessee player in a season all-time ... Has recorded a sack in his last five consecutive games, including 2.0 sacks in three of his last four games.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Series tied 1-1 CATEGORY TENNESSEE IOWA SERIES: Tennessee and Iowa are meeting for the third time in the history of the two SCORING OFFENSE 27.6 (11) [73] 28.3 [68] programs ... The all-time series between the Vols and Hawkeyes is tied 1-1 ... The two TOTAL OFFENSE 363.0 (12) [98] 398.3 [66] squads last met in 1987, a 23-22 Tennessee win in East Rutherford, N.J. ... Tennessee RUSHING 135.0 (13) [100] 156.3 [71] and Iowa first met in the 1982 Peach Bowl, a 28-22 win for Iowa. PASSING 228.0 (8) [65] 242.0 [52] GAME NOTES: Tennessee has earned its 50th bowl invitation, a total that ranks the SCORING DEFENSE 23.9 (9) [39] 24.0 [40] Vols tied for fourth all-time among college football programs ... The Volunteers are 25- TOTAL DEFENSE 359.9 (8) [34] 334.5 [18] 24 all-time in bowl games ... Tennessee is appearing in its first bowl game since the RUSHING 162.1 (9) [64] 158.8 [57] 2010 Music City Bowl ... Iowa is making its 28th all-time postseason bowl game ap- pearance ... The Hawkeyes are 14-12-1 all-time in bowl games ... Iowa ranks third PASSING 197.8 (5) [28] 175.8 [8] amongst Big Ten teams in bowl appearances and is bowl eligible for the 13th time under TURNOVER MARGIN +0.08 (9) [55] -0.42 [99] coach Kirk Ferentz. 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games BIRMINGHAM BOWL

• FLORIDA vs. EAST CAROLINA • January 3 • 12 p.m. ET • Birmingham, Ala. • Legion Field (71,594) LIVE TV: ESPN (Dave Neal, play-by-play; Andre Ware, analyst; Laura Rutledge, sidelines) LIVE RADIO: ESPN Radio (Clay Matvick, play-by-play; Greg McElroy analyst; Cara Capuano, sidelines) SIRIUS/XM: 83 (6-5, 4-4 SEC) EAST CAROLINA PIRATES (8-4, 5-3 AMERICAN) Interim Head Coach: D.J. Durkin (Bowling Green State, ‘01) Head Coach: Ruffin McNeill (East Carolina, ‘80) Overall/Years: 0-0 / First Game Overall/Years: 38-26 (.594) / 5th Season Florida/Years: 0-0 / First Game East Carolina/Years: 37-26 (.587) / 5th Season In Bowl Games: 0-0 In Bowl Games: 2-2 (.500) National Rankings: Not Ranked National Rankings: Not Ranked Florida Bowl Appearances: 40 East Carolina Bowl Appearances: 19 Florida Bowl Record: 20-20 (.500) East Carolina Bowl Record: 9-10 (.474)

KEY PLAYERS KEY PLAYERS

QB Treon Harris (5-11, 190, Fr., Miami, Fla.) QB Shane Carden (6-2, 221, Sr., Houston, Texas) An SEC All-Freshman Team selection at quarterback in 2014 ... Has led the Gators The 2014 American Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year and a first- to three wins and a bowl appearance since being named Florida’s starting quarterback team All-AAC selection ... Has passed for a conference record and ECU single-season prior to the Georgia game ... Has thrown for 896 yards with seven touchdowns and a best 4,309 yards, completing 65 percent of his passes (359-of-551) with 28 touchdowns quarterback rating of 142.36 ... Also has rushed for 297 yards with three touchdowns ... Also has rushed for six touchdowns, which ranks second on his team ... Ranks sec- ... Is 3-2 in five games started this season ... Has completed 50 percent of his passes ond in the nation in passing yards and is third nationally in passing yards per game (50-of-100) and is averaging 112.0 yards per game through the air. (359.1) ... Leads the American in points responsible for (204) and points responsible for per game (17.3) ... Second in the nation in completions per game (29.83) ... Already WR/AP Andre Debose (6-0, 195, Sr., Sanford, Fla.) owns ECU career records in completions (1,018), attempts (1,513), TDs (84), passing The SEC’s active career leader in kickoff return yardage (2,111) and currently ranks yards (11,564), total offense (11,831) and total plays (1,775) ... Has logged five 400- 10th all-time in league history in career kick return yards ... Fourth in the SEC and 31st yard passing performances this season, which is second-most nationally. nationally in kick return average this season (24.7) ... Ranks ninth nationally and sec- ond in the SEC in combined kick return yardage (842) ... Sixth nationally in punt return WR Justin Hardy (6-0, 188, Sr., Vanceboro, N.C.) average (14.0) ... Holds a Florida school record with four career kick return touch- A first-team All-AAC selection and the lone unanimous all-conference selection by downs, which is also tied for the SEC record in that category ... Averaging 24.7 yards the league’s head coaches ... A three-time all-conference first-team selection ... Winner on 21 kick returns this season. of the 2014 , given to the nation’s most outstanding collegiate player who began his career as a walk-on ... Ranks second nationally in receptions (110) and DB Vernon Hargreaves, III (5-11, 195, So., Tampa, Fla.) fifth in receiving yards (1,334) ... Holds the NCAA FBS all-time receptions record at A first-team All-SEC selection at defensive back in 2014 ... Helped lead a Gator de- 376 ... Also owns ECU’s career records for receiving yards (4,381) and touchdown fense that ranks ninth in the country, allowing 311.0 yards per game ... Leads the SEC catches (34) ... Has at least two catches in all 48 career games played ... Has logged and ranks 14th in the nation with 13 pass breakups on the season ... Recovered two 14 double-digit career reception games. fumbles, which ranks among the top-five in the SEC this year, and has also nabbed two interceptions ... Has recorded 45 total tackles. LB Zeek Bigger (6-2, 228, Jr., Gastonia, N.C.) A second-team All-AAC selection in 2014 ... Leads the American Athletic Confer- DL Dante Fowler, Jr. (6-3, 260, Jr., St. Petersburg, Fla.) ence and ranks seventh nationally with 134 tackles on the season, including 63 solo A first-team All-SEC selection as a defensive lineman in 2014 ... Has totaled 57 stops ... Has recorded double-digit tackles on eight occasions this season, including a tackles this season, which ranks third on the Florida team ... Has registered a team- career-best 17 tackles against North Carolina, earning him Walter Camp National De- leading 12.0 tackles for loss, which is among the top-10 in the SEC this season ... Is fensive Player of the Week honors. second on his team with 5.5 sacks and has a squad-best 15 quarterback hurries ... Has also forced two fumbles this year. LB Brandon Williams (6-1, 230, Sr., Rock Hill, S.C.) A second-team All-AAC selection in 2014 ... East Carolina’s defensive team captain ... Second on his squad with 113 tackles (49 solo) and 4.5 sacks ... Leads the Pirates with 10.5 tackles for loss ... Is coming off a career-best 17 tackles against UCF in East Carolina’s last outing ... Has 192 total tackles over his four-year career.

SERIES/GAME NOTES 2014 STATISTICAL COMPARISON ( ) - SEC Ranking; [ ] - NCAA Ranking Record: Florida leads 1-0 CATEGORY FLORIDA EAST CAROLINA SERIES: Florida and East Carolina are meeting for just the second time in the history of the two programs ... The two institutions first met on Oct. 22, 1983, a 24-17 win by SCORING OFFENSE 30.5 (8) [54] 37.2 [14] the Gators in Gainesville ... Florida and East Carolina are scheduled to meet during the TOTAL OFFENSE 370.2 (11) [91] 532.8 [5] 2015 season in Gainesville (Sept. 12). RUSHING 189.5 (7) [41] 165.4 [61] GAME NOTES: Florida is making its 41st all-time bowl game appearance with a post- season bowl record of 20-20 ... The Gators return to a bowl game after breaking a 22- PASSING 180.7 (12) [105] 367.3 [2] year bowl streak last season ... Florida’s last bowl appearance was a 33-23 loss to SCORING DEFENSE 21.2 (6) [24] 25.7 [56] Louisville in the 2013 Allstate Sugar Bowl ... East Carolina is making its 20th all-time TOTAL DEFENSE 311.0 (2) [9] 369.7 [43] bowl appearance, holding a 9-10 all-time postseason bowl record ... The Pirates are RUSHING 116.8 (2) [12] 107.1 [8] appearing in a bowl game for the third consecutive year ... East Carolina defeated Ohio 37-20 in last season’s Beef O’ Brady’s Bowl ... Florida and East Carolina hold two of PASSING 194.2 (4) [23] 262.6 [104] the nation’s longest streaks for consecutive games without being shutout ... The Gators TURNOVER MARGIN +0.55 (5) [29] -0.33 [89] haven’t been shut out since October 1988, while the Pirates last shutout came in Octo- ber 1997. 2014 SEC Football SEC Postseason Bowl Games

SEC IN THE POLLS Associated Press (Dec. 7) College Football Playoff Rankings (Dec. 7)

No. Team Record Points No. Team Record 1 ALABAMA (27) 12-1 1452 SATELLITE RADIO SCHEDULE 1 ALABAMA 12-1 2 Florida State (25) 13-0 1436 The following games are scheduled to be on SiriusXM satellite 3 Oregon (8) 12-1 1426 2 Oregon 12-1 radio this weekend. SEC broadcast available for non-confer- 4 Baylor 11-1 1265 3 Florida State 13-0 ence games. Home team broadcast available for SEC contests 5 Ohio State 12-1 1262 4 Ohio State 12-1 unless stated otherwise. 6 TCU 11-1 1257 5 Baylor 11-1 Sirius / XM 7 Michigan State 10-2 1105 6 TCU 11-1 Dec. 27 Duck Commander Independence Bowl N/A 8 MISSISSIPPI STATE 10-2 1070 7 MISSISSIPPI STATE 10-2 South Carolina vs. Miami (3:30 p.m. ET) 9 OLE MISS 9-3 976 8 Michigan State 10-2 10 Georgia Tech 10-3 876 9 OLE MISS 9-3 Dec. 29 11 Kansas State 9-3 875 Autozone Liberty Bowl 83 10 Arizona 10-3 12 Arizona 10-3 819 Texas A&M vs. West Virginia (1 p.m. CT) 13 GEORGIA 9-3 745 11 Kansas State 9-3 12 Georgia Tech 10-3 AdvoCare V100 Texas Bowl 83 14 UCLA 9-3 663 Arkansas vs. Texas (8 p.m. CT) 15 Arizona State 9-3 602 13 GEORGIA 9-3 16 MISSOURI 10-3 599 14 UCLA 9-3 Dec. 30 17 Wisconsin 10-3 542 15 Arizona State 9-3 Franklin American Music City Bowl 83 LSU vs. Notre Dame (2 p.m. CT) 18 Clemson 9-3 509 16 MISSOURI 10-3 19 AUBURN 8-4 450 17 Clemson 9-3 Belk Bowl 83 20 Louisville 9-3 406 18 Wisconsin 10-3 Georgia vs. Louisville (6:30 p.m. ET) 21 Boise State 11-2 368 19 AUBURN 8-4 22 LSU 8-4 221 Dec. 31 20 Boise State 11-2 Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl 83 23 Utah 8-4 134 Ole Miss vs. TCU (11:30 a.m. CT) 24 USC 8-4 112 21 Louisville 9-3 25 Nebraska 9-3 79 22 Utah 8-4 Capital One Orange Bowl 83 23 LSU 8-4 Mississippi State vs. Georgia Tech (7 p.m. CT) 24 USC 8-4 Jan. 1 25 Minnesota 8-4 Outback Bowl 91 Amway Coaches’ Poll (Dec. 7) Auburn vs. Wisconsin (11 a.m. CT)

No. Team Record Points Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl 84 1 ALABAMA (28) 12-1 1486 Missouri vs. Minnesota (Noon CT) 2 Florida State (25) 13-0 1450 Allstate Sugar Bowl 83 3 Oregon (7) 12-1 1439 Alabama vs. Ohio State 7:30 p.m. CT) 4 Ohio State 12-1 1307 5 Baylor 11-1 1277 Jan. 2 6 TCU (1) 11-1 1276 TaxSlayer Bowl 83 Tennessee vs. Iowa (3:20 p.m. ET) 7 Michigan State 10-2 1143 SEC Nation on The SEC Network 8 MISSISSIPPI STATE 10-2 1079 Host Joe Tessitore is joined by analyst Tim Tebow, Marcus Jan. 3 9 Georgia Tech 10-3 922 Spears and contributors on a different SEC campus each week Birmingham Bowl 83 Florida vs. East Carolina(Noon ET) 10 Kansas State 9-3 915 for this two-hour traveling pregame show with game pre- 11 Arizona 10-3 903 views, highlights, features and the sights and sounds of game 12 OLE MISS 9-3 882 day in the SEC. 13 GEORGIA 9-3 759 14 MISSOURI 10-3 676 SEC Nation Schedule: 15 UCLA 9-3 661 Date Time (ET) School/City 16 Arizona State 9-3 599 Thu., Aug. 28 4 – 6 p.m. South Carolina/Columbia, S.C. 17 Wisconsin 10-3 566 Sat., Aug. 30 10 a.m. - Noon Auburn/Auburn, Ala. 18 Clemson 9-3 518 Sat., Sept. 6 10 a.m. - Noon Vanderbilt/Nashville, Tenn. 19 AUBURN 8-4 395 Sat., Sept. 13 10 a.m. - Noon Florida/Gainesville, Fla. 20 Louisville 9-3 381 Sat., Sept. 20 10 a.m. - Noon Alabama/Tuscaloosa, Ala. 21 Boise State 11-2 325 Sat., Sept. 27 10 a.m. - Noon Georgia/Athens, Ga. 22 Nebraska 9-3 200 Sat., Oct. 4 10 a.m. - Noon Miss. State/Starkville, Miss. 23 LSU 8-4 173 Sat., Oct. 11 10 a.m. - Noon Arkansas/Fayetteville, Ark. 24 Oklahoma 8-4 100 Sat., Oct. 18 10 a.m. - Noon Ole Miss/Oxford, Miss. Sat., Oct. 25 10 a.m. - Noon Kentucky/Lexington, Ky. 25 Utah 8-4 72 Sat., Nov. 1 10 a.m. - Noon Missouri/Columbia, Mo. Sat., Nov. 8 10 a.m. - Noon LSU/Baton Rouge, La. Sat., Nov. 15 10 a.m. - Noon Texas A&M/College Station Sat., Nov. 22 10 a.m. - Noon Tennessee/Knoxville, Tenn. Sat., Nov. 29 10 a.m. - Noon Ole Miss/Oxford, Miss. (Egg Bowl Selection) 2014 SEC Football SEC Postseason Bowl Games

SEC IN THE POLLS (AP / USA Today / CFP Ranking) ALA ARK AUB UF UGA UK LSU UM MSU MU USC UT A&M VU PRESEASON 2/2/-- --/RV/-- 6/5/-- RV/RV/-- 12/12/-- --/--/-- 13/13/-- 18/19/-- RV/RV/-- 24/RV/-- 9/9/-- --/--/-- 21/20/-- RV/--/-- Aug. 31 2/2/-- --/--/-- 5/5/-- RV/RV/-- 6/8/-- --/--/-- 12/12/-- 15/17/-- RV/RV/-- 24/22/-- 21/21/-- RV/--/-- 9/13/-- --/--/-- Sept. 7 3/2/-- --/--/-- 5/5/-- RV/RV/-- 6/6/-- --/--/-- 10/9/-- 14/15/-- RV/RV/-- 20/22/-- 24/23/-- RV/--/-- 7/8/-- --/--/-- Sept. 14 3/2/-- RV/RV/-- 5/5/-- RV/RV/-- 13/14/-- --/--/-- 8/8/-- 11/12/-- RV/RV/-- 18/19/-- 14/16/-- --/--/-- 6/7/-- --/--/-- Sept. 21 3/2/-- RV/RV/-- 5/5/-- --/--/-- 12/13/-- --/--/-- 17/18/--- 10/11/-- 14/16/-- RV/RV/-- 13/15 --/--/-- 6/7/-- --/--/-- Sept. 28 3/1/-- RV/RV/-- 5/5/-- --/--/-- 13/12 --/--/-- 15/15/-- 11/11/-- 12/14/-- 24/RV/-- RV/RV/-- --/--/-- 6/7/-- --/--/-- Oct. 5 7/7/-- RV/RV/-- 2/2/-- --/--/-- 13/10/-- RV/RV/-- RV/RV/-- 3/4/-- 3/6/-- 23/24/-- RV/RV/-- --/--/-- 14/14/-- --/--/-- Oct. 12 7/7/-- RV/--/-- 6/8/-- --/--/-- 10/10/-- RV/RV/-- RV/RV/-- 3/3/-- 1/1/-- --/RV-- RV/--/-- --/--/-- 21/21/-- --/--/-- Oct. 19 4/4/-- --/--/-- 5/6/-- --/--/-- 9/9/-- --/--/-- 24/23/-- 3/3/-- 1/1/-- RV/RV/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- RV/--/-- --/--/-- Oct. 26 3/3/6 --/--/-- 4/4/3 --/--/-- 9/8/11 --/--/-- 16/17/19 7/9/4 1/1/1 RV/RV/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/RV/-- --/--/-- Nov. 2 4/4/5 --/--/-- 3/3/3 RV/--/-- 17/17/20 --/--/-- 14/15/16 12/10/11 1/1/1 RV/RV/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- RV/--/-- --/--/-- Nov. 9 4/3/-- --/--/-- 9/9/-- --/RV/-- 16/14/-- --/--/-- 20/20/-- 10/10/-- 1/1/-- RV/RV/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- RV/RV/-- --/--/-- Nov. 16 2/2/5 RV/RV/-- 16/17/9 --/--/-- 9/10/15 --/--/-- RV/RV/17 8/8/10 4/4/1 19/20/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- RV/RV/-- --/--/-- Nov. 23 2/1/1 RV/RV/-- 15/16/14 --/--/-- 8/8/10 --/--/-- RV/RV/-- 18/19/8 4/4/4 17/17/20 --/--/-- --/--/-- RV/RV/-- --/--/-- Nov. 30 1/1/1 --/RV/-- 20/21/15 --/--/-- 15/15/9 --/--/-- 23/24/-- 13/14/19 10/10/4 14/13/17 --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- Dec. 7 1/1/1 --/--/-- 19/19/19 --/--/-- 13/13/13 --/--/-- 22/23/23 9/12/9 8/8/7 16/14/16 --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- FINAL --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/-- --/--/--

SEC ATTENDANCE UPDATE School Stadium(s) Capacity Games 100%+ Total Att. Average Att. Pct. of Capacity Alabama Bryant-Denny Stadium 101,821 7 5 710,736 101,534 99.72 Arkansas Donald W. Reynolds Razorback (Fayetteville) 72,000 6 1 399,124 66,521 92.39 War Memorial (Little Rock) 54,120 1 1 54,949 54,949 101.53 7 2 454,073 64,868 96.96 Auburn Pat Dye Field at Jordan-Hare Stadium 87,451 7 7 612,157 87,451 100.00 Florida Ben Hill Griffin at Stadium at Florida Field 88,548 6 1 515,001 85,834 96.93 Georgia Sanford Stadium 92,746 7 7 649,222 92,746 100.00 Kentucky Commonwealth Stadium 62,093 7 1 403,022 57,572 92.72 LSU Tiger Stadium 102,321 7 3 712,063 101,723 99.42 Ole Miss Vaught-Hemingway/Hollingsworth Field 60,580 7 6 430,829 61,547 101.60 Miss. State Davis Wade Stadium at Scott Field 61,337 7 4 428,772 61,127 99.66 Missouri Memorial Stadium / Faurot Field 72,000 7 0 456,996 65,285 91.42 South Carolina Williams-Brice Stadium 80,250 7 5 569,755 81,381 101.41 Tennessee Neyland Stadium/Shields-Watkins Field 102,455 7 4 698,276 99,754 97.36 Texas A&M Kyle Field 106,000 6 1 630,725 105,122 99.17 Vanderbilt Vanderbilt Stadium 40,350 7 1 230,803 32,972 81.71 LP Field 69,143 1 0 43,260 43,260 62.57 8 1 274,063 34,258 72.14 TOTALS 78,326 97 47 (48.45%) 7,545,710 77,791 99.32 Neutral Site Games [Florida vs. Georgia, Jacksonville] 82,000 1 1 83,004 83,004 101.22 [Arkansas vs. Texas A&M, Arlington] 71,167 1 0 68,113 68,113 95.71 [SEC Championship Game, Atlanta] 71,500 1 1 73,526 73,526 TOTALS 77,783 100 49 (49.00%) 7,770,353 77,704 99.90

SEC OVERTIME RECORDS Team Total Pct. vs. Non-SEC Last Overtime Game BREAKDOWN OF LENGTH OF OVERTIMES Alabama 5-8 .385 0-1 Alabama 20, LSU 13 (1) (2014) /OTs Games Last Game Arkansas 9-5 .643 1-1 Texas A&M 35, Arkansas 28 (1) (2014) 7 2 Arkansas 71, Kentucky 63 (2003) Auburn 7-5 .583 4-1 Auburn 31, UL-Monroe 28 (1) (2012) 6 1 Tennessee 41, Arkansas 38 (2002) Florida 4-3 .571 0-0 South Carolina 23, Florida 20 (2014) 5 1 Tennessee 51, Alabama 43 (2003) Georgia 6-5 .545 3-3 Georgia Tech 30, Georgia 24 (1) (2014) 4 3 Missouri 51, Tennessee 48 (2012) Kentucky 2-5 .286 0-2 Western Kentucky 32, Kentucky 31 (1) (2012) 3 5 Florida 36, Kentucky 30 (2014) LSU 8-6 .571 1-0 Alabama 20, LSU 13 (1) (2014) 2 10 Georgia 41, Georgia Tech 34 (2) (2013) Ole Miss 6-7 .462 2-1 Mississippi State 17, Ole Miss 10 (1) (2013) 1 59 Georgia Tech 30, Georgia 24 (1) (2014) Miss. State 5-4 .556 3-0 Mississippi State 17, Ole Miss 10 (1) (2013) Missouri 1-1 .500 0-0 S. Carolina 27, Missouri 24 (2) (2013) NOTES: South Carolina 2-3 .400 0-0 South Carolina 23, Florida 20 (2014) First Overtime Game: Nov. 16, 1996 at Auburn (Georgia 56, Auburn 49 - 4 OT) Tennessee 11-5 .688 1-1 Tennessee 45, South Carolina 42 (1) (2014) First Non-Conference Overtime Game: Aug. 30, 1997 at Oxford (Ole Miss 24, Central Florida 23) Texas A&M 1-0 1.000 0-0 Texas A&M 35, Arkansas 28 (1) (2014) Longest Current Consecutive Win Streaks in Overtime Games: 4 (Florida) Vanderbilt 2-6 .250 1-2 Tennessee 27, Vanderbilt 21 (1) (2011) Most Overtime Games in a Year: 11 (2014) TOTALS 16-12 (.571) 2014 SEC Football SEC Postseason Bowl Games SEC FOOTBALL PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

2014 SEASON 2013 SEASON Week 1 (Games of Aug. 28-31): Offense - Kenny Hill, QB, Texas A&M; , RB, Week 1 (Games of Aug. 29-31): Offense - Todd Gurley, RB, Georgia; Defense - Robenson Georgia; Defense - Amarlo Herrera, LB, Georgia; Special Teams - Adam Griffith, PK, Alabama; Therezie, DB, Auburn; Special Teams - , DR/PR/WR, Alabama; Offensive Lineman Offensive Lineman - Jon Toth, C, Kentucky; Defensive Lineman - Preston Smith, DE, Mississippi - La’el Collins, OT, LSU; Defensive Lineman - Trey Flowers, DE, Arkansas; Freshman - Laquon State; Freshman - Daniel Carlson, P, Auburn. Treadwell, WR, Ole Miss. Week 2 (Games of Sept. 6): Offense - Maty Mauk, QB , Missouri; Defense - Cliff Coleman, DB, Week 2 (Games of Sept. 7): Offense - , QB, Georgia; Defense - Brian Randolph, Ole Miss; Special Teams - Elliott Fry, PK, South Carolina; Offensive Lineman - Max Garcia, OL, DB, Tennessee; Special Teams - Odell Beckham Jr., KR/PR/WR, LSU; Offensive Lineman - Kevin Florida; Defensive Lineman - Preston Smith, DE, Mississippi State; Freshman - Jalen Hurd, RB, Mitchell, OG, Kentucky; Defensive Lineman - Markus Golden, DE, Missouri; Freshman - Alex Tennessee. Collins, RB, Arkansas. Week 3 (Games of Sept. 13): Offense - Alex Collins, RB, Arkansas; Defense - Shane Ray, DL, Week 3 (Games of Sept. 14): Offense - AJ McCarron, QB, Alabama; Defense - Ego Ferguson, Missouri; Special Teams: Kyle Christy, P, Florida; Offensive Lineman - Corey Robinson, OT, South DE, LSU; Special Teams - Alan D’Appollonio, LS, Arkansas; Offensive Lineman - Gabe Jackson, G, Carolina; Defensive Lineman - Preston Smith, DE, Mississippi State; Freshman - Garrett Mississippi State; Defensive Lineman - Kony Ealy, DE, Missouri; Freshman - Alex Collins, RB, Johnson, WR, Kentucky. Arkansas. Week 4 (Games of Sept. 20): Offense - Amari Cooper, WR, Alabama; Dak Prescott, QB, Week 4 (Games of Sept. 21): Offense - Jeremy Hill, RB, LSU; Defense - Dante Fowler, DL, Mississippi State; Defense - Joshua Holsey, DB, Auburn; Special Teams - Darrius Sims, KR, Florida; Special Teams - Jeff Scott, PR/RB, Ole Miss; Offensive Lineman - Clayton Stadnik, C, Vanderbilt; Offensive Lineman - Ben Beckwith, OL, Mississippi State; Defensive Lineman - Trey South Carolina; Defensive Lineman - Chris Smith, DE, Arkansas; Freshman - Reggie Davis, WR, Flowers, DE, Arkansas; Freshman - Sony Michel, RB, Georgia. Georgia. Week 5 (Games of Sept. 27): Offense - Todd Gurley, RB, Georgia; Defense - Deshazor Everett, Week 5 (Games of Sept. 28): Offense - Aaron Murray, QB, Georgia; Defense - C.J. Mosley, LB, DB, Texas A&M; Special Teams - Quan Bray, PR/WR, Auburn; Offensive Lineman - Darrian Miller, Alabama; Special Teams - Marshall Morgan, PK, Georgia; Offensive Lineman - A.J. Cann, OG, OT, Kentucky; Defensive Lineman - Shane Ray, DE, Missouri; Freshman - Brandon Harris, QB, South Carolina; Defensive Lineman - , DE, Missouri; Freshman - Vernon LSU. Hargreaves, III, DB, Florida. Week 6 (Games of Oct. 4): Offense - Bo Wallace, QB, Ole Miss; Defense - Richie Brown, LB, Week 6 (Games of Oct. 5): Offense - Zach Mettenberger, QB, LSU; Defense - Loucheiz Purifoy, Mississippi State; Special Teams - Daniel Carlson, PK, Auburn; Offensive Lineman - Ben DB, Florida; Special Teams - Marshall Morgan, PK, Georgia; Offensive Lineman - Chris Burnette, Beckwith, C/G, Mississippi State; Defensive Lineman - Alvin “Bud” Dupree, DE, Kentucky; OG, Georgia; Defensive Lineman - Michael Sam, DE, Missouri; Freshman - Carl Lawson, DE, Freshman -Jalen Tabor, DB, Florida; Nick Chubb, RB, Georgia. Auburn. Week 7 (Games of Oct. 11): Offense - Dak Prescott, QB, Mississippi State; Defense - Cody Week 7 (Games of Oct. 12): Offense - Johnny Manziel, QB, Texas A&M; Defense - Kentrell Prewitt, DB, Ole Miss; Special Teams - JK Scott, P, Alabama; Offensive Lineman - Vadal Brothers, LB, Missouri; Special Teams - Sam Irwin-Hill, P, Arkansas; Offensive Lineman - Alexanader, OG, LSU; Defensive Lineman - Marquis Haynes, DE, Ole Miss; Freshman - Nick Anthony Steen, OG, Alabama; Defensive Lineman - Danielle Hunter, DE, LSU; Freshman - Chubb, RB, Georgia; Leonard Fournette, RB, LSU. Jeremy Johnson, QB, Auburn. Week 8 (Games of Oct. 18): Offense - Nick Chubb, RB, Georgia; Defense - Damian Swann, S, Week 8 (Games of Oct. 19): Offense - Nick Marshall, QB, Auburn; Defense - Michael Sam, DE, Georgia; Special Teams - JMarcus Murphy, KR/PR, Missouri; Offensive Lineman - , Missouri; Special Teams - Michael Palardy, P/K/KOS, Tennessee; Offensive Lineman - Wesley OL, Alabama; Defensive Lineman - Shane Ray, DE, Missouri ; Freshman - Marquis Haynes, DE, Johnson, OT, Vanderbilt; Defensive Lineman - Cameron Whigham, DE, Ole Miss; Freshman - Ole Miss. Maty Mauk, QB, Missouri. Week 9 (Games of Oct. 25): Offense - Josh Robinson, RB, Mississippi State; Amari Cooper, Week 9 (Games of Oct. 26): Offense - Connor Shaw, QB, South Carolina; Defense - Landon WR, Alabama; Defense - Kendell Beckwith, LB, LSU; Special Teams - Will Gleeson, P, Ole Miss; Collins, S, Alabama; Special Teams - Elliott Fry, PK, South Carolina; Offensive Lineman - Gabe Offensive Lineman - Sebastian Tretola, OG, Arkansas; Defensive Lineman - Kaleb Eulls, DT, Jackson, OG, Mississippi State; Defensive Lineman - Kelcy Quarles, DT, South Carolina; Freshman Mississippi State; Freshman - Leonard Fournette, RB, LSU. - Jeremy Johnson, QB, Auburn. Week 10 (Games of Nov. 1): Offense - Josh Dobbs, QB, Tennessee; Defense - Kris Frost, LB, Week 10 (Games of Nov. 2): Offense - Tre Mason, RB, Auburn; Defense - Victor Hampton, Auburn; Special Teams - Mike McNeely, H, Florida; Offensive Lineman - Max Garcia, OL, Florida; DB, South Carolina; Special Teams - Marshall Morgan, PK, Georgia; Offensive Lineman - Justin Defensive Lineman - Shane Ray, DE, Missouri; Freshman - Johnny McCrary, QB, Vanderbilt. Britt, LT, Missouri; Defensive Lineman - Caleb Azubike, DE, Vanderbilt; Freshman - Maty Mauk, Week 11 (Games of Nov. 8): Offense - Kyle Allen, QB, Texas A&M; Defense - Reggie Ragland, QB, Missouri. LB, Alabama; Special Teams - Isaiah McKenzie, KR/PR, Georgia; Offensive Lineman - Arie Week 11 (Games of Nov. 9): Offense - Nick Marshall, QB, Auburn; Defense - C.J. Mosley, LB, Koaundjio, OG, Alabama; Defensive Lineman - Lorenzo Carter, DL, Georgia; Freshman - Treon Alabama; Special Teams - Chris Davis, RS, Auburn; Offensive Lineman - Laremy Tunsil, OT, Ole Harris, QB, Florida; Nick Chubb, RB, Georgia. Miss; Defensive Lineman - Garrison Smith, NG, Georgia; Freshman - Maty Mauk, QB, Missouri. Week 12 (Games of Nov. 15): Offense - Russell Hansbrough, RB, Missouri; Defense - Nick Week 12 (Games of Nov. 16): Offense - Jordan Matthews, WR, Vanderbilt; Defense - C.J. Perry, S, Alabama; Martrell Spaight, LB, Arkansas; Special Teams - JK Scott, P, Alabama; Mosley, LB, Alabama; Special Teams - , P, Alabama; Offensive Lineman - Reese Offensive Lineman - Dan Skipper, OT, Arkansas; Defensive Lineman - Derek Barnett, DE, Dismukes, OL, Auburn; Defensive Lineman - Robert Nkemdiche, DL, Ole Miss; Freshman - Elliott Tennessee; Freshman - Treon Harris, QB, Florida; Nick Chubb, RB, Georgia. Fry, PK, South Carolina. Week 13 (Games of Nov. 22): Offense - Dak Prescott, QB, Mississippi State; Defense - Markus Week 13 (Games of Nov. 23): Offense - Terrence Magee, RB, LSU; Defense - Chase Garnham, Golden, DE, Missouri ; Special Teams - Sam Irwin-Hill, P, Arkansas; Offensive Lineman - Ben LB, Vanderbilt; Special Teams - Harrold Brantley, DT, Missouri; Offensive Lineman - Gabe Beckwith, OG, Mississippi State ; Defensive Lineman - Darius Philon, DT, Arkansas ; Freshman - Jackson, OL, Mississippi State; Defensive Lineman - Garrison Smith, DE, Georgia; Freshman - Treon Harris, QB, Florida; Nick Chubb, RB, Georgia. Paris Head, DB, Vanderbilt; Rashard Robinson, DB, LSU. Week 14 (Games of Nov. 27-29): Offense - Amari Cooper, WR, Alabama; Defense - Tony Week 14 (Games of Nov. 28-30): Offense - Nick Marshall, QB, Auburn; Defense - E.J. Conner, DB, Ole Miss ; Special Teams - Andrew Baggett, PK, Missouri; Cameron Sutton, PR, Gaines, CB, Missouri; Nickoe Whitley, S, Mississippi State; Special Teams - Chris Davis, CB/KR, Tennessee ; Offensive Lineman - , OL, Alabama ; Defensive Lineman - C.J. Auburn; Carey Spear, PK, Vanderbilt; Offensive Lineman - Corey Miller, DL, Tennessee; Defensive Johnson, DE, Ole Miss; Alvin "Bud" Dupree, DE, Kentucky; Freshman - Leonard Fournette, RB, Lineman - Kelcy Quarles, DT, South Carolina; Corey Miller, DL, Tennessee; Freshman - Chris LSU. Jones, DT, Mississippi State; Anthony Jennings, QB, LSU. 2014 SEC Football SEC FOOTBALL NOTES SEC FOOTBALL INSTANT REPLAY STATISTICS SEC BOWL AGREEMENTS

Games Using Play Plays Average Length The Southeastern Conference has agreements with nine postseason bowls and a new process SEC Replay Stoppages Overturned of Review for the assignment of SEC member schools to bowl games, beginning with the 2014 season 2005 77 66 17 (25.76%) 1:53 and extending for six years. 2006 89 123 29 (23.58%) 1:41 2007 87 139 38 (27.34%) 1:36 The new SEC bowl process coincides with the beginning of the new College Football Playoff 2008 85 122 39 (31.97%) 1:24 2009 85 115 28 (24.35%) 1:26 that follows the 2014 college football season. The SEC will also participate in the Allstate Sugar 2010 85 119 37 (31.09%) 1:36 Bowl and the Capital One Orange Bowl (in selected years). 2011 86 95 36 (37.89%) 1:37 2012 101 138 52 (37.68%) 1:28 Under the new SEC bowl system, the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl in Orlando (vs. Big 2013 101 146 54 (36.99%) 1:22 Ten/ACC), a longtime SEC bowl, will have the first selection of available SEC teams after any TOTALS 796 1063 329 (30.95%) 1:34 conference schools have qualified for the College Football Playoff, the Allstate Sugar Bowl or the Capital One Orange Bowl. 2014 INSTANT REPLAY STATISTICS Following the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl, there will be a pool of six bowls comprised of Games Using Play Plays Average Length SEC Replay Stoppages Overturned of Review renewals with the Outback Bowl in Tampa (vs. Big Ten), Franklin American Mortgage Music Week 1 9 12 4 (33.33%) 1:25 City Bowl in Nashville (vs. ACC/Big Ten), TaxSlayer Bowl in Jacksonville (vs. ACC/Big Ten) and Week 2 11 13 3 (23.00%) 1:06 AutoZone Liberty Bowl in Memphis (vs. Big 12), as well as new agreements with the Advocare Week 3 8 18 8(44.00%) 1:20 V100 Texas Bowl in Houston (vs. Big 12) and Belk Bowl in Charlotte (vs. ACC). Week 4 6 11 3 (27.27%) 1:39 Week 5 7 8 4 (50.00%) 1:18 Week 6 6 15 5 (33.00%) 1:34 In consultation with SEC member institutions, as well as these six bowls, the conference will Week 7 8 9 2 (22.22%) 1:20 make the assignments for the bowl games in this newly created pool system. Week 8 6 5 3 (60.00%) 1:46 Week 9 5 5 1 (20.00%) 1:26 The SEC has also renewed its relationship with both the Birmingham Bowl (vs. American) and Week 10 7 14 5 (35.71%) 1:14 the Duck Commander Independence Bowl in Shreveport (vs. ACC). The Birmingham Bowl will Week 11 6 11 4 (36.36%) 1:38 Week 12 6 9 4 (44.00%) 1:33 have the first selection of available teams following the pool of six bowls. The Duck Week 13 8 15 9 (60.00%) 1:29 Commander Independence Bowl will have the next selection of available teams following the Week 14 6 17 6 (35.29%) 1:43 Birmingham Bowl. SECCG 1 1 0 (00.00%1:05 TOTALS 101 166 62 (37.35%) 1:28

2014 SEC FOOTBALL VIDEO REPLAY THE OBJECTIVE To allow for specific types of officiating calls to be immediately reviewed during all games hosted by SEC teams.

THE COACHES' CHALLENGE The head coach may challenge the ruling of any reviewable play. He retains a challenge if his initial challenge is successful and thus results in a reversal by the replay official. The head coach will then have a single challenge that he may use anytime during the game if his team has not used all its timeouts. Thus a team may have a total of two challenges in the game, but only if the first results in a reversal of the on-field ruling. A head coach may not challenge an on-field ruling if all of the team’s timeouts have been used for that half or extra period.

THE SOURCE All reviewable video comes direct from either the television network broadcasting the game or other TV production facilities that meet established conference standards. The Southeastern Conference has used instant replay since 2005.

THE PLAYS Scoring Plays Reviewable plays involving a potential score include: a. A potential touchdown or safety. [Exception: Safety by penalty for fouls that are not specifically reviewable with the exception of the location of the passer when an intentional grounding foul results in a safety.] b. Field goal attempts if and only if the ball is ruled (a) below or above the crossbar or (b) inside or outside the uprights when it is lower than the top of the uprights. If the ball is higher than the top of the uprights as it crosses the end line, the play may not be reviewed.

Passes Reviewable plays involving passes include: a. Pass ruled complete, incomplete or intercepted anywhere in the field of play or an end zone. b. Forward pass touched by a player or an official. c. Forward pass or forward handing when a ball carrier is or has been beyond the neutral zone. d. A forward pass or forward handing after a change of team possession. e. Pass ruled forward or backward when thrown from behind the neutral zone. 1. If the pass is ruled forward and is incomplete, the play is reviewable only if there is clear recovery of a loose ball in the immediate continuing action after the loose ball or if the ball is out of bounds. If the replay official does not have indisputable video evidence as to which team recovers, the ruling of incomplete pass stands. 2. If the replay official reverses an incomplete forward pass ruling and the ball is recovered, it belongs to the recovering team at the spot of the recovery and any advance is nullified. 2014 SEC Football

Dead Ball and Loose Ball Reviewable plays involving potential dead balls and loose balls include: a. Loose ball by a potential passer ruled a fumble. b. Loose ball by a passer ruled incomplete forward pass when there is clear recovery in the immediate continuing action after the loose ball. 1. If the replay official does not have indisputable video evidence as to which team recovers, the ruling of incomplete pass stands. 2. If the replay official rules fumble, the ball belongs to the recovering team at the spot of the recovery and any advance is nullified. c. Live ball not ruled dead in possession of a ball carrier. d. Loose ball ruled dead, or live ball ruled dead in possession of a ball carrier when the clear recovery of a loose ball occurs in the immediate continuing action. 1. If the ball is ruled dead and the replay official does not have indisputable video evidence as to which team recovers, the dead-ball ruling stands. 2. If the replay official rules that the ball was not dead, it belongs to the recovering team at the spot of the recovery and any advance is nullified. e. Ball carrier’s forward progress with respect to a first down. f. Catch or recovery of a fumble by a Team A player other than the fumbler before any change of possession during fourth down or a try. g. Ball carrier in or out of bounds. If a ball carrier is ruled out of bounds, the play is not reviewable, except as in Rules 12-3-1-a and 12-3-3-d. h. Catch, recovery or touching of a loose ball by a player potentially touching or having touched a sideline or end line or in the field of play. i. A loose ball touching on or beyond a sideline, goal line, or end line, touching a pylon, or breaking the plane of a goal line.

Kicks Reviewable plays involving kicks include: a. Touching of a kick. b. Player beyond the neutral zone when kicking the ball. c. Kicking team player advancing a ball after a potential muffed kick/fumble by the receiving team. d. Scrimmage kick crossing the neutral zone.

Miscellaneous Situations that may be addressed by the replay official: a. The number of players on the field for either team during a live ball. b. Clock adjustment and status when a ruling is reviewed. c. Clock adjustment at the end of any quarter. If at the end of any quarter the game clock expires, either during a down in which it should be stopped by rule when the ball becomes dead or following the down upon a request for an available team timeout, the replay official may restore time only under these conditions: 1. The replay official has indisputable video evidence that time should have remained on the game clock when the ball became dead or when the team timeout was granted; 2. In the second and fourth quarters only, the team in possession when the ball became dead would next put the ball in play from scrimmage (not the try); 3. In the fourth quarter only, either the score is tied or the team that will next snap the ball is behind by eight points or fewer; and 4. The replay official’s video evidence includes the timeout signal by an official in the case where the game clock should have stopped for a requested team timeout. d. Correcting the number of a down. 1. This includes the result of a penalty enforcement that includes an automatic first down or loss of down. 2. The correction may be made at any time within that series of downs or before the ball is legally put in play after that series. e. Any person who is not a player interfering with live-ball action occurring in the field of play (Rule 9-2-3). f. The player disqualification portion and the penalty for targeting fouls under 9-1-3 and 9-1-4. Forcible contact to the head or neck area of the crown of the helmet are reviewable. Note that if the disqualifica- tion is reversed and the only foul is Targeting, the 15 yard penalty will not be enforced.

Limitations on Reviewable Plays No other plays or officiating decisions are reviewable. However, the replay official may correct egregious errors, including those involving the game clock, whether or not a play is reviewable. This excludes fouls that are not specifically reviewable (Reviewable fouls: Rules 12-3-2-c and d, 12-3-4-b and 12-3-5-a).

THE PROCESS Each SEC football stadium has a secured replay booth equipped with the HD Instant Replay system provided by DVSport. Three individuals work in the booth for the duration of the game: 1. Replay Official, 2. Communicator, 3. Technician. The Replay Official and the Communicator are selected and assigned by the Conference Office.

A live HD video feed is sent directly to the replay booth from the TV truck. The Technician watches the feed on an input monitor while recording it into the DVSport Replay System. The Technician also marks the beginning of each play while the Communicator marks all incoming replays.

Each play and subsequent replay then appears on a touch screen in front of the Replay Technician. As the Technician and the Communicator mark the incoming video, each view will appear as a small picture on the computer touch screen. At any time, the Replay Technician can touch the thumbnail and immediately send that play or replay to the Replay Official.

With the Communicator's assistance, the Replay Official can quickly jump between replays while playing back the video. All replay video navigation is done via a jog shuttle remote controlled by the Replay Official. All video is viewed on an HD monitor that sits in front of the Replay Official. The touch screen is only used to select the replays and to log specific play data in the event a call is overturned.

While all plays are reviewed between the whistle and the beginning of the next play, the Replay Official can stop play on the field by using a pager system. Six of the seven on-field officials wear pagers. If play is stopped the Referee announces on the stadium PA microphone that play has been stopped so the previous play can be reviewed. The Referee then proceeds to the sideline headset, which provides direct communication to the Replay Official in the booth. Once the play has been reviewed, the Replay Official notifies the Referee, who then announces the decision on the stadium PA system.

RECENT ADDITIONS * Monitors may be used to view a live telecast or webcast in the football coaching booth. The home team is responsible for assuring identical television capability in the coaches’ booths of both teams. This capability may not include replay equipment or recorders.

* If at the end of a half the game clock expires, either during a down in which it should be stopped by rule when the ball becomes dead or following the down upon a request for an available team timeout, the replay official may restore time only under these conditions: 1. The replay official has indisputable video evidence that time should have remained on the game clock when the ball became dead or when the team timeout was granted; 2. The team in possession when the ball became dead would next put the ball in play from scrimmage; 3. In the fourth quarter only, either the score is tied or the team that will next snap the ball is behind by eight points or fewer; and 4. The replay official’s video evidence includes the timeout signal by an official in the case where the game clock should have stopped for a requested team timeout.

THE EQUIPMENT Each SEC member institution uses the HD Replay System developed by DVSport. The replay systems are maintained by the home institution with technical support from DVSport. 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games

SEC IN POST-SEASON BOWLS

The SEC record in the bowl games that it is participating this Jan. 1, 1999 - Penn State 26, Kentucky 14 AUTOZONE LIBERTY BOWL (16-8) season (Listing includes only games involving current SEC mem- Jan. 1, 2000 - Georgia 28, Purdue 25 [OT] Dec. 19, 1959 - Penn State 7, Alabama 0 bers/Record does not include games when two teams played vs. Jan. 1, 2001 - South Carolina 24, Ohio State 7 Dec. 21, 1963 - Mississippi State 16, N.C. State 12 each other): Jan. 1, 2002 - South Carolina 31, Ohio State 28 Dec. 18, 1965 - Ole Miss 13, Auburn 7 Jan. 1, 2003 - Michigan 38, Florida 30 Dec. 16, 1967 - N.C. State 14, Georgia 7 BCS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME (7-1) Jan. 1, 2004 - Iowa 37, Florida 17 Dec. 14, 1968 - Ole Miss 34, Virginia Tech 17 Jan. 8, 2007 - Florida 41, Ohio State 14 (at Glendale, Ariz.) Jan. 1, 2005 - Georgia 24, Wisconsin 21 Dec. 13, 1969 - Colorado 47, Alabama 33 Jan. 7, 2008 - LSU 38, Ohio State 24 (at New Orleans, La.) Jan. 2, 2006 - Florida 31, Iowa 24 Dec. 20, 1971 - Tennessee 14, Arkansas 13 Jan. 8, 2009 - Florida 24, Oklahoma 14 (at Miami, Fla.) Jan. 1, 2007 - Penn State 20, Tennessee 10 Dec. 16, 1974 - Tennessee 7, Maryland 3 Jan. 7, 2010 - Alabama 37, Texas 21 (at Pasadena, Calif.) Jan. 1, 2008 - Tennessee 21, Wisconsin 17 Dec. 20, 1976 - Alabama 36, UCLA 6 Jan. 10, 2011 - Auburn 22, Oregon 19 (at Glendale, Ariz.) Jan. 1, 2009 - Iowa 31, South Carolina 10 Dec. 23, 1978 - Missouri 20, LSU 15 Jan. 9, 2012 - Alabama 21, LSU 0 (at New Orleans, La.) Jan. 1, 2010 - Auburn 38, Northwestern 35 (OT) Dec. 29, 1982 - Alabama 21, Illinois 15 Jan. 7, 2013 - Alabama 42, Notre Dame (at Miami, Fla.) Jan. 1, 2011 - Florida 37, Penn State 24 Dec. 27, 1984 - Auburn 21, Arkansas 15 Jan. 6, 2014 - Florida State 34, Auburn 31 (at Pasadena, Calif.) Jan. 2, 2012 - Michigan State 33, Georgia 30 (OT) Dec. 27, 1985 - Baylor 21, LSU 7 Jan. 1, 2013 - South Carolina 33, Michigan 28 Dec. 29, 1986 - Tennessee 21, Minnesota 14 BUFFALO WILD WINGS CITRUS BOWL (18-11-1) Jan. 1, 2014 - LSU 21, Iowa 14 Dec. 29, 1987 - Georgia 20, Arkansas 17 Dec. 22, 1973 - Miami (OH) 16, Florida 7 Dec. 28, 1989 - Ole Miss 42, Air Force 29 Dec. 21, 1974 - Miami (OH) 21, Georgia 10 CHICK-FIL-A PEACH BOWL (18-15) Dec. 29, 1991 - Air Force 38, Mississippi State 15 *Dec. 20, 1975 - Miami (OH) 20, South Carolina 7 Dec. 30, 1968 - LSU 31, Florida State 27 Dec. 31, 1992 - Ole Miss 13, Air Force 0 Dec. 22, 1979 - LSU 34, Wake Forest 10 *Dec. 30, 1969 - West Virginia 14, South Carolina 3 Dec. 29, 2006 - South Carolina 44, Houston 36 Dec. 20, 1980 - Florida 35, Maryland 20 Dec. 30, 1971 - Ole Miss 41, Georgia Tech 18 Dec. 29, 2007 - Mississippi State 10, Central Florida 3 Dec. 18, 1982 - Auburn 33, Boston College 26 Dec. 28, 1973 - Geogia 17, Maryland 16 Jan. 2, 2009 - Kentucky 25, East Carolina 19 Dec. 17, 1983 - Tennessee 30, Maryland 23 Dec. 28, 1974 - Vanderbilt 6, Texas A&M 6 Jan. 2, 2010 - Arkansas 20, East Carolina 17 (OT) Dec. 22, 1984 - Georgia 17, Florida State 17 Dec. 31, 1976 - Kentucky 21, North Carolina 0 Dec. 31, 2010 - Central Florida 10, Georgia 6 Jan. 1, 1987 - Auburn 16, Southern Cal 7 Dec. 31, 1981 - West Virginia 26, Florida 6 Dec. 31, 2011 - Cincinnati 31, Vanderbilt 24 Jan. 1, 1993 - Georgia 21, Ohio State 14 Dec. 31, 1982 - Iowa 28, Tennessee 22 Dec. 31, 2013 - Mississippi State 44, Rice 7 Jan. 1, 1994 - Penn State 31, Tennessee 13 Jan. 2, 1988 - Tennessee 27, Indiana 22 Jan. 2, 1995 - Alabama 24, Ohio State 17 Dec. 30, 1989 - Syracuse 19, Georgia 18 FRANKLIN AMERICAN MORTGAGE MUSIC CITY (7-8) Jan. 1, 1996 - Tennessee 20, Ohio State 14 Dec. 29, 1990 - Auburn 27, Indiana 23 Dec. 29, 1998 - Virginia Tech 38, Alabama 7 Jan. 1, 1997 - Tennessee 48, Northwestern 28 Jan. 2, 1993 - North Carolina 21, Miss. State 17 Dec. 29, 1999 - Syracuse 20, Kentucky 13 Jan. 1, 1998 - Florida 21, Penn State 6 Dec. 31, 1993 - Clemson 14, Kentucky 13 Dec. 28, 2000 - West Virginia 49, Ole Miss 38 Jan. 1, 1999 - Michigan 45, Arkansas 31 Jan. 1, 1995 - N.C. State 28, Miss. State 24 Dec. 28, 2001 - Boston College 20, Georgia 16 Jan. 1, 2000 - Michigan State 37, Florida 34 Dec. 30, 1995 - Virginia 34, Georgia 27 Dec. 30, 2002 - Minnesota 29, Arkansas 14 Jan. 1, 2001 - Michigan 31, Auburn 28 Dec. 28, 1996 - LSU 10, Clemson 7 Dec. 31, 2003 - Auburn 28, Wisconsin 14 Jan. 1, 2002 - Tennessee 45, Michigan 17 Jan. 2, 1998 - Auburn 21, Clemson 17 Dec. 31, 2004 - Minnesota 20, Alabama 16 Jan. 1, 2003 - Auburn 13, Penn State 7 Dec. 31, 1998 - Georgia 35, Virginia 33 Dec. 29, 2006 - Kentucky 28, Clemson 20 Jan. 1, 2004 - Georgia 34, Purdue 27 (OT) Dec. 30, 1999 - Miss. State 17, Clemson 7 Dec. 31, 2007 - Kentucky 35, Florida State 28 Jan. 1, 2005 - Iowa 30, LSU 25 Dec. 29, 2000 - LSU 28, Georgia Tech 14 Dec. 31, 2008 - Vanderbilt 16, Boston College 14 Jan. 2, 2006 - West Virginia 38, Georgia 35 Dec. 31, 2001 - North Carolina 16, Auburn 10 Dec. 27, 2009 - Clemson 21, Kentucky 13 Jan. 1, 2007 - Wisconsin 17, Arkansas 14 Dec. 31, 2002 - Maryland 30, Tennessee 3 Dec. 30, 2010 - North Carolina 30, Tennessee 27 (OT) Jan. 1, 2008 - Michigan 41, Florida 35 Jan. 2, 2004 - Clemson 27, Tennessee 14 Dec. 30, 2011 - Mississippi State 23, Wake Forest 17 Jan. 1, 2009 - Georgia 24, Michigan State 12 Dec. 31, 2004 - Miami (Fla.) 27, Florida 10 Dec. 31, 2012 - Vanderbilt 38, N.C. State 24 Jan. 1, 2010 - Penn State 19, LSU 17 Dec. 30, 2005 - LSU 40, Miami (Fla.) 3 Dec. 30, 2013 - Ole Miss 25, Georgia Tech 17 Jan. 1, 2011 - Alabama 49, Michigan State 7 Dec. 30, 2006 - Georgia 31, Virginia Tech 24 Jan. 2, 2012 - South Carolina 30, Nebraska 13 Dec. 31, 2007 - Auburn 23, Clemson 20 BIRMINGHAM BOWL (2-2) Jan. 1, 2013 - Georgia 45, Nebraska 31 Dec. 31, 2008 - LSU 38, Georgia Tech 3 Jan. 2, 2010 - Connecticut 20, South Carolina 7 Jan. 1, 2014 - South Carolina 34, Wisconsin 24 Dec. 31, 2009 - Virginia Tech 37, Tennessee 14 Jan. 8, 2011 - Pittsburgh 27, Kentucky 10 Dec. 31, 2010 - Florida State 26, South Carolina 17 Jan. 5, 2013 - Ole Miss 38, Pittsburgh 17 OUTBACK BOWL (14-10) Dec. 31, 2011 - Auburn 43, Virginia 24 Jan. 4, 2014 - Vanderbilt 41, Houston 24 Dec. 23, 1986 - Boston College 27, Georgia 24 Dec. 31, 2012 - Clemson 25, LSU 24 Jan. 2, 1988 - Michigan 28, Alabama 24 Dec. 31, 2013 - Texas A&M 52, Duke 48 Jan. 2, 1989 - Syracuse 23, LSU 10 Jan. 1, 1990 - Auburn 31, Ohio State 14 Jan. 1, 1993 - Tennessee 38, Boston College 23 Jan. 1, 1996 - Penn State 43, Auburn 14 Jan. 1, 1997 - Alabama 17, Michigan 14 Jan. 1, 1998 - Georgia 33, Wisconsin 6 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games

SEC IN POST-SEASON BOWLS

INDEPENDENCE BOWL (12-3) SUGAR BOWL (28-30) Jan. 2, 1978 - Alabama 35, Ohio State 6 Dec. 10, 1983 - Air Force 9, Ole Miss 3 Jan. 1, 1936 - TCU 3, LSU 2 Jan. 1, 1979 - Alabama 14, Penn State 7 Dec. 20, 1986 - Ole Miss 20, Texas Tech 17 Jan. 1, 1937 - Santa Clara 21, LSU 14 Jan. 1, 1980 - Alabama 24, Arkansas 9 *Dec. 29, 1991 - Georgia 24, Arkansas 15 Jan. 1, 1938 - Santa Clara 6, LSU 0 Jan. 1, 1981 - Georgia 17, Notre Dame 10 Dec. 29, 1995 - LSU 45, Michigan State 26 Jan. 1, 1941 - Boston College 19, Tennessee 13 Jan. 1, 1982 - Pittsburgh 24, Georgia 20 Dec. 31, 1996 - Auburn 32, Army 29 Jan. 1, 1943 - Tennessee 14, Tulsa 7 Jan. 1, 1983 - Penn State 27, Georgia 23 Dec. 28, 1997 - LSU 27, Notre Dame 9 Jan. 1, 1945 - Duke 29, Alabama 26 Jan. 2, 1984 - Auburn 9, Michigan 7 Dec. 31, 1998 - Ole Miss 35, Texas Tech 18 Jan. 1, 1947 - Georgia 20, North Carolina 10 Jan. 1, 1985 - Nebraska 28, LSU 10 Dec. 31, 1999 - Ole Miss 27, Oklahoma 25 Jan. 1, 1948 - Texas 27, Alabama 7 Jan. 1, 1986 - Tennessee 35, Miami 7 Dec. 31, 2000 - Miss. State 43, Texas A&M 41 [OT] Jan. 2, 1950 - Oklahoma 35, LSU 0 Jan. 1, 1987 - Nebraska 30, LSU 15 Dec. 27, 2001 - Alabama 14, Iowa State 13 Jan. 1, 1951 - Kentucky 13, Oklahoma 7 Jan. 1, 1988 - Auburn 16, Syracuse 16 Dec. 27, 2002 - Ole Miss 27, Nebraska 23 Jan. 1, 1952 - Maryland 28, Tennessee 13 Jan. 2, 1989 - Florida State 13, Auburn 7 Dec. 31, 2003 - Arkansas 27, Missouri 14 Jan. 1, 1953 - Georgia Tech 24, Ole Miss 7 Jan. 1, 1990 - Miami 33, Alabama 25 Dec. 30, 2005 - Missouri 38, South Carolina 31 Jan. 1, 1955 - Navy 21, Ole Miss 0 Jan. 1, 1991 - Tennessee 23, Virginia 22 (19-22) Dec. 28, 2006 - Oklahoma State 34, Alabama 31 Jan. 1, 1957 - Baylor 13, Tennessee 7 Jan. 1, 1992 - Notre Dame 39, Florida 28 Dec. 30, 2007 - Alabama 30, Colorado 24 Jan. 1, 1958 - Ole Miss 39, Texas 7 Jan. 1, 1993 - Alabama 34, Miami 13 Dec. 28, 2009 - Georgia 44, Texas A&M 20 Jan. 1, 1959 - LSU 7, Clemson 0 Jan. 1, 1994 - Florida 41, West Virginia 7 Jan. 1, 1960 - Ole Miss 21, LSU 0 Jan. 2, 1995 - Florida State 23, Florida 17 TAXSLAYER BOWL (22-16) Jan. 2, 1961 - Ole Miss 14, Rice 6 Jan. 2, 1997 - Florida 52, Florida State 20 Jan. 1, 1946 - Wake Forest 26, South Carolina 14 Jan. 1, 1962 - Alabama 10, Arkansas 3 Jan. 2, 2001 - Miami (Fla.) 37, Florida 20 Jan. 1, 1948 - Georgia 20, Maryland 20 Jan. 1, 1963 - Ole Miss 17, Arkansas 13 Jan. 1, 2002 - LSU 47, Illinois 34 Jan. 1, 1953 - Florida 14, Tulsa 13 Jan. 1, 1964 - Alabama 12, Ole Miss 7 Jan. 1, 2003 - Georgia 26, Florida State 13 Jan. 1, 1954 - Texas Tech 35, Auburn 13 Jan. 1, 1965 - LSU 13, Syracuse 10 Jan. 4, 2004 - LSU 21, Oklahoma 14 Dec. 31, 1954 - Auburn 33, Baylor 13 Jan. 1, 1966 - Missouri 20, Florida 18 Jan. 3, 2005 - Auburn 16, Virginia Tech 13 Dec. 31, 1955 - Vanderbilt 25, Auburn 13 Jan. 2, 1967 - Alabama 34, Nebraska 7 Jan. 3, 2006 - LSU 41, Notre Dame 14 Dec. 28, 1957 - Tennessee 3, Texas A&M 0 Jan. 1, 1968 - LSU 20, Wyoming 13 Jan. 1, 2008 - Georgia 41, Hawaii 10 Dec. 27, 1958 - Ole Miss 7, Florida 3 Jan. 1, 1969 - Arkansas 16, Georgia 2 Jan. 2, 2009 - Utah 31, Alabama 17 Jan. 2, 1960 - Arkansas 14, Georgia Tech 7 Jan. 1, 1970 - Ole Miss 27, Arkansas 22 Jan. 1, 2010 - Florida 51, Cincinnati 24 Dec. 31, 1960 - Florida 13, Baylor 12 Jan. 1, 1971 - Tennessee 34, Air Force 13 Jan. 4, 2011 - Ohio State 31, Arkansas 26 Dec. 29, 1962 - Florida 17, Penn State 7 Jan. 1, 1972 - Oklahoma 40, Auburn 22 Jan. 2, 2013 - Louisville 33, Florida 23 Dec. 31, 1966 - Tennessee 18, Syracuse 12 Dec. 31, 1973 - Notre Dame 24, Alabama 23 Jan. 2, 2014 - Oklahoma 45, Alabama 31 Dec. 28, 1968 - Missouri 35, Alabama 10 Dec. 31, 1974 - Nebraska 13, Florida 10 Dec. 27, 1969 - Florida 14, Tennessee 13 Dec. 31, 1975 - Alabama 13, Penn State 6 Jan. 2, 1971 - Auburn 35, Ole Miss 28 Jan. 1, 1977 - Pittsburgh 27, Georgia 3 Dec. 31, 1971 - Georgia 7, North Carolina 3 SEC SENDS NCAA-RECORD 12 TEAMS TO BOWL GAMES Dec. 30, 1972 - Auburn 24, Colorado 3 The SEC will have a NCAA-record 12 teams participate in post-season bowl games in 2014-15. The SEC has sent no less than Dec. 29, 1973 - Texas Tech 28, Tennessee 19 eight teams to post-season bowls in each of the last nine seasons. Dec. 30, 1974 - Auburn 27, Texas 3 The SEC sent nine teams to bowl games in 2006, 2007, 2011 and 2012, eight teams in 2008 and 10 teams in 2009, 2010 and Dec. 29, 1975 - Maryland 13, Florida 0 2013. Dec. 29, 1980 - Pittsburgh 37, South Carolina 9 The most wins by the SEC in a bowl season is seven, set in 2007 and matched again in 2013. During the last seven years (2007- Dec. 28, 1981 - North Carolina 31, Arkansas 27 13), the SEC is 43-22 (.662) in post-season bowl games. Dec. 30, 1983 - Florida 14, Iowa 6 Most Bowl Appearances Dec. 28, 1984 - Oklahoma State 21, South Carolina 14 The percentages of teams in bowls for each of the power conferences: 1. 12 - SEC, 2014 Dec. 31, 1987 - LSU 30, South Carolina 13 1. SEC 83.3 percent (12 of 14) 2. 11 - ACC, 2013, 2014 Jan. 1, 1989 - Georgia 34, Michigan State 27 2. ACC 78.6 percent (11 of 14) 2. 10 - SEC, 2009, 2010, 2013 Jan. 1, 1991 - Michigan 35, Ole Miss 3 3. Big Ten 71.4 percent (10 of 14) 10 - ACC, 2008 Dec. 31, 1992 - Florida 27, N.C. State 10 4. Big 12 70 percent (seven of 10) 10 - Big Ten, 2011, 2014 Dec. 31, 1993 - Alabama 24, North Carolina 10 5. Pac-12 66.7 percent (eight of 12) 5. 9 - SEC, 2000, 2006, 2007, 2011, 2012 Dec. 30, 1994 - Tennessee 45, Virginia Tech 23 9 - ACC, 2010 Jan. 1, 2011 - Mississippi State 52, Michigan 14 9 - Big 12, 2012 Jan. 2, 2012 - Florida 24, Ohio State 17 9 - Pac 12, 2013 Jan. 1, 2013 - Northwestern 34, Mississippi State 20 Jan. 1, 2014 - Nebraska 24, Georgia 19 Most Bowl Wins 1. 7 - SEC, 2007 (7-2); 2013 (7-3) 2. 6 - SEC, 2013 (5 times); Big 12 (once); Pac-12 (once) 7. 5 - SEC (7 times); Big 12 (3 times); Pac-10 (twice); ACC (3 times) 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games

SEC IN POST-SEASON BOWLS

SEC IN THE BOWLS SEC COACHES’ BOWL RECORDS SEC TOPS NATION IN BOWL APPEARANCES Below is a recap of how each of the current SEC coaches The schools that currently comprise the SEC have appeared in BOWL APPEARANCES have fared in previous post-season bowl games (alphabetical by 407 bowls (as of 2013-14 bowls). That is by far the most of any school): conference in the nation. Below is a look at how the various 2014 Bowl conferences have fared in bowl games in its history (using 2014 1. ALABAMA 63 Sugar Coach G W-L-T Pct. conference alignments): 2. Texas 54 Nick Saban, Alabama 15 8-7-0 .533 3. Southern California 52 Bret Bielema, Arkansas 6 2-4-0 .333 Conference Bowls W-L-T Pct. Nebraska 52 Gus Malzahn, Auburn 1 0-1-0 .000 SEC 407 213-181-13 .539 5. GEORGIA 51 Belk Mark Richt, Georgia 13 8-5-0 .615 Pac-12 295 153-136-6 .529 6. TENNESSEE 50 TaxSlayer , Kentucky 0 0-0-0 .000 ACC 320 160-155-5 .508 7. Oklahoma 49 Les Miles, LSU 12 7-5-0 .583 American 133 66-65-2 .504 8. LSU 47 Music City Hugh Freeze, Ole Miss 2 2-0-0 1.000 Big 12 275 133-138-4 .491 9. Ohio State 46 Dan Mullen, Miss. State 4 3-1-0 .750 Big Ten 313 145-165-3 .469 10. Penn State 45 Gary Pinkel, Missouri 10 6-4-0 .600 Conference USA 143 66-75-2 .469 11. Michigan 44 Steve Spurrier, South Carolina 20 10-10-0 .500 Mountain West 114 52-59-3 .469 Florida State 44 Butch Jones, Tennessee 5 3-2-0 .600 Sun Belt 23 10-13-0 .434 Georgia Tech 44 Kevin Sumlin, Texas A&M 4 3-1-0 .750 Mid-American 73 29-44-0 .397 14. FLORIDA 41 Birmingham , Vanderbilt 0 0-0-0 .000 15. ARKANSAS 40 Texas SEC vs. OTHER CONFERENCES IN BOWL GAMES AUBURN 40 Outback SEC COMPOSITE BOWL RECORD (Using 2014 conference alignments) 17. Clemson 38 School W-L-T Pct. 18. Texas Tech 37 Alabama 34-23-3 .592 Conference Bowls W-L-T Pct. 19. OLE MISS 37 Chick-fil-A Peach Arkansas 13-23-3 .372 Big 12 100 47-50-3 .485 TEXAS A&M 37 Liberty Auburn 22-14-2 .605 ACC 82 48-32-2 .598 Miami (Fla.) 37 Florida 20-20-0 .500 Big Ten 79 48-31 .608 22. UCLA 35 Georgia 27-20-3 .570 American 26 9-16-1 .365 Washington 35 Kentucky 8-7-0 .533 Pac-10 23 12-8-3 .587 Notre Dame 35 LSU 23-21-1 .522 Conference USA 24 19-5-0 .792 25. West Virginia 34 Ole Miss 23-12-0 .657 Mountain West 14 8-6-0 .571 Mississippi State 10-7-0 .588 Mid-American 2 0-2-0 .000 Missouri 14-16-0 .467 Western Athletic 1 1-0-0 1.000 BOWL VICTORIES South Carolina 7-12-0 .368 1. ALABAMA 34 Tennessee 25-24-0 .510 SEC YEAR-BY-YEAR IN POST-SEASON BOWLS (Since 1992) 2. Southern California 32 Texas A&M 16-19-0 .457 Year Teams W-L Pct. 3. Oklahoma 28 Vanderbilt 4-2-1 .643 2013 10 7-3 .700 4. Penn State 27 OVERALL 246-220-13 .527 2012 9 6-3 .667 GEORGIA 27 2011 9 6-3 .667 6. Texas 26 LAST APPEARANCE IN BOWL GAMES (PRIOR TO 2014) 2010 10 5-5 .500 Florida State 26 Alabama 2014 Sugar 2009 10 6-4 .600 8. TENNESSEE 25 Arkansas 2012 Cotton 2008 8 6-2 .750 Nebraska 25 Auburn 2014 BCS Championship Game 2007 9 7-2 .778 10. LSU 23 Florida 2013 Sugar 2006 9 6-3 .667 OLE MISS 23 Georgia 2014 Gator 2005 6 3-3 .500 12. AUBURN 22 Kentucky 2011 BBVA Compass 2004 6 3-3 .500 Georgia Tech 22 LSU 2014 Outback 2003 7 5-2 .714 14. FLORIDA 20 Ole Miss 2013 Music City 2002 7 3-4 .429 Michigan 20 Mississippi State 2013 Liberty 2001 8 5-3 .625 16. Ohio State 19 Missouri 2014 Cotton 2000 9 4-5 .444 17. Miami (Fla.) 18 South Carolina 2014 Capital One 1999 8 4-4 .500 18. Clemson 17 Tennessee 2010 Music City 1998 8 4-4 .500 19. Washington 16 Texas A&M 2013 Chick-fil-A 1997 6 5-1 .833 Notre Dame 16 Vanderbilt 2014 BBVA Compass 1996 5 5-0 1.000 TEXAS A&M 16 1995 6 2-4 .333 22. UCLA 15 1994 5 3-2 .600 23. Iowa 14 1993 4 2-2 .500 N.C. State 14 1992 6 5-1 .833 Oklahoma State 14 West Virginia 14 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games

SEC BOWL RECORDS (INDIVIDUAL) (Top three unless otherwise indicated/# - NCAA Record)

TOTAL OFFENSE 12 - Darvin Adams, Auburn vs. Northwestern (2010 Outback) Most Plays Most Yards 68 - Hines Ward, Georgia vs. Virginia (1995 Peach) 239 - Josh Reed, LSU vs. Illinois (2002 Sugar) 67 - Casey Clausen, Tennessee vs. Clemson (2004 Peach) 220 - Jameon Lewis, Mississippi State vs. Rice (2013 Liberty) 65 - Shane Matthews, Florida vs. Notre Dame (1992 Sugar) 205 – Tavarres King, Georgia vs. Michigan State (2012 Outback) Most Total Yards 199 - Peerless Price, Tennessee vs. Florida State (1999 Fiesta) [4 catches] 533 - Tim Tebow, Florida vs. Cincinnati (2010 Sugar) 196 - Anthony Hancock, Tennessee vs. Wisconsin (1981 Garden State) [11] 516 - Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M vs. Oklahoma (2013 Cotton) Highest Average per Reception 469 - Hines Ward, Georgia vs. Virginia (1995 Peach) 68.0 (2-136) - Chris Conley, Georgia vs. Nebraska (2013 Capital One) Highest Average Per Play 49.8 (4-199) - Peerless Price, Tennessee vs. Florida State (1999 Fiesta) 12.4 - Greg McElroy, Alabama vs. Michigan State (2011 Capital One) 39.7 (3-119) - Ike Hilliard, Florida vs. Florida State (1995 Sugar) 11.6 – Aaron Murray, Georgia vs. Nebraska (2013 Capital One) Most TD Receptions 10.9 - Tim Tebow, Florida vs. Cincinnati (2010 Sugar) 3 - Five Times [Most Recent: Travis Taylor, Florida vs. Michigan State, 2000 Citrus] Most Touchdowns Responsible For 5 - Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M vs. Duke (2013 Chick-fil-A) SCORING 5 - Dak Prescott, Mississippi State vs. Rice (2013 Liberty) Most Points 5 – Aaron Murray, Georgia vs. Nebraska (2013 Capital One) 24 - Domanick Davis, LSU vs. Illinois (2002 Sugar) 5 - Casey Clausen, Tennessee vs. Michigan (2002 Citrus) 19 - Bobby Luna, Alabama vs. Syracuse (1953 Orange) [2 TD, 7 PAT] 18 - by several players RUSHING Most Touchdowns Most Attempts 4 - Domanick Davis, LSU vs. Illinois (2002 Sugar) 43 - Fred Taylor, Florida vs. Penn State (1998 Citrus) 39 - Errict Rhett, Florida vs. N.C. State (1992 Gator) KICKING 37 - Ronnie Brown, Auburn vs. Penn State (2003 Capital One) Most Field Goals Made Most Net Yards #5 - Tim Rogers, Mississippi State vs. N.C. State (1995 Peach) 250 - Chuck Webb, Tennessee vs. Arkansas (1990 Cotton) #5 - Arden Czyzewski, Florida vs. Notre Dame (1992 Sugar) 234 - Kevin Faulk, LSU vs. Michigan State (1995 Independence) #5 - , Alabama vs. LSU (2012 BCS Championship) 234 - Fred Taylor, Florida vs. Penn State (1998 Citrus) 4 - Marshall Morgan, Georgia vs. Nebraska (2014 Gator) Highest Average per Rush 4 - Billy Bennett, Georgia vs. Florida State (2003 Sugar) 16.0 - I’Tavius Mathers, Ole Miss vs. Pitt (2013 BBVA Compass) [6 for 96] 4 - Kanon Parkman, Georgia vs. Virginia (1995 Peach) 13.6 - Percy Harvin, Florida vs. Oklahoma (2009 BCS NCG) [9 for 122] 4 - Tim Davis, Alabama vs. Ole Miss (1964 Sugar) 13.5 - Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M vs. Oklahoma (2013 Cotton) [17 for 229] Most Points by a Kicker Most Rushing Touchdowns 16 - Tim Rogers, Mississippi State vs. N.C. State (1995 Peach) [5 FG, 1 PAT] 4 - Domanick Davis, LSU vs. Illinois (2002 Sugar) 16 - Arden Czyzewski, Florida vs. Notre Dame (1992 Sugar) [5 FG, 1 PAT] All-Purpose Rushing Yards 15 - Jeremy Shelley, Alabama vs. LSU (2012 BCS Championship) [5 FGs] #359 - Sherman Williams, Alabama vs. Ohio State (1995 Citrus) 267 - Jameon Lewis, Mississippi State vs. Rice (2013 Liberty) PUNTING 256 - , LSU vs. Notre Dame (1997 Independence) Highest Average per Punt 52.3 - Chris Hogue, Tennessee vs. Nebraska (1998 Orange) [6-314] PASSING 50.0 - Dana Moore, Mississippi State vs. Nebraska (1980 Sun) [5-250] Most Attempts 49.3 - Damon Duval, Auburn vs. North Carolina (2001 Peach) [9-444] 59 - Hines Ward, Georgia vs. Virginia (1995 Peach) 49.2 – Brian Mimbs, Georgia vs. Michigan State (2009 Capital One) {4-197} 58 - Shane Matthews, Florida vs. Notre Dame (1992 Sugar) 49.2 - Cody Mandell, Alabama vs. Notre Dame (2013 BCS NCG) [4-197] 55 - Casey Clausen, Tennessee vs. Clemson (2004 Peach) Most Completions RETURN YARDAGE 38 - Whit Taylor, Vanderbilt vs. Air Force (1982 Hall of Fame) Most Kickoff Return Yards 33 - David Smith, Alabama vs. Army (1988 Sun) 146 - Sherman Williams, Alabama vs. Miami (1993 Sugar) 31 - Six Times [Most Recent: Tim Tebow, Florida vs. Cincinnati, 2010 Sugar) 132 - Dale Carter, Tennessee vs. Penn State (1992 Fiesta) Most Consecutive Completions Most Punt Return Yards #19 - , Georgia vs. Wisconsin (1998 Outback) 108 - Freddie Milons, Alabama vs. Michigan (2000 Orange) 13 - Jeff Francis, Tennessee vs. Indiana (1988 Peach) 106 - Marshay Green, Ole Miss vs. Oklahoma State (2010 Cotton) 12 - Tim Tebow, Florida vs. Cincinnati (2010 Sugar) 95 - Sherman Williams, Alabama vs. Miami (1993 Sugar) Most Net Yards 482 - Tim Tebow, Florida vs. Cincinnati (2010 Sugar) DEFENSE 452 - Whit Taylor, Vanderbilt vs. Air Force (1982 Hall of Fame) Most Interceptions 444 - Rohan Davey, LSU vs. Illinois (2002 Sugar) 3 - Bud McClinton, Auburn vs. Arizona (1968 Sun) Most Touchdown Passes Thrown 3 - Tommy Luke, Ole Miss vs. Texas (1966 Bluebonnet) 5 - Aaron Murray, Georgia vs. Nebraska (2013 Capital One) 3 - Ray Brown, Ole Miss vs. Texas (1958 Sugar) 4 - Peyton Manning, Tennessee vs. Northwestern (1997 Citrus) Most Total Tackles 4 - Rex Grossman, Florida vs. Maryland (2002 Orange) #31 - Lee Roy Jordan, Alabama vs. Oklahoma (1963 Orange) Highest Completion Percentage 20 - Carl Zander, Tennessee vs. Maryland (1984 Sun) #.929 (26-28) - Mike Bobo, Georgia vs. Wisconsin (1998 Outback) 19 - Kevin Minter, LSU vs. Clemson (2012 Chick-Fil-A) .886 (31-35) - Tim Tebow, Florida vs. Cincinnati (2010 Sugar) Most Sacks .880 (22-25) - Connor Shaw, South Carolina vs. Wisconsin (2014 Capital One) 4.5 - Reggie McKenzie, Tennessee vs. Maryland (1984 Sun) 3 – Marcus Howard, Georgia vs. Hawaii (2008 Sugar) RECEIVING 3 - , Georgia vs. Wisconsin (2005 Outback) Most Receptions 3 - Gabe Northern, LSU vs. Michigan State (1995 Independence) #20 - Norman Jordan, Vanderbilt vs. Air Force (1982 Hall of Fame) 3 - James Gilyard, LSU vs. Michigan State (1995 Independence) 14 - Josh Reed, LSU vs. Illinois (2002 Sugar) 3 - Ernie Barnes, Mississippi State vs. Kansas (1981 Hall of Fame) 12 - Hines Ward, Georgia vs. Wisconsin (1998 Outback) 3 - Kalimba Edwards, South Carolina vs. Ohio State (2001 Outback) 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games

SEC BOWL RECORDS (TEAM) (Top three unless otherwise indicated/# - NCAA Records)

TOTAL OFFENSE .885 (23-26) - South Carolina vs. Wisconsin (2014 Capital One) Most Plays 97 - LSU vs. Illinois (2002 Sugar) SCORING 95 - Georgia vs. Virginia (1995 Peach) Most Touchdowns 95 - LSU vs. Texas (2003 Cotton) 9 - Alabama vs. Syracuse (1953 Orange) Most Plays, Both Teams 8 - Florida vs. Maryland (2002 Orange) 187 - Missouri (91) vs. Oklahoma State (96) (2014 Cotton) 7 - LSU vs. Illinois (2002 Sugar) 171 - Auburn (82) vs. Arizona (89) (1968 Sun) 7 - Florida vs. Cincinnati (2010 Sugar) 169 - Tennessee (77) vs. Purdue (92) (1979 Bluebonnet) Most Touchdowns, Both Teams Most Yards 12 - Texas A&M (6) vs. Duke (6) (2013 Chick-fil-A) 659 - Florida vs. Maryland (2002 Orange) 12 - LSU (7) vs. Illinois (5) (2002 Sugar) 659 - Florida vs. Cincinnati (2010 Sugar) 11 - Florida (8) vs. Maryland (3) (2002 Orange) 633 - Texas A&M vs. Oklahoma (2013 Cotton) 11 - Florida (3) vs. Nebraska (8) (1996 Fiesta) Most Yards, Both Teams 11 - Ole Miss (4) vs. West Virginia (7) (2000 Music City) 1,202 - Texas A&M (541) vs. Duke (661) (2013 Chick-fil-A) Most Field Goals 1,048 - Ole Miss (333) vs. Michigan (715) (1991 Gator) #5 - Mississippi State vs. N.C. State (1995 Peach) 1,047 - Ole Miss (533) vs. Air Force (514) (1989 Liberty) #5 - Florida vs. Notre Dame (1992 Sugar) Highest Average per Play #5 - Alabama vs. LSU (2012 BCS Championship) 9.6 (66-633) - Texas A&M vs. Oklahoma (2013 Cotton) 4 - Georgia vs. Nebraksa (2014 Gator) 9.4 (70-659) - Florida vs. Cincinnati (2010 Sugar) 4 - Alabama vs. Ole Miss (1964 Sugar) 8.9 (74-659) - Florida vs. Maryland (2002 Orange) 4 - Georgia vs. Florida State (2003 Sugar) 8.3 (71-589) - Georgia vs. Nebraska (2013 Capital One) 4 - LSU vs. Miami, Fla. (2006 Peach) 8.0 (53-426) - South Carolina vs. Michigan (2013 Outback) Most Field Goals, Both Teams #7 - Mississippi State (5) vs. N.C. State (2) (1995 Peach) RUSHING 6 - Florida (5) vs. Notre Dame (1) (1992 Sugar) Most Attempts 6 - Auburn (3) vs. Syracuse (3) (1988 Sugar) 68 - Mississippi State vs. North Carolina (1974 Sun) 6 - Tennessee (1) vs. Maryland (5) (1983 Citrus) Most Attempts, Both Teams Most Points Scored #122 - Mississippi State (68) vs. North Carolina (54) (1974 Sun) 61 - Alabama vs. Syracuse (1953 Orange) 116 - Alabama (46) vs. Colorado (70) (1969 Liberty) 56 - Florida vs. Maryland (2002 Orange) 113 - Auburn (42) vs. Missouri (71) (1973 Sun) 52 - Texas A&M vs. Duke (2013 Chick-fil-A) Most Net Yards 52 - Florida vs. Florida State (1997 Sugar) 455 - Mississippi State vs. North Carolina (1974 Sun) Most Points Scored, Both Teams 423 - Auburn vs. Baylor (1954 Gator) 100 - Texas A&M (52) vs. Duke (48) (2013 Chick-fil-A) Most Net Yards, Both Teams 87 - Ole Miss (38) vs. West Virginia (49) (2000 Music City) 732 - Mississippi State (455) vs. North Carolina (277) (1974 Sun) 86 - Florida (24) vs. Nebraska (62) (1996 Fiesta) 681 - Tennessee (320) vs. Arkansas (361) (1990 Cotton) 628 - Alabama (155) vs. Colorado (473) (1969 Liberty) MISCELLANEOUS RECORDS Highest Rushing Average Most First Downs 10.5 (31-326) - Texas A&M vs. Oklahoma (2013 Cotton) 32 - LSU vs. Illinois (2002 Sugar) 32 - Tennessee vs. Texas A&M (2005 Cotton) PASSING 31 - LSU vs. Notre Dame (2007 Sugar) Most Attempts Most Punts 59 - Georgia vs. Virginia (1995 Peach) 16 - Alabama vs. Texas A&M (1942 Cotton) 58 - Florida vs. Notre Dame (1992 Sugar) 15 - Tennessee vs. Rice (1947 Orange) 56 - Tennessee vs. Clemson (2004 Peach) 14 - LSU vs. Santa Clara (1938 Sugar) Most Attempts, Both Teams Highest Punting Average 111 - Auburn (33) vs. Northwestern (78) (OT) (2010 Outback) 52.3 (6-314) - Tennessee vs. Nebraska (1998 Orange) 101 - Missouri (44) vs. Oklahoma State (57) (2014 Cotton) 50.0 (5-250) - Mississippi State vs. Nebraska (1980 Sun) 100 - Kentucky (50) vs. Florida State (50) (2007 Music City) Most Fumbles Most Completions #11 - Ole Miss vs. Alabama (1964 Sugar) 38 - Vanderbilt vs. Air Force (1982 Hall of Fame) 7 - Five Times 33 - Alabama vs. Army (1988 John Hancock) Most Fumbles Lost 33 - Florida vs. Maryland (2002 Orange) #6 - Ole Miss vs. Alabama (1964 Sugar) (11 fumbles) Most Completions, Both Teams 5 - Georgia vs. Stanford (1978 Bluebonnet) (6 fumbles) 67 - Auburn (20) vs. Northwestern (47) (OT) (2010 Outback) 5 - Auburn vs. Texas (1974 Gator) (7 fumbles) 59 - Texas A&M (30) vs. Duke (29) (2013 Chick-fil-A) 5 - Georgia vs. Arkansas (1969 Sugar) (7 fumbles) 58 - Florida (31) vs. Cincinnati (27) (2010 Sugar) 5 - Auburn vs. Vanderbilt (1955 Gator) (5 fumbles) 58 - Texas A&M (23) vs. Oklahoma (35) (2013 Cotton) Most Penalties Most Yards #21 - Mississippi State vs. Clemson (1999 Peach) 482 - Florida vs. Cincinnati (2010 Sugar) 18 - Alabama vs. Michigan (2000 Orange) 456 - Florida vs. Maryland (2002 Orange) Most Yards Penalized 452 - Vanderbilt vs. Air Force (1982 Hall of Fame) 188 - Mississippi State vs. Clemson (1999 Peach) Most Yards, Both Teams 140 - Auburn vs. Northwestern (2010 Outback) 809 - Texas A&M (382) vs. Duke (427) (2013 Chick-fil-A) 132 - Alabama vs. Michigan (2000 Orange) 774 - Florida (449) vs. Florida State (325) (1995 Sugar) Fewest Rushing Yards Allowed 767 - Auburn (235) vs. Northwestern (532) (2010 Outback) -48 - Alabama vs. Michigan State (28 attempts) (2011 Capital One) Highest Completion Percentage Largest Deficit Overcome to Win .900 (9-10) - Ole Miss vs. Air Force (1992 Liberty) 25 - Georgia (28) vs. Purdue (25) (2000 Outback) (UGA trailed 25-0 in 2nd quarter) .897 (26-29) - Georgia vs. Wisconsin (1998 Outback) 2014 SEC Football

SEC FOOTBALL (2006-13) ... SECOND TO NONE

During the last eight years (2006-13), Southeastern Conference football has experienced success that • Alabama’s 28-point victory over Notre Dame in the 2013 Discover BCS National Championship is the is unparalleled in its football history and in the history of college football. During this tenure, the second-largest in the BCS era. (Southern Cal defeated Oklahoma by 36 in the 2005 BCS SEC’s achievements have been demonstrated by: Championship Game for the top spot, however, that victory was later vacated.) • Triumphs in BCS bowl games, including the BCS National Championship Game • Non-conference success in regular season and bowl games • During the recent seven-year winning streak, the SEC’s average margin of victory in BCS National • Defeating highly-ranked non-conference teams Championship Games is 17 points, which includes a three point victory over Oregon in 2011, the only • Success in the polls and rankings game during the streak decided by single digits. • Individual awards and All-America Teams • Academic and Community Service Standouts • Continued accomplishments of former SEC student-athletes in the NFL SEC IN OVERALL BOWL GAMES • Since 2006, the SEC has accrued more bowl wins (49) and appearances (83) than any other confer- SEC IN THE BCS ERA ence. The conference’s .671 bowl winning percentage is first among FBS leagues during that time. • The SEC has won seven of the last eight national championships, nine of the 16 BCS National SEC 49-24 .671 Championships, two runner-up finishes and 23 overall national titles (AP, BCS, FWAA, coaches poll). The SEC appeared in 10 of the 16 BCS Championship Games, winning nine. American 28-15 .651 Mountain West 24-16 .600 • Four different SEC schools have won the BCS National Championship since 2006 (Auburn, 2010; Sun Belt 11-8 .579 Alabama, 2009, 2011, 2012; Florida, 2006 and 2008; LSU, 2007). Tennessee (1998) and LSU (2004) Pac-12 26-19 .578 have also won the BCS crown. Auburn also appeared in the 2013 BCS Championship Game. A team Big 12 32-30 .516 from the SEC Western Division has advanced to five consecutive national championship games. The Big 12 (Texas and Oklahoma) and the ACC (Miami and Florida State) have each had two schools win Conference USA 22-23 .489 titles since 1998. Independents 8-9 .471 ACC 28-39 .418 • Since 2006, more than half of the slots in the BCS National Championship Game have been taken Big Ten 21-40 .344 by SEC teams (10 of 18). The Big Ten and the Big 12 have two each, while the ACC and Pac-10 each have one. MAC 10-28 .263

• An SEC team has led or tied for the lead at the end of 27 of the last 32 quarters of BCS National • In the 2013-14 bowl season, the SEC had the most wins (7) and had the second highest win per- Championship Game play. centage (7-3, .700), first among conferences that had three-or-more teams in bowl games. The seven victories tied the SEC’s own record for most bowl wins in history by a single conference. • Since 2006, an SEC team has been ranked first in the weekly BCS standings in 36 of the 65 weeks, with four different teams holding the top spot. Florida was first for seven weeks, Alabama for 16 weeks, Auburn for three and LSU for 10 weeks, including six of the nine polls this season. The Big • In January bowl games, the SEC is 31-15 (.674) against non-conference competition. Since 2008, Ten has held the top spot for 15 weeks (all Ohio State), the Big 12 for six weeks (Texas and Oklahoma the league is 25-11 (.694) against non-conference foes in January bowl games. twice, Missouri and Kansas State once) and the Pac-10 four weeks (all Oregon). The ACC (Florida State) held the top spot in the final poll in 2013. SEC vs. OTHER CONFERENCES • The SEC has had more teams ranked in the BCS standings for the most times than any other con- • Since 2006, the SEC has posted the highest non-conference winning percentage (regular season & ference since 2006. The league has had 13 of its 14 teams ranked at one time or another since 2006. bowls) than any other conference. The league has a 387-86 record, an 81.8 winning percentage. The The SEC breakdown: LSU (62), Alabama (52), Florida (41), Auburn (38), South Carolina (38), Georgia SEC has won no less than 43 non-conference games (regular season & bowls) during the last eight (35), Arkansas (23), Texas A&M (17), Tennessee (14), Mississippi State (12), Missouri (9), Kentucky seasons (2006-2013). This season, the SEC was 54-12 (.818), the highest percentage among FBS (4) and Ole Miss (4). Vanderbilt is the only team to not appear in the BCS rankings during this time, conferences. however, the Commodores finished ranked in the Top 25 in both 2012 and 2013 after bowl games with 9-4 records. The BCS does not produce a poll following bowl games. • Teams from the SEC have posted 48 wins in the last seven years against non-conference Top 25 • Since 2006, the SEC has posted a 10-6 record in BCS bowl games, more wins than any other confer- teams (at time game was played), an average of six wins per season. Ten of the 14 SEC teams have ence. Here are the BCS bowl records of all conferences since 2006: at least one win against a non-conference Top 25 team in the last seven years with LSU (9), Georgia (8), Alabama (7), Florida (5), South Carolina (7) Auburn (3) and Texas A&M (2) leading the way. SEC SEC 10-6 .625 Pac-12 7-4 .636 teams have beaten teams ranked 1-25 since 2006 with the exception of No. 6. AAC 5-3 .625 Big 12 5-7 .417 1 – Florida def. #1 Ohio State, 41-14, 2007 Tostitos BCS National Championship Game; LSU def. #1 Big Ten 5-9 .357 Ohio State, 38-24, 2008 Allstate BCS National Championship Game; Florida def. #1 Oklahoma, 24-14, ACC 4-6 .400 2009 FedEx BCS National Championship Game; Alabama def. #1 Notre Dame, 42-14, 2013 Discover Mountain West 2-1 .667 WAC 2-1 .667 BCS National Championship Game. MAC 0-1 .000 2 – Florida def. #2 Oklahoma, 24-14, 2009 FedEx BCS National Championship Game; Alabama def. #2 Independents 0-2 .000 Texas, 37-21, 2010 Citi BCS National Championship Game; Auburn def. #2 Oregon, 22-19, 2011 Tostitos BCS National Championship Game • Three of the top nine defensive performances in BCS history have been registered by SEC teams, 3 - LSU def. #3 Oregon, 40-27, Sept. 3, 2011 more than any other conference. Alabama’s shutout of LSU in the 2012 BCS National Championship 4 – Florida def. #4 Cincinnati, 51-24, 2010 Allstate Sugar Bowl Game was the first shutout in BCS history. Georgia defeated Hawaii, 41-10, in the 2008 Sugar Bowl, 5 - Florida def. #5 Florida State, 37-26, Nov. 24, 2012 and Florida defeated Syracuse, 31-10, in the 1999 Orange Bowl - both are tied for 7th in lowest point 7 – Alabama def. #7 Virginia Tech, 34-24, Sept. 5, 2009; Georgia def. #7 Georgia Tech, 30-24, Nov. 28, total allowed in a BCS game. 2009 8 - Arkansas def. #8 Kansas State, 29-16, Jan. 6, 2012; Alabama def. #8 Michigan, 41-14, Sept. 1, 2012 2014 SEC Football SEC FOOTBALL (2006-13) ... SECOND TO NONE

9 – Kentucky def. #9 Louisville, 40-34, Sept. 15, 2007; LSU def. #9 Virginia Tech, 48-7, Sept. 8, 2007; SEC INDIVIDUAL AWARDS AND ALL-AMERICANS Alabama def. #9 Clemson, 34-10, Aug. 30, 2008; South Carolina def. #9 Nebraska, 30-13, Jan. 2, • In the 30 individual awards given this season, the SEC has had at least one recipient in 27 of them 2012; South Carolina def. #9 Clemson, 27-17, Nov. 24, 2012 since 2006. The SEC has not had a winner of the Biletnikoff Award (wide receiver), Lou Groza (place- 10 – LSU def. #10 Notre Dame, 41-14, 2007 Allstate Sugar Bowl; Georgia def. #10 Hawaii, 41-10, kicker) or Brian Burlsworth (walk-on) in the last eight seasons. 2008 Allstate Sugar Bowl 11 – Texas A&M def. #11 Oklahoma, 41-13, 2013 AT&T Cotton Bowl • Since 2006, the SEC football student-athletes and coaches have won 68 major individual awards, an 12 – Tennessee def. #12 California, 35-18, Sept. 2, 2006 average of more than eight per year. The league won an all time high 12 individual honors in 2010 13 - Arkansas def. #13 Texas A&M, 42-38, Oct. 1, 2011; Missouri def. #13 Oklahoma State, 41-31, and won nine this season. 2014 Cotton Bowl 14 – Alabama def. #14 Penn State, 24-3, Sept. 11, 2010 • The SEC has won a national player of the year in six years with five different players – Darren 15 – Georgia def. #15 Virginia Tech, 31-24, 2006 Chick-fil-A Bowl; Tennessee def. #15 Wisconsin, 21- McFadden, Arkansas, and Tim Tebow, Florida, in 2007; Tebow in 2008; Mark Ingram, Alabama, in 17, 2008 Outback Bowl; South Carolina def. #15 Clemson, 34-17, Nov. 28, 2009 2009; , Auburn, in 2010; and Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M, in 2012. The SEC did not have 16 – Georgia def. #16 Georgia Tech, 15-12, Nov. 25, 2006; Auburn def. #16 Clemson, 23-20, 2007 a national player of the year in 2011 or 2013. Three of the Heisman finalists in 2013 were, however, Chick-fil-A Bowl; LSU def. #16 West Virginia, 47-21, Sept. 24, 2011; Georgia def. #16 Nebraska, 45- from the SEC. 31, 17 - LSU def. #17 Texas A&M, 41-24, 2011 AT&T Cotton Bowl; South Carolina def. #17 Clemson, 34- SEC INDIVIDUAL AWARD WINNERS SINCE 2006 13, Nov. 26, 2011 HEISMAN MEMORIAL TROPHY (Nation’s best player) – Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M (2012); Cam 18 – Ole Miss def. #18 Oklahoma State, 21-7, 2010 AT&T Cotton Bowl; LSU def. #18 North Carolina, Newton, Auburn (2010); Mark Ingram, Alabama (2009); Tim Tebow, Florida (2007) 30-24, Sept. 4, 2010 (Nation’s best defensive player) – , LSU (2010); Tyrann 19 – Georgia def. #19 Michigan State, 24-12, ; South Carolina def. #19 Mathieu, LSU (2011) Wisconsin, 34-24; 2014 Capital One Bowl (Nation’s best punter) – , Florida (2010); , Georgia (2009) 20 - Alabama def. #20 Penn State, 27-11, Sept. 10, 2011; South Carolina def. #20 Michigan, 33-28, MAXWELL AWARD (Nation’s best player) – Cam Newton, Auburn (2010); Tim Tebow, Florida (2008); 2013 Outback Bowl; LSU def. #13 TCU 37-27, Aug. 31, 2013 Tim Tebow, Florida (2007); AJ McCarron, Alabama (2013) 21 – LSU def. #21 West Virginia, 20-14, Sept. 25, 2010; Texas A&M def. #21 Duke, 52-48, 2013 Chick- (Nation’s best player) – Cam Newton, Auburn (2010); Darren McFadden, fil-A Bowl Arkansas (2007) 22 – Auburn def. #22 Nebraska, 17-14, 2007 AT&T Cotton Bowl DAVEY O’BRIEN AWARD (Nation’s best quarterback) – Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M (2012); Cam 23 – Florida def. #23 Florida State, 45-15, Nov. 29, 2008 Newton, Auburn (2010); Tim Tebow, Florida (2007) 24 – South Carolina def. #24 Clemson, 31-28, Nov. 25, 2006; Georgia def. #24 Arizona State, 27-10, JIM THORPE AWARD (Nation’s best defensive back) – Johnthan Banks, Mississippi State (2012); Sept. 20, 2008 Morris Claiborne, LSU (2011); Patrick Peterson, LSU (2010); , Tennessee (2009) 25 - Georgia def. #25 Georgia Tech, 31-17, Nov. 26, 2011 JOHN MACKEY AWARD (Nation’s best tight end) – D.J. Williams, Arkansas (2010); , [NOTE: poll used either AP, BCS, USA Today or Harris] Florida (2009) ROTARY (Nation’s outstanding lineman) – Nick Fairley, Auburn (2010); Glenn SEC IN FINAL RANKINGS Dorsey, LSU (2007) • Since 2006, the SEC has had the most teams ranked in the final USA Today Coaches Poll. The con- AWARD (Nation’s most versatile player) -- Brandon Boykin, Georgia (2011); Odell ference has had 43 teams ranked in the final USA Today rankings, 12 more than the Big 12 (31) and Beckham, LSU (2013) 13 more than the Big Ten (30). FRANK (Nation’s top assistant coach) – John Chavis, LSU (2011); Gus Malzahan, Auburn (2010); , Alabama (2009) Conference 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Total (Community service with athletic and academic achievement) – , SEC 5 5 4 4 6 5 7 7 43 Alabama (2011) Big 12 2 5 5 4 5 4 3 3 31 JOHNNY UNITAS GOLDEN ARM (Outstanding senior quarterback) - AJ McCarron, Alabama (2013). Big Ten 4 5 4 4 3 4 2 4 30 AFCA ASSISTANT COACH OF THE YEAR - Kirby Smart, Alabama (2012) ACC 3 3 3 3 4 3 2 3 24 DISNEY SPIRIT AWARD (Top inspirational story) – Alabama Football Team (2011); D.J. Williams, Pac-12 3 3 4 2 2 2 3 5 24 Arkansas (2010) MWC 2 1 3 3 2 2 1 0 14 HOME DEPOT COACH OF THE YEAR (National Coach of the Year) – Les Miles, LSU (2011); , American 3 2 1 3 0 2 2 2 15 Auburn (2010); Nick Saban, Alabama (2008); Gus Malzahn, Auburn (2013) MAC 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 3 EDDIE ROBINSON FWAA COACH OF THE YEAR – Nick Saban, Alabama (2008); Gus Malzahn, Auburn CUSA 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 4 (2013) LIBERTY MUTUAL COACH OF THE YEAR -- Nick Saban, Alabama (2008); Les Miles, LSU (2011); Gus • The SEC has either led or tied for the lead with the most teams ranked in the USA Today Top 25 for Malzahn, Auburn (2013) seven of the last eight seasons. In 2013, the SEC finished with a record seven teams ranked in the CoSIDA/ESPN ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN OF THE YEAR – Barrett Jones, Alabama (2012); Greg McElroy, final Top 25 poll for the second consecutive year. Ten SEC schools were ranked at some point during Alabama (2010); Tim Tebow, Florida (2009) the 2013 season in the Coaches’ Poll, with 13 receiving votes. BUTKUS AWARD (Nation’s best linebacker) – Rolando McClain, Alabama (2009); , Ole Miss (2006); C.J. Mosley, Alabama (2013) WILLIAM V. CAMPBELL TROPHY (Nation’s top scholar-athlete) – Tim Tebow, Florida (2009); Barrett Jones, Alabama (2012) RIMINGTON TROPHY (Nation’s best center) – Barrett Jones, Alabama (2012); , Florida (2009); , Arkansas (2007) 2014 SEC Football SEC FOOTBALL (2006-13) ... SECOND TO NONE

LOWE’S SENIOR CLASS AWARD (Nation’s top senior student-athlete) – Tim Tebow, Florida (2009) SEC FOOTBALL ACADEMIC & COMMUNITY SERVICE STANDOUTS WUERFFEL TROPHY (Community Service, Athletic and Academic Achievement) – Tim Tebow, Florida • 19 SEC football student-athletes have won 22 national academic and community service awards (2008) since 2006. The SEC has had three of the last four CoSIDA/ESPN Academic All-Americas of the Year in football, a recipient of the William V. Campbell Trophy (known as the “Academic Heisman”), 13 first- OUTLAND TROPHY (Nation’s top lineman) – Barrett Jones, Alabama (2011); Andre Smith, Alabama team CoSIDA/ESPN Academic All-America first team recipients, six National Football Foundation (2008); , LSU (2007) Scholar-Athletes and 10 representatives on the AFCA Good Works Team. WALTER CAMP COACH OF THE YEAR – Nick Saban, Alabama (2008) BRONKO NAGURSKI AWARD (Nation’s top defensive player) – Glenn Dorsey, LSU (2007) 2006 (Nation’s top running back) – , Alabama (2011); Darren CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America First Team – Hayden Lane, OL, Kentucky National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete – Chris Leak, QB, Florida McFadden, Arkansas (2007); Darren McFadden, Arkansas (2006) AFCA Good Works Team – William Brown, OL, South Carolina; Quentin Moses, DE, Georgia; Jacob (Defensive IMPACT Player) – Glenn Dorsey, LSU (2007) Tamme, TE, Kentucky; James Wilhoit, PK, Tennessee MANNING AWARD (Nation’s top quarterback) – Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M (2012); Tim Tebow, Florida (2008); JaMarcus Russell, LSU (2006) 2007 ASSOCIATED PRESS COLLEGE PLAYER OF THE YEAR – Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M (2012); Tim Tebow, National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete – Jacob Tamme, TE, Kentucky CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America First Team – Tim Tebow, QB, Florida; Jacob Florida (2007) Tamme, TE, Kentucky ARA SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD -- Barrett Jones, Alabama (2011) AFCA Good Works Team – Jason Cook, FB, Ole Miss; Kelin Johnson, SS, Georgia; TED HENDRICKS TROPHY (Nation’s best defensive ends) -- Jadeveon Clowney, South Carolina (2012) 2008 • The SEC would fill a complete first unit of first-team All-Americas since 2006. The SEC has had 80 CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America First Team – Tim Tebow, QB, Florida; Tim Masthay, players make first-team All-America in the AP, Walter Camp, FWAA or AFCA squads, including 10 for P, Kentucky CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America of the Year – Tim Tebow, QB, Florida the 2013 season. The list represents at least one player at every position. AFCA Good Works Team – Tim Masthay, P, Kentucky Offense (28) LB – Jarvis Jones, Georgia (2011) Wuerrfel Trophy – Tim Tebow, QB, Florida QB – Tim Tebow, Florida (2007) LB – , Alabama (2011) QB – Cam Newton, Auburn (2010) LB – Dont’a Hightower, Alabama (2011) 2009 QB – Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M (2012) LB – Jarvis Jones, Georgia (2012) National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete – Tim Tebow, QB, Florida QB - AJ McCarron, Alabama (2013) LB – C.J. Mosley, Alabama (2012) NFF William V. Campbell Trophy – Tim Tebow, QB, Florida RB – Darren McFadden, Arkansas (2006-07) LB – C.J. Mosley, Alabama (2013) CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America First Team – Tim Tebow, QB, Florida; Colin Peek, RB – Knowshon Moreno, Georgia (2008) DB – Eric Berry, Tennessee (2008-09) TE, Alabama RB – Mark Ingram, Alabama (2009) DB – LaRon Landry, LSU (2006) CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America of the Year – Tim Tebow, QB, Florida RB – Trent Richardson, Alabama (2011) DB – Craig Steltz, LSU (2007) AFCA Good Works Team – Tim Tebow, QB, Florida; Jeff Owens, DL, Georgia WR – Robert Meachem, Tennessee (2006) DB – Rashad Johnson, Alabama (2008) WR – Alshon Jeffery, South Carolina (2010) DB – Javier Arenas, Alabama (2009) 2010 WR - Mike Evans, Texas A&M (2013) DB – Joe Haden, Florida (2009) National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete – Greg McElroy, QB, Alabama; Derek Sherrod, OT, TE – Aaron Hernandez, Florida (2009) DB – , Alabama (2010) Mississippi State TE – Orson Charles, Georgia (2011) DB – Patrick Peterson, LSU (2010) CoSIDA/ESPN Academic All-America First Team – Greg McElroy, QB, Alabama; Barrett Jones, OL, OL – Arron Sears, Tennessee (2006) DB – Morris Claiborne, LSU (2011) Alabama; Drew Butler, P, Georgia OL – Michael Oher, Ole Miss (2008) DB – Tyrann Mathieu, LSU (2011) OL – Andre Smith, Alabama (2008) DB – Mark Barron, Alabama (2011) 2011 OL – Herman Johnson, LSU (2008) DB – Bacarri Rambo, Georgia (2011) National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete - Drew Butler, P, Georgia OL – Mike Johnson, Alabama (2009) DB – DeQuan Menzie, Alabama (2011) Capital One/CoSIDA Academic All-America First-Team - Barrett Jones, OL, Alabama; Drew Butler, P, OL – Lee Ziemba, Auburn (2010) DB – , Alabama (2011) Georgia OL – Barrett Jones, Alabama (2011-12) DB – , LSU (2012) AFCA Good Works Team - Aron White, TE, Georgia; Jacob Lewellen, DL, Kentucky OL – , Alabama (2012) DB – , Alabama (2012) ARA Sportsmanship Award -- Barrett Jones, OL, Alabama OL – Luke Joeckel, Texas A&M (2012) DB – Johnthan Banks, Mississippi State (2012) OL - Jake Matthews, Texas A&M (2013) DB - Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, Alabama (2013) 2012 OL - , Alabama (2012) SAF – Matt Elam, Florida (2012) National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete - Barrett Jones, C, Alabama C – Jonathan Luigs, Arkansas (2007) SAF - Cody Prewitt, Ole Miss (2013) NFF William V. Campbell Trophy - Barrett Jones, C, Alabama C – Andre Caldwell, Alabama (2008) Capital One/CoSIDA Academic All-America First-Team - Barett Jones, C, Alabama; Dylan Breeding, C – Maurkice Pouncey, Florida (2009) Specialists (12) PK – Daniel Lincoln, Tennessee (2007) P, Arkanass Defense (40) PK – Leigh Tiffin, Alabama (2009) AFCA Good Works Team - Barrett Jones, C, Alabama; Philip Lutzenkirchen, TE, Auburn; Aaron DL – Glenn Dorsey, LSU (2006-07) PK – Josh Jasper, LSU (2010) Murray, QB, Georgia DL – , Alabama (2008-09) P – Drew Butler, Georgia (2009) DL – Peria Jerry, Ole Miss (2008) P – Chas Henry, Florida (2010) 2013 DL – Nick Fairley, Auburn (2010) P – Brad Wing, LSU (2011) National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete - Aaron Murray, QB, Georgia DL – Melvin Ingram, South Carolina (2011) RS – Felix Jones, Arkansas (2007) Capital One/CoSIDA Academic All-America First-Team - Aaron Murray, QB, Georgia; DL – Sam Montgomery, LSU (2011) RS – Brandon James, Florida (2008) AFCA Good Works Team - Carey Spear, PK, Vanderbilt DL – Jadeveon Clowney, South Carolina (2012) RS – Joe Adams, Arkansas (2011) DL – Damontre Moore, Texas A&M (2012) RS - Odell Beckham, Jr. (2013) • The SEC leads all conferences with 58 selections to the Good Works Team since it began in 1992. DL - Michael Sam, Missouri (2013) AP– Randall Cobb, Kentucky (2010) The SEC is followed by the Big 12 Conference with 41 selections and the Atlantic Coast Conference DL – Jadeveon Clowney, South Carolina (2013) with 34 selections. With C.J. Zimmerer’s selection in 2013, Nebraska moves into a tie with Georgia LB – Patrick Willis, Ole Miss (2006) for first place with 14 honorees to the Allstate AFCA Good Works Team. The Cornhuskers and LB – Brandon Spikes, Florida (2008) Bulldogs are followed by St. Thomas (Minn.) with 13 honorees. XLII, XLVI and XLI LB – Rolando McClain, Alabama (2009) LB – Eric Norwood, South Carolina (2009) champion quarterbacks Eli and Peyton Manning were members of the 2002 and 1997 Good Works LB – Justin Houston, Georgia (2010) Teams®, respectively. 2014 SEC Football SEC FOOTBALL (2006-13) ... SECOND TO NONE SEC IN THE NFL

• The SEC has had more of its former players on NFL rosters in the last nine seasons than any • SEC finished with 1/3 of total NFL First Round picks in 2014. It's the 3rd time in four years SEC other conference. On opening weekend of the 2014 season, the SEC placed 345 former players on has produced double-digit first rounders. Eight of the first 21 selections were from the SEC. active 53-man rosters. Since 2006, the SEC has averaged 283 players per year on NFL opening weekend rosters. • Over the last 16 NFL Drafts, the SEC has had the No. 1 pick seven times. Have also had a Top 3 pick 12 times and Top 5 pick 15 times. • During the last nine completed NFL seasons (2005-13), the SEC had had two of its former play- ers named NFL MVP four times (2005, Shaun Alexander, RB, Alabama with Seattle; 2008-09-13, • Since 2009, Top 10 NFL picks by league: SEC 23; Big 12 16; ACC 9; Pac-12 8; MAC 2; AAC 1, BYU 1, Peyton Manning, QB, Tennessee with Indianapolis and Denver). B1G 0. SEC has 43% of the top-10 picks in the past 4 NFL drafts.

• During the last eight Super Bowls (2006-13), three former SEC players have been named game • SEC West by itself produced more first-round picks (8) than any other conference in 2014. MVP (2006 – Hines Ward, WR, Georgia with Pittsburgh; 2007 – Peyton Manning, QB, Tennessee with Indianapolis; 2008 and 2012– Eli Manning, QB, Ole Miss with New York Giants. SEC NFL DRAFT SELECTIONS 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 SEC ON NFL ROSTERS SEC - 37 41 35 37 49 38 42 63 49 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 ACC - 52 31 33 33 31 35 31 31 42 SEC – 266 263 259 263 272 283 257 340 Big Ten - 41 34 28 28 34 29 41 22 30 Pac-12 - 32 25 34 32 29 31 28 28 34 • The Southeastern Conference led the nation in 2014 with an all-time high 345 former players on Big 12 - 29 28 29 28 30 30 26 22 17 opening weekend 53-man active rosters. The SEC led the nation's conferences in draft picks for theeighth consecutive year. The last time • With the first two picks of the 2014 NFL Draft, this is the first time in the modern era of the NFL that the SEC did not top the conference draft list was in 2006, when the Big Ten had 41 and the Draft (1979) a conference has had both the No. 1 and No. 2 overall selections. SEC had 37.

• The SEC had 63 players selected in the 2013 NFL Draft, a new record for a conference in a single SEC IN THE NFL SUCCESS year. The SEC picks were more than double that of any other league. Both the SEC East ern and Western Divisions had more or as many selections in the NFL Draft in 2013 as any other league. • Former Southeastern Conference football players have had success in the . Here is a snapshot of that success since 2000. • The SEC has had more draft selections since 2006 than any other conference. The league has averaged nearly 50 selections per draft since 2006. 2000s All-Decade Team OG - Alan Faneca, LSU (Pittsburgh, N.Y. Jets, Arizona) • The SEC had 11 first-round picks in 2014. The league set a record with 12 first-round selections in C - Kevin Mawae, LSU (Seattle, N.Y. Jets, Tennessee) 2013. During the last eight NFL Drafts, the SEC has had 74 players taken in the first round, an QB - Peyton Manning, Tennessee (Indianapolis) average of over nine per season. RB - Jamal Lewis, Tennessee (Baltimore, Cleveland) RB - Shaun Alexander, Alabama (Seattle, Washington) • With five draft picks in the Top 15 in 2014, the SEC has now had 40 players taken with first 15 DT - Richard Seymour, Georgia (New England, Oakland) picks last eight years. This is the eighth year in a row and 10th in last 12 drafts the SEC has had CB - Champ Bailey, Georgia (Washington, Denver) multiple picks in the Top 7. NFL MVPs • There have now been 42 players selected from the 2012 BCS National Championship Game 2003 - Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (Tennessee) between Alabama and LSU. Jamal Lewis, Baltimore (Tennessee) 2004 - Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (Tennessee) • SEC West has had more NFL draft picks in past two years (61) than every conference except ACC 2005 - Shaun Alexander, Seattle (Alabama) (73) & Pac-12 (62). 2008 - Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (Tennessee) 2009 - Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (Tennessee) • First round picks by conference in 2014: SEC 11, ACC 5, American 4, Big 10 4, Pac 12 3, Big 12 2, 2013 - Peyton Manning, Denver (Tennessee) MAC 2, ND 1. Super Bowl MVPs • Four of the first seven picks of the 2014 NFL Draft were from the SEC, including the No. 1 overall XL - Hines Ward, Pittsburgh (Georgia) pick. XLI - Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (Tennessee) XLII - Eli Manning, New York Giants (Ole Miss) • 2014 was the fourth year in a row five of the first 14 draft picks were from the SEC. XLVI - Eli Manning, New York Giants (Ole Miss)

• Seven SEC schools (half the league) had a player drafted in the First Round in 2014. A nation-leading 31 players hailing from current Southeastern Conference institutions were on the rosters of the and , the two National Football League teams • The SEC had more than double the First Round draft selections (11) than that of the next closest who will squared off in the Super Bowl XLVIII on February 2. The next closest conference is the conference (ACC 5). Pacific-12, from which its current institutions boast 23. 2014 SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE FOOTBALL COMMUNITY SERVICE TEAM

Alabama quarterback Blake Sims is the Southeastern Conference Football Community Service Team Player of the Week. Sims has been very active a local middle school, encouraging students to stay in school and get their education. He also spoke of becoming better listeners and taking advantage of all of the resources they are pro- vided to get the most out of their education. In addition: • He visited Central Elementary School in early October to speak to the children about what it takes to be a “Champion,” which is part of their them this year. • He visited a little boy that was a student at Skyland Elementary but was restricted to his home because of his illness. He played played video games with the boy and encouraged him. • Took part in Alabama’s 2014 Halloween Extravaganza, taking pictures and signing autographs for all of the children that attended. • Collected money from teammates for the past three years for Project Angel Tree (funds buy presents for 30+ local children whose parent(s) are incarcerated)

Week 1 - Jay Hughes, Mississippi State Week 8 - Chris Conley, Georgia Week 2 - Max Godby, Kentucky Week 9 - Mitch Morse, Missouri Week 3 - Deterrian Shackelford, Ole Miss Week 10 - Dylan Thompson, South Carolina Week 4 - Brooks Ellis, Arkansas Week 11 - Josh Lambo, Texas A&M Week 5 - Max Garcia, Florida Week 12 - Nathan Peterman, Tennessee Week 6 - Sammie Coates, Auburn Week 13 - Andrew East , Vanderbilt Week 7 - Hoko Fanaika, LSU Week 14 - Blake Sims, Alabama 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games WINNINGEST SEC COACHES - ALL GAMES AT SEC INSTITUTIONS

Wins Coach (Schools) Seasons W-L-T 1. 292 Paul “Bear” Bryant (Kentucky/Alabama) UK 1946-53 60-23-5 UA 1958-82 232-46-9 2. 205 Steve Spurrier (Florida/South Carolina) UF 1990-2001 122-27-1 SC 2005-present 83-45 3. 201 (Georgia) 1964-88 201-77-10 4. 197 Dan McGugin (Vanderbilt) 1904-17; 1919-34 197-55-19 5. 190 John Vaught (Ole Miss) 1947-70; 1973 190-61-12 6. 176 Ralph “Shug” Jordan (Auburn) 1951-75 176-83-6 7. 173 Robert Neyland (Tennessee) 1926-34; 1936-40; 1946-52 173-31-12 8. 152 (Tennessee) 1992-2008 152-52 9. 140 Wallace Butts (Georgia) 1939-60 140-86-9 10. 137 Charlie McClendon (LSU) 1962-79 137-59-7 11. 135 Mark Richt (Georgia) 2001-present 135-48 12. 134 Nick Saban (LSU/Alabama) LS 2000-04 48-16 UA 2007-present 86-16 13. 122 Mike Donahue (Auburn/LSU) AU 1904-06; 1908-22 99-35-5 LSU 1923-27 23-19-3 14. 115 Johnny Majors (Tennessee) 1977-92 115-62-8 115 Frank Thomas (Alabama) 1931-46 115-24-7 16. 110 Tommy Tuberville (Ole Miss/Auburn) UM 1995-98 25-20 AU 1999-2008 85-40 17. 104 Doug Dickey (Tennessee/Florida) UT 1964-69 46-15-4 UF 1970-78 58-42-2 18. 103 Les Miles (LSU) 2005-present 103-28 19. 99 Pat Dye (Auburn) 1981-92 99-39-4 99 Houston Nutt (Ole Miss/Arkansas) AR 1998-2007 75-48 UM 2008-2011 24-26 21. 98 Harry Mehre (Georgia/Ole Miss) UG 1928-37 59-34-6 UM 1938-45 39-26-1 22. 83 Bernie Moore (LSU) 1935-47 83-39-6 23. 75 Jackie Sherrill (Mississippi State 1991-2002 75-75-2 24. 70 Ray Graves (Florida) 1960-69 70-31-4 25. 67 Billy Brewer (Ole Miss) 1983-93 67-55-3

Minimum 50 Victories WINNINGEST SEC COACHES - SEC REGULAR-SEASON GAMES

Wins Coach (Schools) Seasons W-L-T 1. 159 Paul “Bear” Bryant (Kentucky/Alabama) UK 1946-53 22-18-4 UA 1958-82 137-28-5 2. 131 Steve Spurrier (Florida/South Carolina) UF 1990-2001 87-14 SC 2005-present 44-36 3. 106 John Vaught (Ole Miss) 1947-70; 1973 106-41-10 4. 105 Vince Dooley (Georgia) 1964-88 105-41-4 5. 98 Ralph “Shug” Jordan (Auburn) 1951-75 98-63-4 98 Phillip Fulmer (Tennessee) 1992-2008 98-36 7. 86 Nick Saban (Alabama/LSU) LS 2000-04 30-12 UA 2007-present 56-12 8. 80 Mark Richt (Georgia) 2001-present 80-37 9. 67 Wallace Butts (Georgia) 1939-60 67-60-5 10. 64 Tommy Tuberville (Ole Miss/Auburn) UM 1995-98 12-20 AU 1999-2008 52-29 11. 62 Charlie McClendon (LSU) 1962-79 62-38-0 62 Robert Neyland (Tennessee) 1926-34; 1936-40; 1946-52 62-15-5 13. 59 Frank Thomas (Alabama) 1931-46 59-16-6 14. 58 Les Miles (LSU) 2005-present 58-26 15. 57 Johnny Majors (Tennessee) 1977-92 57-40-3 16. 52 Houston Nutt (Ole Miss/Arkansas) AR 1998-2007 42-38 UM 2008-2011 10-24 17. 49 Doug Dickey (Tennessee/Florida) UT 1964-69 21-10-4 UF 1970-78 28-28-1 18. 48 Pat Dye (Auburn) 1981-92 48-27-1 19. 43 Jackie Sherrill (Mississippi State) 1991-2003 43-52-1 20. 39 Urban Meyer (Florida) 2005-10 39-13 21. 38 Gene Stallings (Alabama) 1990-96 38-16-0 22. 36 Ray Graves (Florida) 1960-69 36-19-3 23. 34 Harold “Red” Drew (Ole Miss/Alabama) UM 1946 1-6-0 UA 1947-54 33-21-7 24. 33 Billy Brewer (Ole Miss) 1983-93 33-41-0 25. 30 Terry Bowden (Auburn) 1993-98 30-14-1

Minimum 25 Victories /Includes SEC Championship Games 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games

SEC COACHING RECORDS COLLEGIATE ALL GAMES SEC vs. SEC# OVERALL RECORD AT SEC SCHOOLS GAMES ONLY Coach, Team W-L-T Pct. W-L-T Pct. W-L-T Pct. Nick Saban, Alabama 177-58-1 .752 134-32 (12) .807 (5) 86-24 (7) .782 (2) Bret Bielema, Arkansas 77-39 .664 9-15 .375 2-14 .125 Gus Malzahn, Auburn 29-9 .763 20-6 .769 12-5 .706 Mark Richt, Georgia 135-48 .738 135-48 (11) .738 (14) 80-37 (8) .684 (13) Mark Stoops, Kentucky 7-17 .292 7-17 .292 2-14 .125 Les Miles, LSU 131-49 .728 103-28 (18) .786 (7) 58-26 (14) .690 (12) Hugh Freeze, Ole Miss 54-21 .720 24-14 .632 11-13 .458 Dan Mullen, Mississippi State 46-30 .605 46-30 .605 22-26 .458 Gary Pinkel, Missouri 185-103-3 .641 27-12 .692 16-10 .615 Steve Spurrier, South Carolina 225-85-2 .724 205-72-1 (2) .739 (13) 131-51 (2) .720 (7) Butch Jones, Tennessee 61-40 .604 11-13 .458 5-11 .313 Kevin Sumlin, Texas A&M 62-28 .689 26-11 .703 13-11 .542 Derek Mason, Vanderbilt 3-9 .250 3-9 .250 0-8 .000

W-L-T Ranking indicates number of wins; Pct. ranking indicates highest winning percentage (To be listed among career leaders, must have min. 5 years coaching) # - includes SEC Championship Game / ( ) - Current SEC Coaches’ Rankings among Career Leaders

STARTING QUARTERBACKS IN THE SEC (2014) IN WINS ------IN LOSSES ------School Quarterback(s) Record A-C-I Yards TD Pct. A-C-I Yards TD Pct. Alabama Blake Sims 12-1 323-210-6 3008 26 65.0 31-19-1 228 0 61.3 Arkansas Brandon Allen 9-15 144-87-1 1226 14 60.4 448-229-16 2511 17 51.1 Auburn Jeremy Johnson 3-0 53-39-2 636 8 73.6 N/A Nick Marshall 17-6 296-192-6 2880 24 64.9 182-101-7 1437 8 55.5 Florida Treon Harris 3-2 39-20-0 404 2 51.3 43-18-2 229 2 41.9 Jeff Driskel 14-6 340-201-8 2047 16 59.1 132-73-10 884 3 55.3 Georgia Hutson Mason 10-4 207-140-4 1614 18 67.6 131-81-2 1024 5 61.8 Kentucky Patrick Towles 5-7 147-96-1 1172 7 65.3 246-129-8 1520 7 52.4 LSU Anthony Jennings 9-3 148-73-7 1138 9 49.3 74-33-1 320 1 44.6 Brandon Harris 0-1 N/A 14-3-0 58 0 21.4 Ole Miss Bo Wallace 24-14 629-422-17 5120 48 67.1 533-314-21 3826 14 58.9 Mississippi State Dak Prescott 14-6 346-214-7 3220 27 61.8 202-115-8 1275 5 56.9 Missouri Maty Mauk 13-4 381-202-7 2512 29 53.0 127-63-6 944 4 49.6 South Carolina Dylan Thompson 9-6 287-173-5 2341 16 60.3 235-134-8 1801 14 57.0 Tennessee Joshua Dobbs 4-4 110-67-4 889 7 60.9 123-77-6 616 1 62.6 Justin Worley 8-9 234-152-5 1638 16 65.0 278-152-11 1635 6 54.7 Nathan Peterman 0-2 N/A 15-6-2 15 0 40.0 Texas A&M Kenny Hill 5-3 180-118-2 1745 17 65.5 141-96-6 904 6 68.1 Kyle Allen 2-2 57-32-2 383 5 56.1 62-41-2 381 4 66.1 Vanderbilt Wade Freebeck 2-2 9-6-1 23 0 66.7 43-17-3 185 0 39.5 Johnny McCrary 1-4 29-20-0 281 5 69.0 104-48-5 535 3 46.2 Stephen Rivers 0-1 N/A 25-6-1 60 0 24.0 Patton Robinette 2-3 31-12-2 211 2 38.7 39-23-2 309 2 59.0 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games SEC vs. NON-CONFERENCE TEAMS (Conference alignment at times games were played) 2014 SEC NON-CONFERENCE RECORD [48-7 (.873)] SEC NON-CONFERENCE RECORD (Since 1992) (Includes Bowl Games) Regular Season 2014 Year App. W-L Pct. Bowls Conference App. W-L Pct. Since 1995* 1992 36 27-9 .750 5-1 American 4 3-1 .750 25-29 (.463) # 1993 36 28-7-1 .792 2-2 1994 36 27-8-1 .764 3-2 Atlantic Coast 5 1-4 .200 90-59 (.604) 1995 36 29-7 .806 2-4 Big Ten 2 1-1 .500 45-31 (.592) 1996 36 27-9 .750 5-0 Big 12 4 3-1 .750 40-26-1 (.604) 1997 36 32-4 .889 5-1 Conference USA 9 9-0 1.000 123-24 (.837) 1998 36 27-9 .750 4-4 Mid-American 4 4-0 1.000 56-5 (.918) 1999 36 28-8 .778 4-4 2000 36 27-9 .750 4-5 Mountain West 3 3-0 1.000 16-7 (.696) 2001 36 29-7 .806 5-3 Pac-12 0 0-0 .000 18-14 (.563) 2002 49 37-12 .755 3-4 Sun Belt 7 7-0 1.000 140-7 (.952) 2003 46 31-15 .674 5-2 Western Athletic 1 1-0 1.000 48-7 (.873) 2004 36 25-11 .694 3-3 FBS Independent 0 0-0 .000 46-16 (.742) 2005 36 27-9 .750 3-3 2006 48 41-7 .854 6-3 Non-FBS 16 16-0 1.000 135-3 (.978) 2007 48 40-8 .825 7-2 *-using alignment during year played. 2008 48 37-11 .771 6-2 # - formerly BIG EAST. 2009 48 42-6 .875 6-4 2010 48 41-7 .854 5-5 2011 48 42-6 .875 5-2 2012 56 48-8 .857 6-3 2013 66 54-12 .818 7-3 2014 55 48-7 .863 0-0 TOTALS 992 794-196-2 .801 101-62 (.619) TOTAL w/ BOWLS 1155 895-258-2 .776

NON-CONFERENCE RECORDS (Does not include bowl games) SINCE 1933 SINCE 2000 School Games Won Lost Tied Pct. Games Won Lost Tied Pct. Current Streak* Alabama 323 256 61 6 .802 56 45 11 0 .804 W25 Arkansas 80 65 15 0 .813 56 50 6 0 .893 W4 Auburn 326 245 73 8 .764 56 46 10 0 .821 W11 Florida 351 239 103 9 .694 55 44 11 0 .800 L1 Georgia 377 275 88 14 .748 56 49 7 0 .875 L1 Kentucky 336 228 99 9 .692 56 41 15 0 .732 L1 LSU 358 269 78 11 .767 56 54 2 0 .964 W49 Ole Miss 344 251 85 8 .741 56 42 14 0 .750 W9 Mississippi State 318 229 81 8 .733 56 39 17 0 .696 W7 Missouri 12 10 2 0 .833 12 10 2 0 .833 L1 South Carolina 80 60 20 0 .750 56 47 9 0 .839 L1 Tennessee 359 283 67 9 .801 56 46 10 0 .821 W1 Texas A&M 12 12 0 0 1.000 12 12 0 0 1.000 W12 Vanderbilt 319 193 117 9 .619 56 35 21 0 .625 W3 TOTALS 3590 2610 889 91 .740 686 552 134 0 .805 --- * Current streak includes all non-conference games, including bowl games. 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games STATE OF THE SEC

Record Last Five Years (2009-Current) Record Last 10 Years (2004-Current)

SEC Champ SEC National AP SEC Champ SEC National AP W-L Pct. Bowls Game App. Champ Champ Top 25 W-L Pct. Bowls Game App Champ Champ Top 25 Alabama 72-8 .900 6 3 3 3 5 Alabama 113-31 .785 11 4 3 3 7 LSU 61-17 .782 6 1 1 0 5 LSU 112-31 .783 11 3 2 1 9 South Carolina 55-23 .705 6 1 0 0 4 Georgia 103-40 .720 11 3 1 0 7 Missouri 53-25 .679 5 2 0 0 2 Auburn 100-41 .709 9 3 3 1 6 Auburn 53-25 .679 5 2 2 1 2 Florida 100-41 .709 10 3 2 2 6 Georgia 53-26 .670 6 2 0 0 2 Missouri 95-47 .669 9 2 0 0 4 Florida 50-26 .658 5 1 0 0 2 South Carolina 89-50 .640 9 1 0 0 4 Texas A&M 49-28 .636 6 0 0 0 3 Texas A&M 81-57 .587 9 0 0 0 3 Mississippi State 46-30 .605 5 0 0 0 1 Arkansas 74-62 .544 6 1 0 0 3 Arkansas 42-33 .560 4 0 0 0 2 Tennessee 73-64 .533 6 2 0 0 3 Ole Miss 39-36 .520 4 0 0 0 1 Mississippi State 67-68 .496 6 0 0 0 1 Tennessee 34-40 .459 3 0 0 0 0 Ole Miss 62-72 .463 5 0 0 0 2 Vanderbilt 31-44 .413 3 0 0 0 2 Kentucky 55-80 .407 5 0 0 0 0 Kentucky 27-47 .365 2 0 0 0 0 Vanderbilt 54-80 .403 4 0 0 0 2

SHUTOUTS IN THE SEC SINCE 1992 SEC’S BEST ROAD TEAMS SINCE 1992 Which defenses in the SEC have posted the most shutouts since 1992: Which SEC team has the best record away from home in league games since 1992 (includes neutral site games/does not include SEC Championship Game): Team Total Last Alabama 26 10/18/14 vs. Texas A&M (59-0) Team W-L Pct. Arkansas 8 11/22/14 vs. Ole Miss (30-0) Florida 73-29 .716 Auburn 14 8/30/08 vs. UL-Monroe (34-0) Alabama 61-32 .656 Georgia 12 10/11/14 vs. Missouri (34-0) Georgia 64-39-1 .620 Florida 11 9/6/14 vs. Eastern Michigan (65-0) Tennessee 54-38 .587 Kentucky 5 9/5/09 vs. Miami, Ohio (42-0) Auburn 51-40 .560 LSU 18 9/13/14 vs. UL-Monroe (31-0) LSU 50-42-1 .543 Ole Miss 13 11/8/14 vs. Presbyterian (48-0) South Carolina 37-55 .402 Mississippi State 9 11/22/14 vs. Vanderbilt (51-0) Arkansas 33-57-2 .370 Missouri 8 9/17/11 vs. Western Illinois (69-0) Ole Miss 27-65 .293 South Carolina 7 8/28/08 vs. N.C. State (34-0) Mississippi State 25-66-1 .277 Tennessee 16 8/31/13 vs. Austin Peay (45-0) Kentucky 23-69 .250 Texas A&M 9 9/11/04 vs. Wyoming (31-0) Vanderbilt 18-74 .196 Vanderbilt 4 11/3/12 vs. Kentucky (40-0) ------Missouri 9-3 .750 Texas A&M 10-4 .714

CLOSE LOSSES SINCE 2003 EASTERN DIVISION vs. WESTERN DIVISION (Since 1992 • DOES NOT INCLUDE SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME) Total Team Losses 1-7 Margin Pct. EASTERN vs. Western W L T Pct. Streak Georgia 42 26 .619 Florida 39 27 0 .591 L3 Alabama 39 23 .590 Georgia 44 21 1 .674 W2 Florida 44 23 .523 Kentucky 23 43 0 .348 L6 LSU 31 16 .516 Missouri 4 2 0 .667 W4 South Carolina 57 26 .456 South Carolina 24 41 1 .371 L2 Arkansas 62 27 .435 Tennessee 36 29 1 .553 L9 Ole Miss 75 30 .400 Vanderbilt 12 54 0 .181 L4 Auburn 47 18 .382 TOTALS 182 217 3 .456 Texas A&M 65 25 .385 Tennessee 64 23 .359 WESTERN vs. Eastern W L T Pct. Streak Vanderbilt 88 31 .352 Alabama 46 19 1 .705 W10 Missouri 51 16 .314 Arkansas 27 39 0 .409 L5 Kentucky 87 26 .299 Auburn 40 25 1 .614 L1 Mississippi State 76 18 .237 LSU 35 30 1 .538 W3 Ole Miss 32 34 0 .485 W2 Mississippi State 34 32 0 .515 W2 Texas A&M 3 3 0 .500 L1 TOTALS 217 182 3 .544 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games SEC NEWS & NOTES SEC FOOTBALL SERIES MARGINS SINCE 2000 (Min. 10 games played / Includes 2014 games) SEC ALL-TIME RECORDS BY WINNING PERCENTAGE (Min. 23 starts)

Total Avg. 1. Jay Barker, Alabama (1991-94) ...... 35-2-1 (.934) Series G Margin Margin 1-9 10-19 20-29 30+ 2. , Florida (1993-96)...... 32-3-1 (.903) South Carolina-Tennessee 15 118 7.87 10 4 1 0 T3. AJ McCarron, Alabama (2010-13)...... 36-4 (.900) Georgia-South Carolina 15 141 9.40 9 4 2 0 T3. Buck Belue, Georgia (1978-81)...... 27-3 (.900) Arkansas-LSU 15 164 10.93 10 2 2 1 5. John Lastinger, Georgia (1981-83) ...... 20-2-1 (.891) Florida-Georgia 15 164 10.93 9 4 1 1 6. Greg McElroy, Alabama (2007-10) ...... 24-3 (.889) Kentucky-Mississippi State 15 168 11.20 7 6 2 0 7. Tee Martin, Tennessee (1996-99)...... 22-3 (.880) LSU-Ole Miss 15 170 11.33 9 4 0 2 8. Bobby Scott, Tennessee (1968-70)...... 20-3 (.869) Alabama-LSU 16 185 11.56 9 3 3 1 9. Peyton Manning, Tennessee (1994-97)...... 39-6 (.867) Ole Miss-Vanderbilt 15 177 11.80 9 4 1 1 10. Tim Tebow, Florida (2006-09)...... 35-6 (.866) Florida-Tennessee 15 178 11.87 6 7 1 1 11. Reggie Slack, Auburn (1986-89)...... 22-4 (.846) Auburn-Ole Miss 15 184 12.27 7 4 4 0 12. Connor Shaw, South Carolina (2010-13)...... 27-5 (.844) Georgia-Tennessee 15 188 12.53 7 4 4 0 13. John Rauch, Georgia (1945-48)...... 36-8-1 (.811) South Carolina-Vanderbilt 15 197 13.13 5 8 1 1 14. David Greene, Georgia (2001-04)...... 42-10 (.808) Kentucky-South Carolina 15 202 13.46 10 1 2 2 15. , Georgia (2006-08)...... 28-7 (.800) Kentucky-Tennessee 15 205 13.67 6 5 2 2 16 Shane Matthews, Florida (1990-92) ...... 27-7 (.794) Auburn-LSU 15 209 13.93 7 3 3 2 17. Heath Shuler, Tennessee (1991-93)...... 19-5 (.792) Alabama-Auburn 15 216 14.40 8 3 2 2 18. Andy Kelly, Tennessee (1988-91)...... 24-5-2 (.790) Florida-LSU 15 218 14.53 7 3 2 3 19. Babe Parilli, Kentucky (1949-51) ...... 28-8 (.778) Kentucky-Vanderbilt 15 218 14.53 5 6 2 2 20. Jason Campbell, Auburn (2001-04) ...... 31-9 (.775) Ole Miss-Mississippi State 15 226 15.06 5 6 2 2 21. Casey Clausen, Tennessee (2000-03)...... 34-10 (.773) Tennessee-Vanderbilt 15 230 15.33 8 2 3 2 Arkansas-Mississippi State 15 231 15.40 8 2 2 3 CURRENT CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITHOUT BEING SHUTOUT Arkansas-South Carolina 14 219 15.64 5 4 4 1 Southeastern Conference Gms Last Time Shutout Arkansas-Ole Miss 15 235 15.66 5 5 1 4 1. *Florida 333 Oct. 29, 1988 (lost to Auburn, 16-0) Auburn-Georgia 15 235 15.67 7 3 3 2 2. Tennessee 258 Sept. 17, 1994 (lost to Florida, 31-0) Arkansas-Auburn 15 236 15.73 4 6 5 0 3. Georgia 246 Sept. 30, 1995 (lost to Alabama, 31-0) Auburn-Mississippi State 15 238 15.87 7 2 4 2 4. Alabama 182 Nov. 18, 2000 (lost to Auburn, 9-0) Alabama-Tennessee 15 247 16.47 5 3 3 4 5. South Carolina 115 Sept. 9, 2006 (lost to Georgia, 18-0) Alabama-Ole Miss 15 252 16.80 6 4 1 4 6. Mississippi State 76 Nov. 28, 2008 (lost to Ole Miss, 45-0) Alabama-Mississippi State 15 266 17.73 3 5 4 2 7. Kentucky 26 Nov. 3, 2012 (lost to Vanderbilt, 40-0) Georgia-Kentucky 15 270 18.00 6 3 2 4 8. Auburn 26 Nov. 24, 2012 (lost to Alabama, 49-0) Florida-South Carolina 15 271 18.07 5 1 4 4 9. Arkansas 15 Oct. 19, 2013 (lost to Alabama, 52-0) Alabama-Arkansas 15 277 18.46 6 3 3 3 10. Missouri 7 Oct. 11, 2014 (lost to Missouri, 34-0) Georgia-Vanderbilt 15 286 19.06 4 5 2 4 11. Texas A&M 4 Oct. 18, 2014 (lost to Alabama, 59-0) Florida-Vanderbilt 15 313 20.87 4 4 5 2 12. LSU 1 Nov. 15, 2014 (lost to LSU, 17-0) Florida-Kentucky 15 362 24.13 4 2 3 6 13. Ole Miss 1 Nov. 22, 2014 (lost to Arkansas, 30-0) LSU-Mississippi State 15 366 24.40 3 3 2 7 14. Vanderbilt 1 Nov. 22, 2014 (lost to Miss. State, 51-0)

* - Longest active streak in NCAA FBS.

SEC STATISTICAL TRENDS Below are some statistical trends in the SEC since conference expansion in 1992 through the 2013 season (Averages per Game Only):

Category 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Scoring Offense 21.7 24.7 26.3 27.1 24.6 25.7 25.9 24.9 26.4 27.7 25.6 27.3 25.0 24.1 25.4 30.3 25.6 28.4 31.0 27.3 30.4 31.7 Total Offense 335.1 367.2 366.9 376.7 344.7 372.6 376.4 349.5 364.8 399.2 360.4 376.9 368.9 348.3 351.6 385.9 342.9 378.6 400.2 355.0 402.4 432.5 Rushing Offense 167.4 169.8 165.1 153.7 144.7 137.9 144.0 127.7 140.9 154.1 163.9 157.8 166.6 141.4 140.5 168.4 147.1 175.8 175.2 161.1 168.4 197.0 Passing Offense 167.7 197.4 201.8 223.0 200.0 234.7 232.4 221.8 223.9 245.1 196.5 219.1 202.3 206.9 211.1 217.5 195.8 202.8 225.0 193.9 234.0 235.5 Percent Run 49.9% 46.2% 44.9% 40.8% 41.9% 37.0% 38.3% 36.5% 38.6% 38.6% 45.5% 41.9% 45.2% 40.6% 39.9% 43.6% 42.9% 46.4% 43.8% 45.4% 41.8% 45.5% Percent Pass 50.1% 53.8% 55.1% 59.2% 58.1% 63.0% 61.7% 63.5% 61.4% 61.4% 54.5% 58.1% 54.8& 59.4% 60.1% 56.8% 57.1% 53.6% 56.2% 54.6% 58.2% 54.5% Scoring Defense 18.8 19.6 21.7 22.5 20.9 21.2 22.3 21.0 22.2 23.7 21.2 22.5 21.2 20.7 19.4 23.8 20.5 20.8 23.7 20.7 23.0 24.8 Total Defense 315.1 329.9 340.9 349.0 320.3 339.1 349.5 322.4 337.1 372.5 329.2 346.6 336.9 327.6 315.0 352.9 309.4 328.7 350.3 320.7 361.3 379.8 Rushing Defense 145.8 146.1 151.4 141.6 131.7 121.6 132.9 107.3 128.8 140.7 143.1 137.7 149.5 131.7 128.4 147.4 122.3 140.7 141.2 143.8 140.2 161.0 Passing Defense 169.3 183.8 189.5 207.4 188.6 217.5 216.6 215.1 208.3 231.8 186.1 208.9 187.4 195.9 186.6 205.5 187.1 188.0 209.1 176.9 221.2 218.7 Percent Run 46.3% 44.3% 44.4% 40.6% 41.1% 35.9% 38.0% 33.3% 38.2% 37.8% 43.5% 39.7% 44.4% 40.2% 40.8% 41.8% 39.5% 42.8% 40.3% 44.8% 38.7% 42.4% Percent Pass 53.7% 55.7% 55.6% 59.4% 58.9% 64.1% 62.0% 66.7% 61.8% 62.2% 56.5% 60.3% 55.6% 58.8% 59.2% 58.2% 60.5% 57.2% 59.7% 55.2% 61.3% 57.6% 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games SEC CAREER STATISTICAL LEADERS

Total Offensive Yards Gained All-Purpose Rushing Yards 1. 13,562 - Aaron Murray, Georgia (396 rushing, 13,166 passing)...... 2010- 13 1. 6,833 - Kevin Faulk, LSU ...... 1995-98 2. 12,232 -Tim Tebow, Florida (2,947 rushing, 9,285 passing)...... 2006-09 2. 5,881 - Darren McFadden, Arkansas ...... 2005-07 3. 11,380 - Chris Leak, Florida (137 rushing, 11,213 passing, 30 receiving)...... 2003-06 3. 5,856 - Derek Abney, Kentucky ...... 2000-03 4. 11,270 - David Greene, Georgia (-258 rushing, 11,528 passing)...... 2001-04 4. 5,749 - , Georgia ...... 1980-82 5. 11,020 - Peyton Manning, Tennessee (-181 rushing, 11,201 passing)...... 1994-97 5. 5,743 - Domanick Davis, LSU ...... 1999-2002 6. 10,841 - Eric Zeier, Georgia (-312 rushing, 11,153 passing)...... 1991-94 6. 5,596 - James Brooks, Auburn...... 1977-80 7. 10,637 - Jared Lorenzen, Kentucky (279 rushing, 10,354 passing)...... 2000-03 7. 5,393 - Errict Rhett, Florida ...... 1990-93 8. 10,500 - Danny Wuerffel, Florida (-375 rushing, 10,875 passing) ...... 1993-96 8. 5,343 - Rafael Little, Kentucky ...... 2004-07 9. 10,383 - Bo Wallace, Ole Miss (958 rushing, 9,425 passing)...... 2012- 9. 5,330 - Dennis Johnson, Arkansas ...... 2008-12 10. 9,989- Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M (2,169 rushing, 7,820 passing) ...... 2012-13 10. 5,326 - Dalton Hilliard, LSU ...... 1982-85 Highest Active Players Highest Active Players 10,383 - Bo Wallace, Ole Miss (958 rushing, 9,425 passing)...... 2012- 4,905 - Marcus Murphy, Missouri...... 2010- 7,016 - Dak Prescott, Mississippi State (1,886 rushing, 5,130 passing)...... 2012- 4,322 – Todd Gurley, Georgia ...... 2012- 3,769 - T.J. Yeldon, Alabama...... 2012- Touchdown Responsibility 1. 145 - Tim Tebow, Florida (57 rushing, 88 passing)...... 2006-09 Pass Completions 2. 137- Aaron Murray, Georgia (16 rushing, 121 passing)...... 2010-13 1. 921 - Aaron Murray, Georgia (1,478 atts., 13,166 yards) ...... 2010-13 3. 122 - Danny Wuerffel, Florida (8 rushing, 114 passing)...... 1993-96 2. 895 - Chris Leak, Florida (1,458 atts., 11,213 yards)...... 2003-06 4. 101 - Peyton Manning, Tennessee (12 rushing, 89 passing) ...... 1994-97 3. 863 - Peyton Manning, Tennessee (1,402 atts., 11,201 yards)...... 1994-97 101 - Chris Leak, Florida (13 rushing, 88 passing) ...... 2003-06 4. 862 - Jared Lorenzen, Kentucky (1,514 atts., 10,354 yards)...... 2000-03 6. 93 - Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M (30 rushing, 63 passing) ...... 2012-13 5. 849 - David Greene, Georgia (1,440 atts., 11,528 yards)...... 2001-04 7. 90 - Jared Lorenzen, Kentucky (12 rushing, 78 passing)...... 2000-03 6. 838 - Eric Zeier, Georgia (1,402 atts., 11,153 yards)...... 1991-94 8. 86 - Eli Manning, Ole Miss (5 rushing, 81 passing) ...... 2000-03 7. 829 - Eli Manning, Ole Miss (1,363 atts., 10,119 yards)...... 2000-03 9. 84 - Andre Woodson, Kentucky (5 rushing, 79 passing)...... 2004-07 8. 795 - Tim Couch, Kentucky (1,184 atts., 8,435 yards) ...... 1996-98 10. 83 - Rex Grossman, Florida (6 rushing, 77 passing)...... 2000-02 9. 791 - Andre’ Woodson, Kentucky (1,278 atts., 9,360 yards)...... 2004-07 Highest Active Players 10. 775 - Casey Clausen, Tennessee (1,270 atts., 9,707 yards)...... 2000-03 81 - Bo Wallace, Ole Miss (19 rushing, 62 passing)...... 2012- Highest Active Players 68 - Dak Prescott, Mississippi State (30 rushing, 38 passing) ...... 2012- 737 - Bo Wallace, Ole Miss (1,163 atts., 9,425 yards)...... 2012- Rushing Yards Gained Passing Yards 1. 5,259 - Herschel Walker, Georgia (33 games) ...... 1980-82 1. 13,166 - Aaron Murray, Georgia (921 of 1,478) ...... 2010-13 2. 4,590 - Darren McFadden, Arkansas (38 games)...... 2005-07 2. 11,528 - David Greene, Georgia (849 of 1,440)...... 2001-04 3. 4,557 - Kevin Faulk, LSU (41 games) ...... 1995-98 3. 11,213 - Chris Leak, Florida (895 of 1,458)...... 2003-06 4. 4,303 - , Auburn (38 games) ...... 1982-85 4. 11,201 - Peyton Manning, Tennessee (863 of 1,381)...... 1994-97 5. 4,163 - Errict Rhett, Florida (48 games)...... 1990-93 5. 11,153 - Eric Zeier, Georgia (838 of 1,402)...... 1991-94 6. 4,050 - Dalton Hilliard, LSU (44 games)...... 1982-85 6. 10,875 - Danny Wuerffel, Florida (708 of 1,170)...... 1993-96 7. 4,035 - Charles Alexander, LSU (44 games) ...... 1975-78 7. 10,354 - Jared Lorenzen, Kentucky (862 of 1,514)...... 2000-03 8. 3,994 - Anthony Dixon, Mississippi State (47 games)...... 2006-09 8. 10,119 - Eli Manning, Ole Miss (829 of 1,363)...... 2000-03 9. 3,928 - Emmitt Smith, Florida (31 games) ...... 1987-89 9. 9,707 - Casey Clausen, Tennessee (774 of 1,269)...... 2000-03 10. 3,835 - Sonny Collins, Kentucky (41 games)...... 1972-75 10. 9,425 - Bo Wallace, Ole Miss (737 of 1,163)...... 2012- Highest Active Players Highest Active Player 3,285 – Todd Gurley, Georgia (30 games)...... 2012- 9,425 - Bo Wallace, Ole Miss (737 of 1,163)...... 2012- 3,275 - T.J. Yeldon, Alabama (38 games)...... 2012- 2,385 - Mike Davis, South Carolina (36 games) ...... 2012- 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games SEC CAREER STATISTICAL LEADERS

Touchdown Passes Touchdown Receptions 1. 121- Aaron Murray, Georgia...... 2010-13 1. 31 - Chris Doering, Florida (40 games) ...... 1992-95 2. 114 - Danny Wuerffel, Florida...... 1993-96 2. 30 - Terrence Edwards, Georgia (45 games)...... 1999-2002 3. 89 - Peyton Manning, Tennessee ...... 1994-97 3. 29 - Ike Hilliard, Florida (32 games)...... 1994-96 4. 88 - Chris Leak, Florida ...... 2003-06 29 - , Auburn (30 games)...... 1969-71 88 - Tim Tebow, Florida...... 2006-09 29 - Jack Jackson, Florida (38 games)...... 1992-94 6. 81 - Eli Manning, Ole Miss ...... 2000-03 29 - Amari Cooper, Alabama (39 games)...... 2012- 7. 79 - Andre’ Woodson, Kentucky ...... 2004-07 7. 28 - Craig Yeast, Kentucky (43 games)...... 1995-98 8. 78 - Jared Lorenzen, Kentucky...... 2000-03 8. 27 - Jabar Gaffney, Florida (23 games)...... 2000-2001 9. 77 - Rex Grossman, Florida...... 2000-02 27 - Marcus Monk, Arkansas (40 games)...... 2004-07 77 - A.J. McCarron, Alabama...... 2010-13 10. 26 - Reidel Anthony, Florida (33 games) ...... 1994-96 Highest Active Player 26 - Dwayne Bowe, LSU (42 games)...... 2003-06 62 - Bo Wallace, Ole Miss...... 2012- Highest Active Players 29 - Amari Cooper, Alabama (39 games)...... 2012- Receptions 19 - Chris Conley, Georgia (48 games)...... 2011- 1. 262- Jordan Matthews, Vanderbilt (3,759 yards)...... 2010-13 17 - Michael Bennett, Georgia (41 games)...... 2011- 2. 236 - Earl Bennett, Vanderbilt (2,852 yards)...... 2005-07 3. 208 - Craig Yeast, Kentucky (2,899 yards)...... 1995-98 Rushing Touchdowns 4. 207 - Kenny McKinley, South Carolina (2,781 yards)...... 2005-09 1. 55 - Tim Tebow, Florida...... 2006-09 5. 204 - Terrence Edwards, Georgia (3,093 yards)...... 1999-2002 2. 49 - Herschel Walker, Georgia...... 1980-82 6. 200 - Keith Edwards, Vanderbilt (1,757 yards)...... 80,82-84 3. 46 - Kevin Faulk, LSU...... 1995-98 7. 198 - Chris Collins, Ole Miss (2,621 yards) ...... 2000-03 4. 45 - Carnell Williams, Auburn...... 2001-04 8. 197 - Derek Abney, Kentucky (2,339 yards)...... 2000-03 5. 44 - Dalton Hilliard, LSU ...... 1982-85 9. 194 - Anthony White, Kentucky (1,519 yards) ...... 1996-99 6. 43 - Bo Jackson, Auburn...... 1982-85 194 - DJ Hall, Alabama (2,923 yards)...... 2004-07 7. 42 - Anthony Dixon, Mississippi State...... 2006-09 Highest Active Player 42 - Mark Ingram, Alabama...... 2008-10 132 - Michael Bennett, Georgia (1,584 yards) ...... 2011- 9. 41 - Shaun Alexander, Alabama ...... 1996-99 41 - Darren McFadden, Arkansas ...... 2005-07 Reception Yardage Highest Active Players 1. 3,759- Jordan Matthews, Vanderbilt (262 catches)...... 2010-13 36 - Todd Gurley, Georgia...... 2012- 2. 3,392 - Amari Cooper, Alabama (219 catches)...... 2012- 36 - T.J. Yeldon, Alabama...... 2012- 3. 3,093 - Terrence Edwards, Georgia (204 catches)...... 1999-2002 30 - Dak Prescott, Mississippi State ...... 2012- 4. 3,042 - Alshon Jeffery, South Carolina (183 catches)...... 2009-11 27 - Kenny Hilliard, LSU...... 2011- 5. 3,001 - Josh Reed, LSU (167 catches) ...... 1999-2001 6. 2,964 - Boo Mitchell, Vanderbilt (188 catches)...... 1985-88 Points Scored 7. 2,934 - Jarius Wright, Arkansas (168 catches) ...... 2008-11 1. 412 - Blair Walsh, Georgia (184 PATs, 76 FGs, 53 games)...... 2008-11 8. 2,923 - DJ Hall, Alabama (194 catches) ...... 2004-07 2. 409 - Billy Bennett, Georgia (148 PAT, 87 FGs, 50 games)...... 2000-03 9. 2,899 - Craig Yeast, Kentucky (208 catches)...... 1995-98 3. 385 - Leigh Tiffin, Alabama (136 PATs, 83 FGs, 46 games)...... 2006-09 10. 2,884 - Fred Gibson, Georgia (161 catches) ...... 2001-04 4. 371 - Jeff Hall, Tennessee (188 PAT, 61 FGs, 46 games)...... 1995-98 Highest Active Players 5. 369 - Colt David, LSU (201 PATs, 54 FGs, 1 TD, 52 games ) ...... 2005-09 3,392 - Amari Cooper, Alabama (39 games)...... 2012- 6. 368 - Jeff Chandler, Florida (67 FGs, 167 PATs, 46 games)...... 1997-2001 1,858 – Chris Conley, Georgia (48 games)...... 2011- 7. 363 - Wes Byrum, Auburn (183 PATs, 60 FGs, 51 games) ...... 2007-10 8. 354 - Zach Hocker, Arkansas (61 FGs, 171 PATs, 50 games)...... 2010-13 9. 353 - Kevin Butler, Georgia (122 PAT, 77 FGs, 44 games)...... 1981-84 10. 345 - Philip Doyle, Alabama (105 PAT, 78 FGs, 1 TD, 43 games)...... 1987-90 Highest Active Players 302 – Marshall Morgan, Georgia (173 PATs, 43 FGs, 37 games) ...... 2012- 283 - Andrew Baggett, Missouri (139 PATs, 48 FGs, 39 games)...... 2012- 264 – Todd Gurley, Georgia (44 TDs, 30 games) ...... 2012- 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games SEC CAREER STATISTICAL LEADERS

Most Touchdowns Scored PAT Kicks Made 1. 57 - Tim Tebow, Florida (55 games)...... 2006-09 1. 201 - Colt David, LSU (204 atts.)...... 2005-09 2. 53 - Kevin Faulk, LSU (41 games) ...... 1995-98 2. 188 - Jeff Hall, Tennessee (194 atts.) ...... 1995-98 3. 52 - Herschel Walker, Georgia (33 games) ...... 1980-82 3. 184 - Blair Walsh, Georgia (186 atts.)...... 2008-11 4. 50 - Dalton Hilliard, LSU (44 games)...... 1982-85 4. 183 - Wes Byrum, Auburn (186 atts.)...... 2007-10 5. 50 - Shaun Alexander, Alabama (41 games)...... 1996-99 5. 173 – Marshall Morgan, Georgia (178 atts.) ...... 2012- 6. 46 - Carnell Williams, Auburn (42 games) ...... 2001-04 6. 172 - Jeremy Shelley, Alabama (175 atts.) ...... 2009-12 46 - Anthony Dixon, Mississippi State (47 games)...... 2006-09 7. 171- Zach Hocker, Arkansas (173 atts.)...... 2010-13 46 - Mark Ingram, Alabama (39 games)...... 2008-10 8. 167 - Jeff Chandler, Florida (180 atts.)...... 1997-2001 9. 45 - Bo Jackson, Auburn (38 games) ...... 1982-85 9. 162 - John Vaughn, Auburn (163 atts.)...... 2003-06 10. 44 – Todd Gurley, Georgia (30 games)...... 2012- 10. 161 - John Becksvoort, Tennesee (161 atts.)...... 1991-94 44 - Darren McFadden, Arkansas (38 games) ...... 2005-07 Highest Active Players Highest Active Players 173 – Marshall Morgan, Georgia (178 atts.)...... 2012- 44 – Todd Gurley, Georgia (30 games)...... 2012- 139 - Andrew Baggett, Missouri (148 atts.)...... 2012-

Field Goals Made Punt Return Yards 1. 87 - Billy Bennett, Georgia (110 atts.) ...... 2000-03 1. 1,752 - Javier Arenas, Alabama (125 returns)...... 2006-09 2. 83 - Leigh Tiffin, Alabama (109 atts.) ...... 2006-09 2. 1,695 - Lee Nalley, Vanderbilt (109 returns) ...... 1947-49 3. 78 - Philip Doyle, Alabama (105 atts.)...... 1987-90 3. 1,371 - Brandon James, Florida (117 returns)...... 2006-09 4. 77 - Kevin Butler, Georgia (98 atts.)...... 1981-84 4. 1,332 - Tony James, Mississippi State (121 returns)...... 1989-92 5. 76 - Blair Walsh, Georgia (103 atts.)...... 2008-11 5. 1,253 - Damien Gary, Georgia (114 returns)...... 2000-03 6. 71 - Fuad Reveiz, Tennessee (95 atts.) ...... 1981-84 6. 1,170 - Thomas Bailey, Auburn (125 returns) ...... 1991-94 7. 70- Caleb Sturgis, Florida (87 atts.)...... 2008-12 7. 1,163 - Bobby Majors, Tennessee (117 returns)...... 1969-71 8. 67 - Jeff Chandler, Florida (80 atts.)...... 1997-2001 8. 1,142 - Junie Hovious, Ole Miss (84 returns)...... 1938-41 9. 65 - Michael Proctor, Alabama (91 atts.) ...... 1992-95 9. 1,126 - Domanick Davis, LSU (94 returns) ...... 1999-2002 10. 63 – Jonathan Nichols, Ole Miss (82 atts.) ...... 2001-04 10. 1,119 - Harry Gilmer, Alabama (83 returns)...... 1944-47 Highest Active Players 1,119 - Greg Richardson, Alabama (125 returns)...... 1983-86 48 - Andrew Baggett, Missouri (68 atts.)...... 2012- Highest Active Players 43 - Marshall Morgan, Georgia (56 atts.)...... 2012- 793 - Marcus Murphy, Missouri (72 returns)...... 2012- 708 - Christion Jones, Alabama (63 returns)...... 2011- Total Points Scored by Kicking 1. 412 - Blair Walsh, Georgia (184 PATs, 76 FGs, 53 games)...... 2008-11 Kickoff Return Yards 2. 409 - Billy Bennett, Georgia (87 FGs, 148 PATs) ...... 2000-03 1. 2,784 - Dennis Johnson, Arkansas (119 returns)...... 2008-12 3. 385 - Leigh Tiffin, Alabama (136 PATs, 83 FGs, 46 games)...... 2006-09 2. 2,718 - Brandon James, Florida (112 returns)...... 2006-09 4. 371 - Jeff Hall, Tennessee (61 FGs, 188 PATs) ...... 1995-98 3. 2,663 - Brandon Boykin, Georgia (110 returns) ...... 2008-11 5. 368 - Jeff Chandler, Florida (67 FGs, 167 PATs)...... 1997-2001 4. 2,498 - Derek Pegues, Mississippi State (112 returns) ...... 2005-08 6. 363 - Colt David, LSU (201 PATs, 54 FGs, 52 games )...... 2005-09 5. 2,476 - Chris Culliver, South Carolina (106 returns) ...... 2007-10 363 - Wes Byrum, Auburn (183 PATs, 60 FGs, 51 games) ...... 2007-10 6. 2,315 - Derek Abney, Kentucky (95 returns) ...... 2000-03 8. 354 - Zach Hocker, Arkansas (61 FGs, 171 PATs, 50 games)...... 2010-13 7. 2,263 - Mark Johnson, Vanderbilt (107 returns) ...... 1986-88, 90 9. 353 - Kevin Butler, Georgia (77 FGs, 122 PATs)...... 1981-84 8. 2,168 - Domanick Davis, LSU (95 returns) ...... 1999-2002 10. 344 – Jonathan Nichols, Ole Miss (63 FGs, 155 PATs, 48 games) ...... 2001-04 9. 2,116 - Javier Arenas, Alabama (88 returns)...... 2006-09 Highest Active Players 10. 2,111- Andre Debose, Florida (79 returns)...... 2010- 302 – Marshall Morgan, Georgia (173 PATs, 43 FGs, 37 games) ...... 2012- Highest Active Players 283 - Andrew Baggett, Missouri (139 PATs, 48 FGs, 39 games)...... 2012- 2,111 - Andre Debose, Florida (77 returns)...... 2010- 2,010 - Marcus Murphy, Missouri (86 returns)...... 2012- 1,581 - Trey Williams, Texas A&M (66 returns)...... 2012- 1,543 - Devrin Young, Tennessee (67 returns)...... 2011- 1,464 - Jaylen Walton, Ole Miss (65 returns) ...... 2012- 1,414 - Jameon Lewis, Mississippi State (63 returns) ...... 2012- 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games SEC CAREER STATISTICAL LEADERS

Rushing Yards by Quarterbacks Tackles 1. 2,947 - Tim Tebow, Florida...... 2006-09 1. 547 - Andy Spiva, Tennessee...... 1973-76 2. 2,535 - Matt Jones, Arkansas...... 2001-04 2. 528 - Freddie Smith, Auburn ...... 1976-79 3. 2,280 - John Bond, Mississippi State ...... 1980-83 528 - Jeff Herrod, Ole Miss...... 1984-87 4. 2,169 - Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M ...... 2012-13 4. 521 - Jim Kovach, Kentucky...... 1974-76, 1978 5. 1,886 - Dak Prescott, Mississippi State...... 2012- 5. 482 - Chris Chenault, Kentucky...... 1985-88 6. 1,884 - Phil Gargis, Auburn...... 1973-76 6. 475 - David Little, Florida ...... 1977-80 7. 1,868 - Don Smith, Mississippi State ...... 1983-86 475 - Jeff Kremer, Kentucky...... 1984-87 8. 1,848 - Nick Marshall, Auburn ...... 2013- 8. 472 - Kem Coleman, Ole Miss ...... 1974-77 1,799 - Andy Johnson, Georgia...... 1971-73 9. 470 - Marty Moore, Kentucky ...... 1990-93 10. 1,764 - Derrick Ramsey, Kentucky...... 1975-77 10. 467 - Scot Brantley, Florida...... 1976-79 Highest Active Players 467 - Ben Zambiasi, Georgia...... 1974-77 1,886 - Dak Prescott, Mississippi State...... 2012- 467 - Ray Costict, Mississippi State...... 1973-76 1,848 - Nick Marshall, Auburn...... 2013- Highest Active Players 958 – Bo Wallace, Ole Miss...... 2012- 425 - A.J. Johnson, Tennessee...... 2011- 642 - Jeff Driskel, Florida ...... 2011- 331 - Amarlo Herrera, Georgia...... 2011-

Yards Punted Sacks 1. 12,171 - Jim Arnold, Vanderbilt (277 punts)...... 1979-82 1. 52.0 - Derrick Thomas, Alabama...... 1985-88 2. 11,562 - Blake McAdams, Mississippi State (293 punts-SEC Record)...... 2005-08 2. 49.0 - Billy Jackson, Mississippi State ...... 1980-83 3. 11,549 - Jim Miller, Ole Miss (266 punts) ...... 1976-79 3. 37.0 - Ben Williams, Ole Miss...... 1972-75 4. 11,336 - Bill Marinangel, Vanderbilt (272 punts)...... 1993-96 4. 36.0 - David Pollack, Georgia...... 2001-04 5. 11,260 - Bill Smith, Ole Miss (254 punts) ...... 1983-86 5. 33.0 - Alex Brown, Florida ...... 1998-01 6. 10,937 - Brett Upson, Vanderbilt (271 punts)...... 2006-09 6. 32.0 - , Tennessee...... 1980-83 7. 10,216 - Dustin Colquitt, Tennessee (240 punts) ...... 2001-04 7. 29.0 - Richard Tardits, Georgia...... 1985-88 8. 10,179 - Lewis Colbert, Auburn (244 punts)...... 1982-85 29.0 - Eric Norwood, South Carolina...... 2006-09 9. 10,177 - Matt Wait, Arkansas (251 punts) ...... 1994-97 9. 28.0 - Jimmy Payne, Georgia...... 1978-82 10. 10,075 - Tyler Campbell, Ole Miss (223 punts)...... 2009-13 28.0 - Leonard Little, Tennessee ...... 1995-97 Highest Active Players 28.0 - Jarvis Jones, Georgia ...... 2011-12 8,234 – Landon Foster, Kentucky (195 punts) ...... 2012- Highest Active Players 7,571 - Kyle Christy, Florida (173 punts) ...... 2011- 23.5 - , Kentucky...... 2011- 18.5 - Shane Ray, Missouri...... 2012- Interceptions 17.0 - Trey Flowers, Arkansas...... 2011- 1. 20 - Bobby Wilson, Ole Miss (379 yards)...... 1946-49 16.0 - Preston Smith, Mississippi State...... 2011- 20 - Chris Williams, LSU (91 yards) ...... 1977-80 15.0 - Markus Golden, Missouri...... 2012- 3. 19 - Glenn Cannon, Ole Miss (180 yards)...... 1967-69 14.5 – Jordan Jenkins, Georgia...... 2012- 19 - Antonio Langham, Alabama (229 yards)...... 1990-93 5. 18 - Buddy McClinton, Auburn (251 yards)...... 1967-69 Passes Deflected 18 - Tim Priest, Tennessee (305 yards)...... 1968-70 1. 49 - Corey Webster, LSU...... 2001-04 7. 16 - Johnthan Banks, Mississippi State (318 yards) ...... 2009-12 2. 47 - John Mangum, Alabama ...... 1985-88 16 - Bacarri Rambo, Georgia (293 yards) ...... 2009-12 3. 44 - Chevis Jackson, LSU...... 2004-07 16 - Harry Gilmer, Alabama (234 yards) ...... 1944-47 4. 43 - Trevard Lindley, Kentucky...... 2006-09 16 - Jake Scott, Georgia (315 yards)...... 1967-68 5. 42 - Anthone Lott, Florida...... 1993-96 16 - Mike Jones, Tennessee (305 yards)...... 1967-69 6. 40 - LaRon Landry, LSU...... 2003-06 16 - Harry Harrison, Ole Miss (242 yards) ...... 1971-73 40 - Carlos Rogers, Auburn ...... 2001-04 16 - Jeremiah Castille, Alabama (186 yards)...... 1979-82 8. 39 - Larry Kennedy, Florida...... 1991-94 16 - John Mangum, Alabama (95 yards)...... 1986-89 9. 36 - Sheldon Brown, South Carolina...... 1998-2001 16 - Walter Harris, Mississippi State (162 yards)...... 1992-95 36 - Robert Davis, Vanderbilt...... 1990-93 Highest Active Players 36 - Dee Milliner, Alabama...... 2010-12 15 - Senquez Golson, Ole Miss (196 yards)...... 2011- Highest Active Players 11 - Cody Prewitt, Ole Miss (174 yards)...... 2011- 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games SEC CAREER STATISTICAL LEADERS

Total Kick Return Yardage (Punt + Kickoff) Tackles for Loss 1. 4,089 - Brandon James, Florida (117-1371 PR / 112-2718 KOR) ...... 2006-09 1. 74.0 - Derrick Thomas, Alabama...... 1985-88 2. 3,868 - Javier Arenas, Alabama (125-1752 PR / 88-2116 KOR)...... 2006-09 2. 59.0 - Kindal Moorehead, Alabama ...... 1998-2002 3. 3,357 - Derek Abney, Kentucky (88-1,042 PR / 95-2,315 KOR)...... 2000-03 3. 58.0 - Wilber Marshall, Florida...... 1980-83 4. 3,294 - Domanick Davis, LSU (94-1126 PR / 95-2168 KOR) ...... 1999-2002 58.0 - David Pollack, Georgia...... 2001-04 5. 3,290 - Derek Pegues, Miss. State (112-2498 KOR / 78-792 PR) ...... 2005-08 5. 55.0 - Alonzo Johnson, Florida...... 1981-85 6. 3,194 - Tony James, Miss. State (121-1,332 PR / 78-1,862 KOR)...... 1989-92 55.0 - Anthony McFarland, LSU ...... 1995-98 7. 2,821 - Brandon Boykin, Georgia (9-158 PR / 110-2,663 KOR)...... 2008-11 7. 54.5 - Eric Norwood, South Carolina...... 2006-09 8. 2,803 - Marcus Murphy, Missouri 72-793 PR / 86-2,010 KOR) ...... 2010- 8. 53.0 - Leonard Little, Tennessee ...... 1995-97 9. 2,784 - Dennis Johnson, Arkansas (119-2,784 KOR)...... 2008-12 9. 51.5 - Derrick Harvey, Florida ...... 2005-07 10. 2,690 - Thomas Bailey, Auburn (125-1,170 PR / 74-1,520 KOR)...... 1991-94 10. 51.0 - Reggie White, Tennessee...... 1980-83 Highest Active Players Highest Active Players 2,803- Marcus Murphy, Missouri 72-793 PR / 86-2,010 KOR) ...... 2010- 45.5 - Trey Flowers, Arkansas...... 2011- 37.0 - Bud Dupree, Kentucky...... 2011- Punt Return Touchdowns 30.5 - A.J. Johnson, Tennessee...... 2011- 1. 7 - Javier Arenas, Alabama ...... 2006-09 2. 6 - Derek Abney, Kentucky...... 2000-03 3. 5 - Lee Nalley, Vanderbilt...... 1947-49 5 - Joe Adams, Arkansas...... 2008-11 Highest Active Players 4 - Marcus Murphy, Missouri...... 2012- 2 - Quan Bray, Auburn ...... 2011- 2 - Christion Jones, Alabama ...... 2011-

Total Kick/Punt Return Touchdowns 1. 8 - Derek Abney, Kentucky (6 PR, 2 KOR)...... 2000-03 2. 7 - Javier Arenas, Alabama (7 PR)...... 2006-09 7 - Marcus Murphy (4 PR 3 KOR)...... 2012- 4. 6 - Lee Nalley, Vanderbilt (5 PR, 1 KOR)...... 1947-49 5. 5 - Pinky Rohm, LSU (3 PR, 2 KOR)...... 1937 5 - Brandon James, Florida (4 PR, 1 KOR) ...... 2006-09 5 - Willie Gault, Tennessee (1 PR, 4 KOR) ...... 1979-82 5 - Tom McWilliams, Mississippi State (4 PR, 1 KOR)...... 1944-48 5 - Brandon Boykin, Georgia (4 KOR / Tied for SEC Career Record / 1 PR)...... 2008-11 5 - Joe Adams, Arkansas (5 PR)...... 2008-11 5 - Marcus Murphy (3 PR, 2 KOR)...... 2012- Highest Active Players 7 - Marcus Murphy (4 PR 3 KOR)...... 2012-

Career Field Goal Percentage (Min. 25 atts.) 1. 87.8 - Bobby Raymond, Florida (43 of 49)...... 1982-84 2. 83.9 - Josh Jasper, LSU (47 of 56) ...... 2007-10 3. 83.8 - Jeff Chandler, Florida (67 of 80)...... 1997-2001 4. 82.9 - Berj Yepremian, Florida (29 of 35)...... 1976-78 5. 82.1 - Judd Davis, Florida (32 of 39) ...... 1992-94 6. 81.3 - David Browndyke, LSU (61 of 75) ...... 1986-89 7. 80.5 - Caleb Sturgis, Florida (70 of 87)...... 2008-12 8. 80.3 - Brandon Coutu, Georgia (53 of 66)...... 2004-07 9. 80.0 - Jeremy Shelley, Alabama (44 of 55) ...... 2009-12 80.0 - Elliott Fry, South Carolina (32 of 40)...... 2013- Highest Active Player 80.0 - Elliott Fry, South Carolina (32 of 40)...... 2013- 76.8 – Marshall Morgan, Georgia (43 of 56)...... 2012- 2014 SEC Football SEC Bowl Games

UPDATE ON SEC INDIVIDUAL AWARDS

(SEC Only - Winners in Bold Italics) Wuerffel Trophy Finalists (4 of 12) Deterrian Shackelford, Ole Miss 80th Annual Heisman Memorial Trophy Finalists (1 of 3) Chris Conley, Georgia Amari Cooper, Alabama (3rd) Dylan Thompson, South Carolina Andrew East, Vanderbilt Biletnikoff Award Winner Amari Cooper, Alabama AFCA Good Works Team (4 of 11) Deterrian Shackelford, Ole Miss (Captain) Rimington Trophy Winner Chris Conley, Georgia Reese Dismukes, Auburn Andrew East, Vanderbilt Max Godby, Kentucky Ray Guy Award Finalists (1 of 3) JK Scott, Alabama Senior CLASS Award Finalists (2 of 10) Chris Conley, Georgia Maxwell Award Finalists (1 of 3) Deterrian Shackelford, Ole Miss Dak Prescott, Mississippi State Lott IMPACT Trophy Finalists (1 of 4) Bronco Nagurski Award Finalists (1 of 5) Landon Collins, Alabama Senquez Golson, Ole Miss Freddie Solomon Community Spirit Award Winner Davey O’Brien National Quarterback Award Finalists (1 of 3) Dylan Thompson, South Carolina Dak Prescott, Mississippi State Pop Warner Award Winner Outland Trophy Finalists (1 of 3) Max Garcia, Florida Reese Dismukes, Auburn NFF Legacy Award Winner Finalists (1 of 5) Mike McNeely, Florida Marcus Murphy, Missouri

Hendricks Award Finalists (1 of 6) Shane Ray, Missouri

Broyles Award Finalists (1 of 5) , Alabama 2014 SEC Football

SEC POST-SEASON ALL-SEC TEAMS AP S(t) Ronald Martin, LSU Second Team All-SEC FRESHMAN ALL-SEC (*ties) S(t) Tony Conner, Mississippi First Team All-SEC OFFENSE OFFENSE TE – Hunter Henry, Arkansas TE - Jeb Blazevich, Georgia OFFENSE SPECIAL TEAMS QB: Dak Prescott, Mississippi State PK Josh Lambo, Texas A&M OL – Laremy Tunsil, Ole Miss OL - Cam Robinson, Alabama RB: Cameron Artis-Payne, Auburn P Kyle Christy, Florida Ben Beckwith, Mississippi State Jashon Robertson, Tennessee RB: Nick Chubb, Georgia Vadal Alexander, LSU Braden Smith, Auburn WR: Amari Cooper, Alabama (unanimous) OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR Mitch Morse, Missouri Ramsey Meyers, Kentucky WR: Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina (tie) Amari Cooper, Alabama WR: Bud Sasser, Missouri (tie) C - Max Garcia, Florida C - Frank Ragnow, Arkansas TE: Evan Engram, Ole Miss DEFENSIVE PLAYE OF THE YEAR OL: La'el Collins, LSU Shane Ray, Missouri WR – Bud Sasser, Missouri WR - Speedy Noil, Texas A&M OL: Ben Beckwith, Mississippi State Sammie Coates, Auburn Malachi Dupre, LSU OL: Arie Kouandjio, Alabama COACH OF THE YEAR OL: Laremy Tunsil, Ole Miss Dan Mullen, Mississippi State QB - Blake Sims, Alabama QB – Treon Harris, Florida C: Reese Dismukes, Auburn AP: Marcus Murphy, Missouri FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR RB - Josh Robinson, Mississippi State RB – Nick Chubb, Georgia Nick Chubb, Georgia T.J. Yeldon, Alabama Leonard Fournette, LSU DEFENSE DE: Shane Ray, Missouri AP - Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina AP - Leonard Fournette, LSU DE: Bud Dupree, Kentucky DT: Robert Nkemdiche, Ole Miss Coaches’ DEFENSE DT: , Alabama First Team All-SEC DEFENSE DL - Myles Garrett, Texas A&M LB: Martrell Spaight, Arkansas OFFENSE DL - Myles Garrett, Texas A&M Derek Barnett, Tennessee LB: Reggie Ragland, Alabama TE - Evan Engram, Ole Miss Trey Flowers, Arkansas Da’Shawn Hand, Alabama LB: Amarlo Herrera, Georgia Derek Barnett, Tennessee Marquis Haynes, Ole Miss CB: Senquez Golson, Ole Miss (unanimous) OL - Cedric Ogbuehi, Texas A&M Markus Golden, Missouri CB: Vernon Hargreaves III, Florida La’el Collins, LSU LB - Nigel Bowden, Vanderbilt S: Landon Collins, Alabama (unanimous) Arie Kouandjio, Alabama LB - Amarlo Herrera, Georgia Lorenzo Carter, Georgia S: Cody Prewitt, Ole Miss A.J. Cann, South Carolina Ramik Wilson, Georgia J.T. Gray, Mississippi State Antonio Morrison, Florida SPECIAL TEAMS C - Reese Dismukes, Auburn DB – Jalen Tabor, Florida K: Austin MacGinnis, Kentucky DB – Jonathan Jones, Auburn Jamal Adams, LSU P: JK Scott, Alabama WR - Amari Cooper, Alabama Braylon Webb, Missouri Todd Kelly, Jr., Tennessee Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina Damian Swann, Georgia Al Harris, Jr., South Carolina Jonathon Mincy, Auburn Second Team All-SEC QB - Dak Prescott, Mississippi State SPECIAL TEAMS SPECIAL TEAMS PK - Austin MacGinnis, Kentucky OFFENSE RB - Nick Chubb, Georgia PK - Elliott Fry, South Carolina WR Josh Reynolds, Texas A&M Cameron Artis-Payne, Auburn P - JK Scott, Alabama WR Sammie Coates, Auburn P - Jamie Keehn, LSU L Greg Pyke, Georgia AP - Marcus Murphy, Missouri RS – Speedy Noil, Texas A&M L A.J. Cann, South Carolina RS – Quan Bray, Auburn L Cedric Ogbuehi, Texas A&M DEFENSE L Austin Shepherd, Alabama DL - Shane Ray, Missouri OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR C David Andrews, Georgia Preston Smith, Mississippi State Amari Cooper, Alabama TE Steven Scheu, Vanderbilt Dante Fowler, Florida QB Blake Sims, Alabama Bud Dupree, Kentucky DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR RB Josh Robinson, Mississippi State Shane Ray, Missouri RB Jonathan Williams, Arkansas LB - Benardrick McKinney, Mississippi State All-Purpose Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina Martrell Spaight, Arkansas SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYER OF THE YEAR Trey DePriest, Alabama Marcus Murphy, Missouri DEFENSE DE Preston Smith, Mississippi State DB – Landon Collins, Alabama FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR DE Derek Barnett, Tennessee Senquez Golson, Ole Miss Nick Chubb, Georgia DT Myles Garrett, Texas A&M Vernon Hargreaves, Florida DT Darius Philon, Arkansas Cody Prewitt, Ole Miss SCHOLAR-ATHLETE OF THE YEAR LB Benardrick McKinney, Mississippi State Chris Conley, Georgia LB(t) Kwon Alexander, LSU SPECIAL TEAMS LB(t) Kentrell Brothers, Missouri PK – Austin MacGinnis, Kentucky JACOBS BLOCKING TROPHY LB(t) Antonio Morrison, Florida La’el Collins, LSU LB(t) Curt Maggitt, Tennessee P – JK Scott, Alabama LB(t) Ramik Wilson, Georgia COACH OF THE YEAR CB(t) Cyrus Jones, Alabama RS – Marcus Murphy, Missouri Gary Pinkel, Missouri CB(t) Damian Swann, Georgia CB(t) Jonathan Jones, Auburn S Braylon Webb, Missouri 2014 SEC Football

SEC PRE-SEASON ALL-SEC TEAMS Media Days Third-Team Coaches’ SPECIAL TEAMS (*ties) DL , Georgia (102) First Team Preseason All-SEC PK - Colby Delahoussaye, LSU OFFENSE DL Montravius Adams, Auburn (94) OFFENSE P - Sam Irwin-Hill, Arkansas First-Team DL Carl Lawson, Auburn (87) TE - O.J. Howard, Alabama RS – Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina QB Nick Marshall, Auburn (241) DL Jermauria Rasco, LSU (79) OL - La’el Collins, LSU RB T.J. Yeldon, Alabama (281) LB Kwon Alexander, LSU (112) Cedric Ogbuehi, Texas A&M Third Team Preseason All-SEC RB Todd Gurley, Georgia (280) LB Cassanova McKinzy, Auburn (82) Arie Kouandjio, Alabama WR Amari Cooper, Alabama (282) LB Serderius Bryant, Ole Miss (76) Laremy Tunsil, Ole Miss OFFENSE WR Sammie Coates, Auburn (207) DB Jon Mincy, Auburn (99) C - Reese Dismukes, Auburn TE – Hunter Henry, Arkansas TE O.J. Howard, Alabama (188) DB Corey Thompson, LSU (86) WR - Amari Cooper, Alabama OL – Chad Slade, Auburn OL La'el Collins, LSU (231) DB Rashard Robinson, LSU (84) Sammie Coates, Auburn Austin Shepherd, Alabama OL Arie Kouandjio, Alabama (188) DB Brison Williams, South Carolina (81) QB - Nick Marshall, Auburn Brandon Shell, South Carolina OL Laremy Tunsil, Ole Miss (183) RB - Todd Gurley, Georgia Jarvis Harrison, Texas A&M * OL Cedric Ogbuehi, Texas A&M (174) Mike Davis, South Carolina Mike Matthews, Texas A&M * C Reese Dismukes, Auburn (226) SPECIALISTS AP - Christion Jones, Alabama DJ Humphries, Florida * First-Team C - Ryan Kelly, Alabama Second-Team P Drew Kaser, Texas A&M (221) DEFENSE WR – Jameon Lewis, Mississippi State QB Dak Prescott, Mississippi State (118) PK Marshall Morgan, Georgia (224) DL - Dante Fowler, Jr., Florida Marquez North, Tennessee RB Mike Davis, South Carolina (240) RS Christion Jones, Alabama (262) Robert Nkemdiche, Ole Miss QB - Dak Prescott, Mississippi State RB Alex Collins, Arkansas (126) AP Christion Jones, Alabama (130) Trey Flowers, Arkansas RB - Keith Marshall, Georgia WR , Ole Miss (182) A’Shawn Robinson, Alabama Matt Jones, Florida * WR Malcolm Mitchell, Georgia (71) Second-Team LB - Trey DePriest, Alabama Jonathan Williams, Arkansas * TE C.J. Uzomah, Auburn (141) P Sam Irwin-Hill, Arkansas (136) A.J. Johnson, Tennessee AP - Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina OL A.J. Cann, South Carolina (166) PK Colby Delahoussaye, LSU (142) Ramik Wilson, Georgia OL Vadal Alexander, LSU (112) RS Andre Debose, Florida (97) DB – Landon Collins, Alabama DEFENSE OL Alex Kozan, Auburn (112) AP Terrence Magee, LSU (111) Vernon Hargreaves III, Florida DL - Montravius Adams, Auburn OL Corey Robinson, South Carolina (107) Cody Prewitt, Ole Miss Jermauria Rasco, LSU C Ryan Kelly, Alabama (126) Third-Team Deshazor Everett, Texas A&M J.T. Surratt, South Carolina P Jamie Keehn, LSU (81) Danielle Hunter, LSU Third-Team PK Andrew Baggett, Missouri (103) SPECIAL TEAMS LB - Serderius Bryant, Ole Miss QB Bo Wallace, Ole Miss (94) RS Marcus Murphy, Missouri (72) PK – Marshall Morgan, Georgia Denzel Nkemdiche, Ole Miss RB Corey Grant, Auburn (52) AP Trey Williams, Texas A&M (89) P – Drew Kaser, Texas A&M Antonio Morrison, Florida RB Keith Marshall, Georgia (44) RS – Christion Jones, Alabama DB – Robenson Therezie, Auburn WR Jameon Lewis, Mississippi State (67) Rashard Robinson, LSU WR Marquez North, Tennessee (66) PREDICTED ORDER OF FINISH Second Team Preseason All-SEC Brison Williams, South Carolina TE Hunter Henry, Arkansas (72) Jamerson Love, Mississippi State OL Austin Shepherd, Alabama (106) SEC CHAMPION OFFENSE OL Chad Slade, Auburn (101) School Points TE – C.J. Uzomah, Auburn SPECIAL TEAMS OL John Theus, Georgia (96) Alabama 154 OL – A.J. Cann, South Carolina PK - Andrew Baggett, Missouri OL Chaz Green, Florida (94) Auburn 75 Vadal Alexander, LSU P - Jamie Keehn, LSU * C Evan Boehm, Missouri (77) South Carolina 32 Corey Robinson, South Carolina Taylor Hudson, Vanderbilt * Georgia 19 Chaz Green, Florida * RS – Andre Debose, Florida DEFENSE LSU 9 Alex Kozan, Auburn * First-Team Ole Miss 2 John Theus, Georgia * DL Robert Nkemdiche, Ole Miss (239) Arkansas 1 C - Evan Boehm, Missouri * - Ties DL Dante Fowler, Jr., Florida (212) Mississippi State 1 WR – Laquon Treadwell, Ole Miss DL A'Shawn Robinson, Alabama (208) Malcolm Mitchell, Georgia DL Gabe Wright, Auburn (192) QB - Bo Wallace, Ole Miss LB Trey DePriest, Alabama (253) EASTERN DIVISION RB - T.J. Yeldon, Alabama LB A.J. Johnson, Tennessee (186) School Points Alex Collins, Arkansas LB Ramik Wilson, Georgia (147) South Carolina 1895 AP - Terrence Magee, LSU DB Landon Collins, Alabama (274) Georgia 1777 DB Vernon Hargreaves, III, Florida (243) Florida 1362 DEFENSE DB Cody Prewitt, Ole Miss (210) Missouri 1263 DL - , Mississippi State DB Deshazor Everett, Texas A&M (183) Tennessee 893 Gabe Wright, Auburn Vanderbilt 619 Alvin Dupree, Kentucky Second-Team Kentucky 395 Markus Golden, Missouri DL Trey Flowers, Arkansas (181) LB - Jordan Jenkins, Georgia DL Chris Jones, Mississippi State (150) Benardrick McKinney, Mississippi State DL Alvin "Bud" Dupree, Kentucky (134) WESTERN DIVISION Kwon Alexander, LSU DL Markus Golden, Missouri (125) School Points DB – Damian Swann, Georgia LB Benardrick McKinney, Miss. State (143) Alabama 1915 Tre’Davious White, LSU LB Jordan Jenkins, Georgia (137) Auburn 1735 Jon Mincy, Auburn * LB Denzel Nkemdiche, Ole Miss (116) LSU 1453 Tony Conner, Ole Miss * DB Robenson Therezie, Auburn (144) Ole Miss 1069 Corey Thompson, LSU * DB Tre'Davious White, LSU (141) Mississippi State 890 DB Damian Swann, Georgia (127) Texas A&M 791 DB Tony Conner, Ole Miss (116) Arkansas 351 2014 SEC Football 2014 SEC FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME 2014 SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME Alabama Missouri The 23rd annual SEC Football Championship Game was playe d on De c. 6 at the Georgia FIRST DOWNS...... 28 10 Dome in Atlanta, with Alabama claiming a 42-13 victory over Missouri and the No. 1 seed in RUSHES-YARDS (NET)...... 49-242 23-41 the inaugural Co llege Football Playoff. PASSING YDS (NET)...... 262 272 The game drew a capacity crowd of 73,526 and had a 7.7/16 te levision rating and 12.8 Passes Att-Comp-Int...... 27-23-0 34-16-0 million viewers on CBS Sports, the second-highest rated college football game of the 2014 sea- TOTA L OFFENSE PLAYS-YA RDS..... 76-504 57-313 son. Fumble Returns-Yards...... 0-0 0-0 The 2009 SEC Championship Game earned a 11.8 rating and a 24 share, the highest rated Punt Returns-Yards...... 1-1 0-0 SEC Championship Game in history. Kickoff Returns-Yards...... 3-85 4-89 The game was playe d in Birmingham’s Le gion Field in 1992 and 1993 and move d to the Interception Returns-Yards.... 0-0 0-0 Georgia Do me in 1994. Punts (Number-Avg)...... 3-43.3 7-43.4 The Championship Game has drawn 21 capacity crowds in its 23-year history. On ly 1993 Fumbles-Lost...... 3-0 2-1 (Birmingham) and 1995 (Atlanta) we re not sellouts. Penalties-Yards...... 2-10 6-60 Possession Time...... 36:43 23:17 Year Score Attendance Third-Down Conversions...... 9 of 13 6 of 16 1992 Alabama 28, Florida 21 83,091 Fourth-Down Conversions...... 0 of 0 1 of 1 1993 Florida 28, Alabama 13 76,345 Red-Zone Scores-Chances...... 4-4 3-3 1994 Florida 24, Alabama 23 74,751 Sacks By: Number-Yards...... 0-0 2-12 1995 Florida 34, Arkansas 3 71,325 1996 Florida 45, Alabama 30 74,132 1997 Tennessee 30, Auburn 29 74,896 RUSHING: Alabama-Henry,Derrick 20-141; Yeldon,T.J. 14-47; Jones,Tyren 3-26; Sims,Blake 9-19; 1998 T ennessee 24, Miss. State 14 74,795 Cooper,Amari 1-9; Fowler,Jalston 1-2; TEAM 1-minus 2. Missouri-Hansbrough, Rus 13-21; 1999 Alabama 34, Florida 7 71,500 Murphy, Marcus 7-20; Witter, Ish 1-1; Mauk, Maty 2-minus 1. 2000 Florida 28, Auburn 6 73,427 2001 LSU 31, Tennessee 20 74,843 PASSING: Alabama-Sims, Blake 23-27-0-262. Missouri-Mauk, Maty 16-34-0-272. 2002 Georgia 30, Arkansas 3 74,835 2003 LSU 34, Georgia 13 74,913 RECEIVING: Alabama-Cooper,Amari 12-83; White,DeAndrew 4-101; Jones,Christion 3-40; 2004 Auburn 38, Tennessee 28 74,892 Howard,O.J. 2-20; Fowler,Jalston 1-13; Vogler,Brian 1-5. Missouri-Hunt, Jimmie 6-169; Sasser, 2005 Georgia 34, LSU 14 73,717 Bud 5-31; White, Darius 3-56; Murphy, Marcus 1-11; Culkin, Sean 1-5. 2006 Florida 38, Arkansas 28 73,374 2007 LSU 21, Tennessee 14 73,832 INTERCEPTIONS: Alabama-None. Missouri-None. 2008 Florida 31, Alabama 20 75,892 2009 Alabama 32, Florida 13 75,514 FUMBLES: Alabama-Sims, Blake 2-0; TEAM 1-0. Missouri-TEAM 1-0; White, 2010 Auburn 56, South Carolina 17 75,802 Darius 1-1. 2011 LSU 42, Georgia 10 74,515 2012 Alabama 32, Georgia 28 75,624 MVP: Alabama’s quarterback Blake Sims was named the game’s MVP. He is the second Crimson 2013 Auburn 59, Missouri 42 75,632 Ti de quarterback to take home MVP honors, joining Greg McEl roy in 2009. Sims is the 14th 2014 Alabama 42, Missouri 13 73,526 quarterback to win MVP. Other Alabama MVPs were Antonio Langham, DB, 1992; Freddie Milons, WR, 1999; Greg McElroy, QB, 2009; , RB, 2012.

2014 SEC FOOT BALL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME HISTORY Alabama 42, Missouri 13 De c. 6, 2014 • Georgia Do me (73,526) • Atlant a, Ga. Team App. Record Ti tles Florida 10 7-3 (.700) 7 (1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2006, 2008) Alabama...... 7 14 0 21 - 42 Record: (12-1,8-1) Alabama 9 5-4 (.556) 5 (1992, 1999, 2009, 2012, 2014) Missouri...... 0 3 10 0 - 13 Reco rd: (10-3,7-2) Auburn 5 3-2 (.600) 3 (2004, 2010, 2013) Georgia 5 2-3 (.400) 2 (2002, 2005) Scoring Summary: LSU 5 4-1 (.800) 4 (2001, 2003, 2007, 2011) 1st Tennessee 5 2-3 (.400) 2 (1997, 1998) 11:24 UA - Yeldon,T.J. 1 yd run (Griffith, Adam kick), 10-68 3:36, UA 7 - MU 0 Arkansas 3 0-3 (.000) Missouri 2 0-2 (.000) 2nd Mississippi State 1 0-1 (.000) 11:48 UA - White,DeAndrew 58 yd pass from Sims,Blake (Griffith, Adam kick), 1-58 0:10, UA South Carolina 1 0-1 (.000) 14 - MU 0 08:30 MU - Baggett, Andrew 33 yd field goal, 9-58 3:12, UA 14 - MU 3 NOTES 02:47 UA - Yeldon,T.J. 2 yd run (Griffith, Adam kick), 14-75 5:43, UA 21 - MU 3 • Alabama’s Blake Sims set the pass co mpletion percentage mark at 85.2 percent by co mpleting 23-of-27 pass attempts. The previous mark of 77.1 was held by Auburn’s Jason Campbell in 3rd 2004 when he co mplete d 27 of 35. Sims also tied the championship game re co rd for consecu- 11:00 MU - Sasser, Bud 1 yd pass from Mauk, Maty (Baggett, Andrew kick), 10-75 4:00, UA tive co mpletions with 9. Florida’s Shane Matthews first set the mark in 1992 and was duplicat- 21 - MU 10 ed by the Gators’ Danny Wuerffel in 1995. Wuerffel, like Sims, starte d the game 9-for-9. Sims 04:37 MU - Baggett, Andrew 33 yd field goal, 9-65 3:25, UA 21 - MU 13 finished the game with seven straight completions.

4th • Alabama’s Amari Cooper set a championship game record with 12 receptions (83 yards), bet- 14:55 UA - Jones,Christion 6 yd pass from Sims,Blake (Griffith, Adam kick), 10-64 4:34, UA 28 tering the mark of 11 set by Florida’s Reidel Anthony in 1996 against Alabama. In two champi- - MU 13 onship games (2012 & 2014), Cooper has 20 catches for 211 ya rds and one TD. 07:38 UA - Henry,Derrick 26 yd run (Griffith, Adam kick), 8-90 4:37, UA 35 - MU 13 03:38 UA - Henry,Derrick 1 yd run (Griffith, Adam kick), 5-62 2:46, UA 42 - MU 13 • Alabama’s DeAndrew White’s 58-yard touchdown catch was the longest passing touchdown in the championship game since 2000 when Florida’s Rex Grossman connecte d with Reche Caldwell for 66 yards.

• Missouri’s Jimmie Hunt’s 169 re ceiving ya rds is the third-highest to tal in championship game history, trailing only Auburn’s Darvin Adams’ 217 in 2010 and Florida’s Reidel Anthony’s 171 in 1996. 2014 SEC Football SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME SEC DIVISIONAL TIE-BREAKER 2014 SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME In the event of a tie for the division championship, the following procedures will be The 2014 SEC Football Championship Game was played on Sat., Dec. 6 at 4 p.m. ET used to break all ties to determine the SEC Football Championship Game representa- in Atlanta’s Georgia Dome and was televised nationally on CBS Sports. tive. All Conference versus Conference Games (both division and non-division) will be The game pits the SEC’s two divisional champions. This was the 23rd annual title counted in the Conference Standings. game (scores of previous games are below). General public tickets for the 2014 game were sold out. 1. Two-Team Tie. In the event two teams are tied for a division title, the following pro- The 2009 SEC Championship Game earned a 11.8 rating and a 24 share, the high- cedure will be used in the following order: est rated SEC Championship Game in history. A. Head-to-head competition between the two tied teams; The game was played in Birmingham’s Legion Field in 1992 and 1993 and moved B. Records of the tied teams within the division; to the Georgia Dome in 1994. C. Head-to-head competition against the team within the division with the best The Championship Game has drawn 20 capacity crowds in its 22-year history. Only overall (divisional and non-divisional) Conference record, and proceeding through the 1993 (Birmingham) and 1995 (Atlanta) were not sellouts. division (multiple ties within the division will be broken from first to last and a tie for The 2013 SEC Championship Game, which saw Auburn defeat Missouri, delivered a first place will be broken before a tie for fourth place); national average household rating/share of 8.6/17 and averaged 14.4 million view- D. Overall record against non-divisional teams; ers, making it the most-watched college football game of the 2013 regular-season. E. Combined record against all common non-divisional teams; Alabama's dramatic SEC Championship Game victory over Georgia in 2012 pro- F. Record against the common non-divisional team with the best overall duced a 9.8 rating with 16.2 million viewers, the most-watched college football Conference record (divisional or non-divisional) and proceeding through other com- game of the 2012 regular season. mon non-divisional teams based on their order of finish within their division; G. Best cumulative Conference winning percentage of non-divisional opponents; Year Score Attendance and 1992 Alabama 28, Florida 21 83,091 Example: Tied Teams Non-Divisional Opponents Cumulative Record 1993 Florida 28, Alabama 13 76,345 Western 1 Eastern Opponents: 14-2 1994 Florida 24, Alabama 23 74,751 Western 2 Eastern Opponents: 12-4 1995 Florida 34, Arkansas 3 71,325 (Western 1 would be the representative) 1996 Florida 45, Alabama 30 74,132 1997 Tennessee 30, Auburn 29 74,896 H. Coin flip of the tied teams. 1998 Tennessee 24, Miss. State 14 74,795 1999 Alabama 34, Florida 7 71,500 2. Three-Team Tie (or more). If three teams (or more) are tied for a division title, the 2000 Florida 28, Auburn 6 73,427 following procedure will be used in the following order: (Note: If one of the proce- 2001 LSU 31, Tennessee 20 74,843 dures results in one team being eliminated and two remaining, the two-team 2002 Georgia 30, Arkansas 3 74,835 tiebreaker procedure as stated in No. 1 above will be used): 2003 LSU 34, Georgia 13 74,913 A. Combined head-to-head record among the tied teams; 2004 Auburn 38, Tennessee 28 74,892 B. Record of the tied teams within the division; 2005 Georgia 34, LSU 14 73,717 C. Head-to-head competition against the team within the division with the best 2006 Florida 38, Arkansas 28 73,374 overall Conference record (divisional and non-divisional) and proceeding through the 2007 LSU 21, Tennessee 14 73,832 division (multiple ties within the division will be broken from first to last and a tie for 2008 Florida 31, Alabama 20 75,892 first place will be broken before a tie for fourth place); 2009 Alabama 32, Florida 13 75,514 D. Overall Conference record against non-divisional teams; 2010 Auburn 56, South Carolina 17 75,802 E. Combined record against all common non-divisional teams; 2011 LSU 42, Georgia 10 74,515 F. Record against the common non-divisional team with the best overall 2012 Alabama 32, Georgia 28 75,624 Conference record (divisional and non-divisional) and proceeding through other com- 2013 Auburn 59, Missouri 42 75,632 mon non-divisional teams based on their order of finish within their division; and 2014 Alabama 42, Missouri 13 73,526 G. Best cumulative Conference winning percentage of non-divisional opponents (Note: If two teams’ non-divisional opponents have the same cumulative record, then Here’s a chart of team history in the SEC Championship Game: the two-team tiebreaker procedures apply. If four teams are tied, and three teams’ Team Appearances W-L Pct. non-divisional opponents have the same cumulative record, the three-team tiebreak- Florida 10 7-3 .700 er procedures will be used beginning with 2.A.); Alabama 9 5-4 .556 Example: Tied Teams Non-Divisional Opponents Cumulative Record Auburn 5 3-2 .600 Western 1 Eastern Opponents: 14-2 Georgia 5 2-3 .400 Western 2 Eastern Opponents: 12-4 LSU 5 4-1 .800 Western 3 Eastern Opponents: 8-8 Tennessee 5 2-3 .400 (Western 1 would be the representative) Arkansas 3 0-3 .000 H. Coin flip of the tied teams with the team with the odd result being the repre- Missouri 2 0-2 .000 sentative (Example: If there are two teams with tails and one team with heads, the Mississippi State 1 0-1 .000 team with heads is the representative). South Carolina 1 0-1 .000 2014 SEC Football

SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME

SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME RACE RECAPS 2004 - Auburn clinches berth in the SEC Championship Game on Oct. 30, tying the earliest since the game began in 1992 (Alabama, 1993). The Tigers (8-0) finish two games ahead in 1992 - Both races decided before final weekend. Florida and Georgia (6-2 in the SEC) were co- the standings of second-place LSU (6-2). Tennessee clinches berth as Eastern Division repre- champions in the Eastern Division. The Gators won the tie-breaker by virtue of a 26-24 win sentative with 38-33 win against Vanderbilt on Nov. 20. The Vols (7-1) would win their next over the Bulldogs earlier in the season. Alabama (8-0) was the outright Western Division game on the following weekend against Kentucky to claim the division title outright. Georgia champion, even with a game against Auburn in the final weekend, which the Tide won, 17-0. was second in the Western Division with a 6-2 mark.

1993 - Both races decided before final weekend. Florida won the Eastern Division and Alabama 2005 - Georgia (6-2) clinched Eastern Division Championship with a 45-13 win over Kentucky won the Western Division. The Gators finished 1/2 game ahead of Tennessee (UT tied Alabama, on Nov. 19. The Bulldogs finish one full game ahead of South Carolina and Florida in the stand- 17-17). Alabama, at 5-2-1, finished two games ahead second-place Arkansas. Auburn was 8-0 ings. LSU clinched Western Division title with a 19-17 win over Arkansas on Nov. 25. The Tigers in the SEC, but was ineligible for the conference title. finished tied for the Western Division title (7-1), but defeated Auburn, 20-17, on Oct. 22, to win the tie-breaker. 1994 - Both races decided before final weekend. Florida won the Eastern Division, finishing SEC play at 7-1, two games ahead of Tennessee. Alabama won the Western Division with an 8- 2006 - Florida (7-1) clinched Eastern Division Championship and berth in the SEC 0 SEC mark, three games ahead of Miss. State. Championship Game on Nov. 4, by defeating Vanderbilt, 25-19. Arkansas clinched the Western Division title and SEC Championship Game berth with a 28-14 win over Mississippi State on 1995 - Both races decided before final weekend. Florida won the Eastern Division, finishing Nov. 18. SEC play at 8-0, one game ahead of Tennessee. Arkansas won the Western Division with a 6-2 SEC mark, one game ahead of Auburn and Alabama. 2007 - LSU (6-2) clinched Western Division berth in the SEC Championship Game on Week 11 after Alabama and Auburn both lose. Tennessee (6-2) gets Eastern Division berth with 52-50 1996 - Both races decided before final weekend. Florida won the Eastern Division, finishing four-overtime victory over Kentucky in Week 13. The Vols win the tie-breaker with Georgia (6- SEC play at 8-0, one game ahead of Tennessee. Alabama won the Western Division with a 6-2 2), defeating the Bulldogs 35-14 in Week 6. SEC mark, tying LSU. However, the Tide defeated the Tigers, 26-0, earlier in the year to win the tie-breaker. 2008 - Alabama (8-0) clinched Western Division berth in SEC Championship Game on Week 11 (Nov. 1) after defeating LSU, 27-21. Florida (7-1) clinched Eastern Division berth in SEC 1997 - Eastern Division race not finalized until after the final weekend. Tennessee defeated Championship Game on Week 12 (Nov. 8) after defeating Vanderbilt, 42-14. Vanderbilt, 17-10, to win the division on the final weekend. Tennessee, at 7-1 in the SEC, fin- ished one game ahead of Georgia and Florida. Auburn had won the Western Division with a 6- 2009 - Florida (8-0) clinched Eastern Division berth in SEC Championship Game on Week 9 (Oct. 2 SEC mark, tying LSU. However, Auburn defeated LSU, 31-28, earlier in the year to win the 31) after defeating Georgia, 41-17. Alabama (8-0) clinched Western Division berth in SEC tie-breaker. Championship Game on Week 11 (Nov. 14) after defeating Mississippi State, 31-3.

1998 - Western Division race not finalized until after the final weekend. Miss. State defeated 2010 - Both spots in the SEC Championship Game were clinched on Week 11 (Nov. 13). Auburn Ole Miss, 28-6, on Thanksgiving night, to win division on final weekend. Arkansas and Miss. (8-0) clinched Western Division berth with a 49-31 win against Georgia. South Carolina (5-3) State finished in tie for the division title. However, Miss. State defeated Arkansas, 22-21, earli- clinched Eastern Division berth with a 36-14 win against Florida. er that season to win the tie-breaker. Arkansas defeated LSU 41-14 on the final weekend, but when State defeated Ole Miss, the chase for the Championship Game had been won. 2011 - Georgia (7-1) clinched a berth in the SEC Championship Game in Week 12 (Nov. 19) Tennessee had clinched the Eastern Division before the final weekend and defeated Vanderbilt, with a 19-10 win over Kentucky while LSU (8-0) clinched its berth in Week 13 (last weekend of 41-0, to finished the SEC at 8-0. the regular season) with a 41-17 win over Arkansas

1999 - Both races decided before final weekend. Florida won the Eastern Division, finishing 2012 - Georgia (7-1) clinched a berth in the SEC Championship Game in Week 11 (Nov. 10) with SEC play at 7-1, one game ahead of Tennessee. Alabama won the Western Division with a 7-1 a 38-0 win over Auburn. Alabama clinched a berth in the SEC Championship Game in Week 13 SEC mark, one game ahead of Miss. State. (Nov. 24) with a 49-0 win over Auburn.

2000 - Both races decided before final weekend. Florida won the Eastern Division, finishing 2013 - For the first time since 2003, both races were determined on the final weekend. Auburn SEC play at 7-1, two games ahead of South Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee. Auburn won the (7-1) clinched a berth in the SEC Championship Game with a dramtic 34-28 win off a 109-yard Western Division with a 6-2 SEC mark, one game ahead of LSU. LSU lost to Arkansas in the missed field goal return for a touchdown on the game’s final play at Auburn. SEC newcomer final weekend, 14-3. Even if the Tigers would have beaten the Razorbacks, Auburn would have Missouri (7-1) clinched a berth in the SEC Championship Game with a 28-21 home win over won the tie-breaker over LSU due to a 34-17 win earlier in the season. Texas A&M.

2001 - Both races go down to the final weekend. Due to game postponements on Sept. 15, 2014 - For the second straight season, both divisional races were determined on the final games were reschedule for Dec. 1. On that weekend, Tennessee defeated Florida, 34-32, in weekend. Missouri won the SEC East outright by closing the season with three straight SEC Gainesville, and LSU defeated Auburn, 27-14, in Baton Rouge, to clinch berths in the SEC wins, inlcuding two on the road for their second straight trip to Atlanta. Alabama won the Championship Game. The Vols won the East with a 7-1 mark while LSU had a 5-3 mark and Western Division outright as well, with Ole Miss defeating Mississippi State in the Egg Bowl, tied with Auburn for the West, but won the head-to-head tiebreaker. while Alabama topped Auburn in the Iron Bowl.

2002 - Western division race not finalized until after the final weekend. Georgia clinched the SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME RACE RECAP Eastern Division championship on Nov. 16 after defeating Auburn, 24-21, in Auburn. The 7-1 Bulldogs finish one game ahead of Florida, which was 6-2. Arkansas wins the Western Division The earliest a berth has been clinched in the SEC Championship Game is Oct. 30 (Auburn, 2004, on the season’s final weekend, defeating LSU, 21-20, in Little Rock on Nov. 29. The Razorbacks, & Alabama, 1993). LSU Tigers and Auburn Tigers are tied at 5-3 but Arkansas wins the head-to-head tiebreakers. In 15 of 46 divisional races (counting 2014), a championship game berth has not been decided 2003 - Both races decided on final weekend. Tennessee defeats Kentucky, 20-7, to force a until the weekend prior to the SEC Championship Game. That occurred in 1997 (Tennessee), three-way tie for Eastern Division championship between Vols, Georgia and Florida. Using tie- 1998 (Mississippi State), 2001 (Tennessee and LSU), 2002 (Arkansas), 2003 (Georgia and LSU), breaker involving the BCS standings, Georgia has the highest BCS ranking and has defeated 2005 (LSU), 2007 (Tennessee), 2011 (LSU), 2012 (Alabama), 2013 (Auburn and Missouri) and Tennessee (next highest ranking) during regular season to secure SEC Championship Game 2014 (Alabama and Missouri). berth. LSU defeats Arkansas, 55-24, and Ole Miss beats Mississippi State, 31-0, to force a tie for the Western Division championship. LSU’s 17-14 win over Ole Miss the week before earns the Tigers the Western Division berth. 2014 SEC Football 2014 SEC FOOTBALL LEGENDS CLASS FLORIDA – Lito Sh eppard, , 1999-2001 SOUTHEASTERN CO NFERENCE ANNOUNCES 2014 FOOTBALL LEGENDS CLASS A two-time All-American and first-team All-SEC selection during his playing days at Fl orida, Lito Sheppard played in 34 games, making 22 career starts. In 2000, he was BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (Oct. 16, 2014) – The Southeastern Conference 2014 Football the fourth sophomore, and second on defense, in Fl orida history to earn first-team Le gends Class includes 14 former SEC stars who exce lled on the gridiron and helped All-America honors. He to taled 87 tackles, eight inte rceptions, re turning one for a write the rich history of the sport at their respective institutions. The conference touchdow n, and scored two touchdow ns as a punt returner. His two interceptions in announced its lineup of 2014 SEC Football Legends on Thursday. the 2000 SEC Championship Game propelled the Gators to their sixth league title. Sheppard was a first-round selection in 2002 NFL Draft by Philadelphia, and was This year’s class includes All-Americans, All-SEC selections and Academic All- named a two-time Pro Bowler during his 10 seasons in the NFL. Americans as well as NCAA and SEC record holders. The group represents teams that won National and SEC Championships and are represented in state, school and col- GEORGIA – John Little, Roverback, 1983-86 lege football halls of fame. A four-year letterman, John Little was a 1985 and 1986 first team All-America and All-SEC selection. A thre e- year starte r, he also earned Academic All-SEC honors two The class will be honored at the 2014 SEC Football “Weekend of Champions” Dec. 5-6 seasons. His total of 381 career tackles is the best in school history for a defensive in Atlanta, Ga. The annual SEC Legends Dinner presented by AT&T will be held Dec. 5 back and still ranks seventh best in school history for a player at any position. He at the Hyatt Regency in Atlant a and the group will also be re co gnized prior to the SEC once posted 25 tackles in a game against Georgia Tech in 1985 and his two intercep- Football Championship Game, which will be held at the Georgia Dome on Sat., Dec. 6. tions in the fourth quarter versus Clemson in 1985 helped preserve a Bulldog victory. Following his senior season, Little was elected by teammates as the permanent team 2014 SEC FOOTBALL LEGEND BIOGRAPHIES captain.

ALABAMA – Bobby Humphrey, Running Back, 1985-88 KENTUCKY – Derek Abney, Wide Receiver/Kick Returner, 2000-03 A two- time All-America selection, Bo bby Humphre y was chosen as Alabama’s Arguably the greatest kick re turner in the history of co llege football, De rek Abney set Of fensive Player of the De cade of the 1980s as he rushed for more than 3,400 ya rd s in seven NCAA re co rd s, 11 SEC re co rd s and 14 school re co rd s for kick re turns and all-pur- a stellar career while scoring 40 touchdow ns. He set the Alabama all-time single- pose yard age. Abney was the first player in NCAA history to accumulate 2,000 receiv- season rushing mark in 1986 and was named UPI’s National Of fensive Player of the ing ya rd s, 2,000 kickoff re turn ya rd s and 1,000 punt re turn ya rd s in a career. He Year in 1987 while finishing 10th in the Heisman Trophy balloting that year. An injury re turned eight kicks for to uchdow ns in his career (six punt s, two kickoffs), ty ing the sidetracked his senior season before he was taken by Denver in the first round of the NCAA re co rd for to tal kick re turn to uchdow ns. He was a two- time All-American and NFL supplemental draft and played five years in the NFL, earning honors in three-time All-SEC performer on the college gridiron and is currently working as an 1990. engineer.

ARKANSAS – Jerry Lamb, End, 1962-64 LSU – Doug Moreau, Split End/Kicker, 1963-65 A captain on Arkansas’ undefeated 1964 national championship team, Jerry Lamb An All-SEC selection as a split end in 1964, Do ug Moreau earned All-America honors was a sure-handed re ceiver for the Ra zorbacks from 1962-64 who earned All- from Football News in 1965. He led the SEC in scoring as both a re ceiver and kicker in So uthwest Conference honors as both a junior and a senior. The SWC Of fensive 1964 and he led LSU in receiving both his junior and senior seasons. Moreau was Newcomer of the Year in 1962, Lamb led the Ra zorbacks in re ceiving in 1962 and selected by Miami in the 19th round of the 1966 AFL draft and he went on to play 1963 and finished his career as the second-leading pass-catcher in school history four seasons for the Do lphins. He earned his law degree from LSU and was later the with 58 catches for 938 yard s and eight touchdow ns. He was selected in both the longtime District At torney for East Baton Rouge Parish. He currently serves as co lor NFL and AFL drafts and played professionally with the AFL’s Chiefs. He is a member of analyst for the LSU Sports Ra dio Network and has playe d a ro le on the Ti ger football the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame and the Arkansas 1960’s All-Decade team. broadcasts for more than 40 years.

AUBURN – Carnell Williams, Running Back, 2001-04 Carnell “Cadillac” Williams was named an All-American as a senior in 2004 after rush- ing for 1,165 ya rd s and 12 to uchdow ns while leading the Ti gers to an undefeated season and the SEC Championship. He was a first-team All-SEC selection and SEC Special Teams Player of the Year in 2004. A two-time first-team All-SEC pick, Williams finished as the school’s all-time leader in rushing at te mpts, rushing to uchdow ns and scoring. He finished second on Au burn’s all-time list in career rushing yard s with 3,831. A 2001 freshman All-American, Williams was selected fifth overall by the in the 2005 NFL Draft and enjoyed a seven-year NFL career. 2014 SEC Football 2014 SEC FOOTBALL LEGENDS CLASS

OLE MISS – St an Hindman, Guard, 1963-65 TENNESSEE – Todd Kelly, Defensive End, 1989-92 Stan Hindman, one of the finest interior linemen in Ol e Miss history, excelled on and Todd Kelly played in 42 games in a four-year career at Tennessee from 1989-92, earn- off the field, earning both All-America and Academic All-America honors for the ing All-America honors by the Football News as a senior in 1992. He was also an All- Rebels. A thre e- time first-team All-SEC selection, he was named to the 1960s All- SEC performer in 1992, when he record ed 11 sacks, a total that ranked second in SEC team, the SEC Skywriters All-Time SEC team and the Ol e Miss Team of the Century Volunteer history at the time and now ranks tied for fourth. Kelly, who ended his as he helped lead the Rebels to three bowl games and the 1963 SEC championship. career second on the Tennessee career sacks list with 22.5, also finished his stellar An NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship recipient in 1966, he was selected in the first career with 88 tackles and 14 tackles for loss while also being elected a team captain round of the 1966 NFL Draft by San Francisco and played seven seasons with the in 1992. A first-round NFL draft choice by San Francisco in 1993, he played four sea- 49ers. He we nt on to beco me a successful architect in the San Francisco Bay Area. sons for the 49ers, and Atlant a Fa lcons.

MISSISSIPPI STATE – Jack Cristil, Radio Broadca ster, 1953-2011 TEXAS A&M – Jacob Green, Defe nsive Line, 1977-79 Jack Cristil was the beloved sports broadcaster of Mississippi State at hletics for 58 A three-year letterman at defensive end at Texas A&M, Jacob Green earned All- years. “The Voice of the Bulldogs” from 1953 to 2011, Cristil called 636 football America honors in 1978 and 1979 while setting the school record for sacks in a season games in his legendary career. Also the voice of men’s for 54 years, Cristil with 20 his senior season, a mark that still stands. In one of his best games as an called more than 1,500 collegiate contests. He received numerous awards including Aggie, he recorded four sacks and 22 tackles against Baylor in 1979. Green was a the prestigious National Football Foundation Chris Schenkel Award and the Ronald first-round draft choice by the Seattle Seahawks and, after playing 12 years for the Reagan Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Association of Sportscasters club, his name was added to the organizat ion’s Ring of Honor. He finished his NFL and Sportswriters. A veteran of World War II who served as an aircraft engine career with 116 sacks for Seattle, which at the time trailed only Reggie White and mechanic in the U. S. Army Air Corps, Cristil died in Se ptember 2014 at the age of 88. Lawrence Taylor in NFL history, and he earned All-Pro honors in 1983.

MISSOURI – Kellen Winslow, Tight End, 1976-78 VANDERBILT – Jonathan Goff, Linebacker, 2004-07 One of the top tight ends to ever play the game, Kellen Winslow was a two-time All- Jonathan Goff earned All-SEC recognition in 2007 after leading the Commodores in Big Eight player and consensus All-American as a senior. His 28 passes caught for 479 tackles for the second consecutive year with a career high mark of 113. He was a two- yard s and six TDs in 1978 were just the tip of the iceberg. He went on to a nine-year time team captain and tw ice was on the SEC Academic Honor Roll, earning a degree NFL career with the San Diego Chargers and revolutionized the tight end position, in mechanical engineering. He played in 46 games and started 36, record ing 307 catching 541 passes for 6,741 yard s and 45 TDs. He was inducted into the Pro tackles, 15.5 tackles for losses, 6.5 quarterback sacks with three inte rceptions. He Football Hall of Fame in 1995, and was a 2003 inductee into the College Football Hall was selected by the New York Giants in the fifth round of the 2008 NFL draft and of Fame. He was also honored in 2004 as an NCAA Silver Anniversary Award Winner. became a starter until a knee injury ended his playing career in 2012. Winslow is currently the Director of Athletics at Florida A&M University.

SOUTH CA ROLINA – Sh eldon Brow n, Cornerback, 1998-2001 A four-year letterwinner and three-year starter at cornerback at South Carolina, Sheldon Brown played for the Gamecocks from 1998-2001. Brown was a first-team All-SEC selection and garnered All-America honors in both 2000 and 2001. A semifi- nalist for the prestigious Jim Thorpe Award given to the nation’s top defensive back, he recorded 10 career interceptions. Brown was a versatile athlete who also played baseball at South Carolina, batting over .280 as the Gamecock right fielder and desig- nated hitter. Brown was a second-round draft pick by Philadelphia in 2002 and logged an 11-year NFL career with the Eagles and Cleveland Browns. 2014 SEC Football

2015 SEC FOOTBALL WEEKLY CONFERENCE SCHEDULE Sept. 3 Oct. 3 Nov. 7 South Carolina vs. North Carolina (Charlotte) *Alabama at Georgia *LSU at Alabama *Arkansas at Tennessee *Arkansas at Ole Miss Sept. 5 San Jose State at Auburn *Auburn at Texas A&M Alabama vs. Wisconsin (Dallas) *Ole Miss at Florida *Vanderbilt at Florida Texas-El Paso at Arkansas Eastern Kentucky at Kentucky *Kentucky at Georgia Auburn vs. Louisville (Atlanta) Eastern Michigan at LSU *South Carolina at Tennessee New Mexico State at Florida *Mississippi State at Texas A&M UL Monroe at Georgia *South Carolina at Missouri Nov. 14 UL Lafayette at Kentucky Vanderbilt at Middle Tennessee *Alabama at Mississippi State McNeese State at LSU *Arkansas at LSU UT Martin at Ole Miss Oct. 10 *Georgia at Auburn Mississippi State at Southern Miss *Arkansas at Alabama *Florida at South Carolina SE Missouri State at Missouri *Florida at Missouri *Kentucky at Vanderbilt UAB at Tennessee (Nashville) *Georgia at Tennessee TBA at Missouri Texas A&M vs. Arizona State (Houston) *LSU at South Carolina North Texas at Tennessee Western Kentucky at Vanderbilt New Mexico State at Ole Miss Western Carolina at Texas A&M Troy at Mississippi State Sept. 12 Nov. 21 Middle Tennessee at Alabama Oct. 15 Charleston Southern at Alabama Toledo at Arkansas (Little Rock) *Auburn at Kentucky *Mississippi State at Arkansas Jacksonville State at Auburn Idaho at Auburn East Carolina at Florida Oct. 17 Florida Atlantic at Florida *Georgia at Vanderbilt *Alabama at Texas A&M Georgia Southern at Georgia *Kentucky at South Carolina *Florida at LSU UNC Charlotte at Kentucky *LSU at Mississippi State *Missouri at Georgia *LSU at Ole Miss Fresno State at Ole Miss Ole Miss at Memphis *Tennessee at Missouri Missouri at Arkansas State Louisiana Tech at Mississippi State Citadel at South Carolina Oklahoma at Tennessee *Vanderbilt at South Carolina *Texas A&M at Vanderbilt Ball State at Texas A&M Oct. 24 Nov. 28 Sept. 19 *Tennessee at Alabama *Alabama at Auburn *Ole Miss at Alabama *Auburn at Arkansas *Missouri at Arkansas *Texas Tech at Arkansas Western Kentucky at LSU Florida State at Florida *Auburn at LSU *Texas A&M at Ole Miss Georgia at Georgia Tech *Florida at Kentucky *Kentucky at Mississippi State Louisville at Kentucky *South Carolina at Georgia *Missouri at Vanderbilt *Texas A&M at LSU Northwestern State at Mississippi State *Ole Miss at Mississippi State UConn at Missouri Oct. 31 Clemson at South Carolina Western Carolina at Tennessee UT Martin at Arkansas *Vanderbilt at Tennessee Nevada at Texas A&M *Ole Miss at Auburn Austin Peay at Vanderbilt *Florida vs. Georgia (Jacksonville) Dec. 5 *Tennessee at Kentucky SEC Football Championship (Atlanta) Sept. 26 *South Carolina at Texas A&M UL Monroe at Alabama Vanderbilt at Houston * SEC Game *Texas A&M vs. Arkansas (Arlington) *Mississippi State at Auburn Nov. 5 Tentative and subject to change *Tennessee at Florida *Mississippi State at Missouri Southern at Georgia *Missouri at Kentucky LSU at Syracuse *Vanderbilt at Ole Miss Central Florida at South Carolina 2014 SEC Football

2015 SEC FOOTBALL TEAM-BY-TEAM CONFERENCE SCHEDULE ALABAMA KENTUCKY SOUTH CAROLINA Sept. 5 Wisconsin (Dallas) Sept. 5 UL LAFAYETTE Sept. 3 (Thu.) North Carolina (Charlotte) Sept. 12 MIDDLE TENNESSEE Sept. 12 at South Carolina Sept. 12 KENTUCKY Sept. 19 OLE MISS Sept. 19 FLORIDA Sept. 19 at Georgia Sept. 26 UL MONROE Sept. 26 MISSOURI Sept. 26 CENTRAL FLORIDA Oct. 3 at Georgia Oct. 3 EASTERN KENTUCKY Oct. 3 at Missouri Oct. 10 ARKANSAS Oct. 10 Open date Oct. 17 at Texas A&M Oct. 15 (Thu.) AUBURN Oct. 10 LSU Oct. 24 TENNESSEE Oct. 24 at Mississippi State Oct. 17 VANDERBILT Oct. 31 Open date Oct. 31 TENNESSEE Oct. 24 Open date Nov. 7 LSU Nov. 7 at Georgia Oct. 31 at Texas A&M Nov. 14 at Mississippi State Nov. 14 at Vanderbilt Nov. 7 at Tennessee Nov. 21 CHARLESTON SOUTHERN Nov. 21 UNC CHARLOTTE Nov. 14 FLORIDA Nov. 28 at Auburn Nov. 28 LOUISVILLE Nov. 21 CITADEL Nov. 28 CLEMSON ARKANSAS LSU Sept. 5 TEXAS-EL PASO Sept. 5 McNEESE STATE TENNESSEE Sept. 12 TOLEDO (Little Rock) Sept. 12 at Mississippi State Sept. 5 UAB (Nashville) Sept. 19 TEXAS TECH Sept. 19 AUBURN Sept. 12 OKLAHOMA Sept. 26 Texas A&M (Arlington) Sept. 26 at Syracuse Sept. 19 WESTERN CAROLINA Oct. 3 at Tennessee Oct. 3 EASTERN MICHIGAN Oct. 10 at Alabama Oct. 10 at South Carolina Sept. 26 at Florida Oct. 17 Open date Oct. 17 FLORIDA Oct. 3 ARKANSAS Oct. 24 AUBURN Oct. 24 WESTERN KENTUCKY Oct. 10 GEORGIA Oct. 31 UT MARTIN Oct. 31 Open date Oct. 17 Open date Nov. 7 at Ole Miss Nov. 7 at Alabama Oct. 24 at Alabama Nov. 14 at LSU Nov. 14 ARKANSAS Oct. 31 at Kentucky Nov. 21 MISSISSIPPI STATE Nov. 21 at Ole Miss Nov. 7 SOUTH CAROLINA Nov. 28 MISSOURI Nov. 28 TEXAS A&M Nov. 14 NORTH TEXAS Nov. 21 at Missouri AUBURN OLE MISS Nov. 28 VANDERBILT Sept. 5 Louisville (Atlanta) Sept. 5 UT MARTIN Sept. 12 JACKSONVILLE STATE Sept. 12 FRESNO STATE TEXAS A&M Sept. 19 at LSU Sept. 19 at Alabama Sept. 5 Arizona State (Houston) Sept. 26 MISSISSIPPI STATE Sept. 26 VANDERBILT Sept. 12 BALL STATE Oct. 3 SAN JOSE STATE Oct. 3 at Florida Oct. 10 Open date Oct. 10 NEW MEXICO STATE Sept. 19 NEVADA Oct. 15 (Thu.) at Kentucky Oct. 17 at Memphis Sept. 26 Arkansas (Arlington) Oct. 24 at Arkansas Oct. 24 TEXAS A&M Oct. 3 MISSISSIPPI STATE Oct. 31 OLE MISS Oct. 31 at Auburn Oct. 10 Open date Nov. 7 at Texas A&M Nov. 7 ARKANSAS Oct. 17 ALABAMA Nov. 14 GEORGIA Nov. 14 Open date Oct. 24 at Ole Miss Nov. 21 IDAHO Nov. 21 LSU Oct. 31 SOUTH CAROLINA Nov. 28 ALABAMA Nov. 28 at Mississippi State Nov. 7 AUBURN Nov. 14 WESTERN CAROLINA FLORIDA MISSISSIPPI STATE Nov. 21 at Vanderbilt Sept. 5 NEW MEXICO STATE Sept. 5 at Southern Miss Nov. 28 at LSU Sept. 12 EAST CAROLINA Sept. 12 LSU Sept. 19 at Kentucky Sept. 19 NORTHWESTERN STATE VANDERBILT Sept. 26 TENNESSEE Sept. 26 at Auburn Oct. 3 OLE MISS Oct. 3 at Texas A&M Sept. 5 WESTERN KENTUCKY Oct. 10 at Missouri Oct. 10 TROY Sept. 12 GEORGIA Oct. 17 at LSU Oct. 17 LOUISIANA TECH Sept. 19 AUSTIN PEAY Oct. 24 Open date Oct. 24 KENTUCKY Sept. 26 at Ole Miss Oct. 31 Georgia (Jacksonville) Oct. 31 Open date Oct. 3 at Middle Tennessee Nov. 7 VANDERBILT Nov. 5 (Thu.) at Missouri Oct. 10 Open date Nov. 14 at South Carolina Nov. 14 ALABAMA Oct. 17 at South Carolina Nov. 21 FLORIDA ATLANTIC Nov. 21 at Arkansas Oct. 24 MISSOURI Nov. 28 FLORIDA STATE Nov. 28 OLE MISS Oct. 31 at Houston Nov. 7 at Florida GEORGIA MISSOURI Nov. 14 KENTUCKY Sept. 5 UL MONROE Sept. 5 SE MISSOURI STATE Nov. 21 TEXAS A&M Sept. 12 at Vanderbilt Sept. 12 at Arkansas State Nov. 28 at Tennessee Sept. 19 SOUTH CAROLINA Sept. 19 UCONN Sept. 26 SOUTHERN Sept. 26 at Kentucky Oct. 3 ALABAMA Oct. 3 SOUTH CAROLINA Tentative and subject to change Oct. 10 at Tennessee Oct. 10 FLORIDA Oct. 17 MISSOURI Oct. 17 at Georgia Oct. 24 Open date Oct. 24 at Vanderbilt Oct. 31 Florida (Jacksonville) Oct. 31 Open date Nov. 7 KENTUCKY Nov. 5 (Thu.) MISSISSIPPI STATE Nov. 14 at Auburn Nov. 14 TBA Nov. 21 GEORGIA SOUTHERN Nov. 21 TENNESSEE Nov. 28 at Georgia Tech Nov. 28 at Arkansas 2015 SEC FOOTBALL SCHEDULE (Tentative and Subject to Change)

Date Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 7 Nov. 14 Nov. 21 Nov. 28 Team MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI CHARLESTON WISCONSIN OLE MISS UL MONROE GEORGIA ARKANSAS TEXAS A&M TENNESSEE LSU AUBURN ALABAMA TENNESSEE STATE SOUTHERN Arlington, Texas Tuscaloosa Tuscaloosa Athens Tuscaloosa College Station Tuscaloosa Tuscaloosa Auburn Tuscaloosa Starkville Tuscaloosa MISSISSIPPI TEXAS-EL PASO TOLEDO TEXAS TECH TEXAS A&M TENNESSEE ALABAMA AUBURN UT MARTIN OLE MISS LSU MISSOURI ARKANSAS STATE Fayetteville Little Rock Fayetteville Arlington, Texas Knoxville Tuscaloosa Fayetteville Fayetteville Oxford Baton Rouge Fayetteville Fayetteville JACKSONVILLE MISSISSIPPI KENTUCKY LOUISVILLE LSU SAN JOSE STATE ARKANSAS OLE MISS TEXAS A&M GEORGIA IDAHO ALABAMA AUBURN STATE STATE Lexington Atlanta, Ga. Baton Rouge Auburn Fayetteville Auburn College Station Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn (Oct. 15) NEW MEXICO SOUTH FLORIDA FLORIDA EAST CAROLINA KENTUCKY TENNESSEE OLE MISS MISSOURI LSU GEORGIA VANDERBILT FLORIDA STATE CAROLINA ATLANTIC STATE Gainesville Lexington Gainesville Gainesville Columbia Baton Rouge Jacksonville Gainesville Gainesville Columbia Gainesville Gainesville SOUTH GEORGIA GEORGIA UL MONROE VANDERBILT SOUTHERN ALABAMA TENNESSEE MISSOURI FLORIDA KENTUCKY AUBURN GEORGIA CAROLINA SOUTHERN TECH Athens Nashville Athens Athens Knoxville Athens Jacksonville Athens Auburn Athens Athens Atlanta SOUTH EASTERN AUBURN MISSISSIPPI UNC UL LAFAYETTE FLORIDA MISSOURI TENNESSEE GEORGIA VANDERBILT LOUISVILLE KENTUCKY CAROLINA KENTUCKY Lexington STATE CHARLOTTE Lexington Lexington Lexington Lexington Athens Nashville Lexington Columbia Lexington (Oct. 15) Starkville Lexington McCNEESE MISSISSIPPI EASTERN SOUTH WESTERN AUBURN SYRACUSE FLORIDA ALABAMA ARKANSAS OLE MISS TEXAS A&M LSU STATE STATE MICHIGAN CAROLINA KENTUCKY Baton Rouge Syracuse Baton Rouge Tuscaloosa Baton Rouge Oxford Baton Rouge Baton Rouge Starkville Baton Rouge Columbia Baton Rouge NEW MEXICO MISSISSIPPI UT MARTIN FRESNO STATE ALABAMA VANDERBILT FLORIDA MEMPHIS TEXAS A&M AUBURN ARKANSAS LSU OLE MISS STATE STATE Oxford Oxford Tuscaloosa Oxford Gainesville Memphis Oxford Auburn Oxford Oxford Oxford Starkville SOUTHERN NORTHWESTERN LOUISIANA MISSOURI MISSISSIPPI LSU AUBURN TEXAS A&M TROY KENTUCKY ALABAMA ARKANSAS OLE MISS MISS STATE TECH Columbia STATE Starkville Auburn College Station Starkville Starkville Starkville Fayetteville Starkville Hattiesburg Starkville Starkville (Nov. 5) SE MISSOURI ARKANSAS SOUTH MISSISSIPPI UCONN KENTUCKY FLORIDA GEORGIA VANDERBILT TBA TENNESSEE ARKANSAS MISSOURI STATE STATE CAROLINA STATE Columbia Lexington Columbia Athens Nashville Columbia Columbia Fayetteville Columbia Jonesboro Columbia, Mo. Columbia (Nov. 5) NORTH CENTRAL SOUTH KENTUCKY GEORGIA MISSOURI LSU VANDERBILT TEXAS A&M TENNESSEE FLORIDA CITADEL CLEMSON CAROLINA FLORIDA Columbia Athens Columbia, Mo. Columbia Columbia College Station Knoxville Columbia Columbia Columbia CAROLINA Charlotte (Sept. 3) Columbia WESTERN SOUTH UAB OKLAHOMA FLORIDA ARKANSAS GEORGIA ALABAMA KENTUCKY NORTH TEXAS MISSOURI VANDERBILT TENNESSEE CAROLINA CAROLINA Nashville Knoxville Gainesville Knoxville Knoxville Tuscaloosa Lexington Knoxville Columbia Knoxville Knoxville Knoxville MISSISSIPPI SOUTH WESTERN TEXAS ARIZONA STATE BALL STATE NEVADA ARKANSAS ALABAMA OLE MISS AUBURN VANDERBILT LSU STATE CAROLINA CAROLINA Houston College Station College Station Arlington, Texas College Station Oxford College Station Nashville Baton Rouge A&M College Station College Station College Station WESTERN MIDDLE SOUTH GEORGIA AUSTIN PEAY OLE MISS MISSOURI HOUSTON FLORIDA KENTUCKY TEXAS A&M TENNESSEE VANDERBILT KENTUCKY TENNESSEE CAROLINA Nashville Nashville Oxford Nashville Houston Gainesville Nashville Nashville Knoxville Nashville Murfreesboro Columbia

2015 SEC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME • DECEMBER 5 • ATLANTA, GA. THIS IS THE SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE

• Since its formation in 1933, the SEC has directed and organized interscholastic athletic competi- • The SEC had two student-athletes awarded the NCAA Today’s Top 10 - the only conference with tions, conducted tournaments and prescribed eligibility rules for student-athletes. The Conference multiple winners. The SEC’s recipients were Raven Chavanne, Tennessee () and Barrett also facilitates and assists its member institutions in maintaining intercollegiate athletic programs Jones, Alabama (football). The award recognizes 10 current student-athletes who will have com- compatible with the highest standards of education and competitive sports. pleted their athletics eligibility for their successes on the fields and courts, in the classroom and in the community. • The Southeastern Conference crowns champions in 21 sports - 12 women’s sports and nine men’s sports. They include baseball, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s cross country, • The SEC also had seven student-athletes earn the NCAA Elite 89 award, which is given to the stu- equestrian, football, men’s and women’s golf, gymnastics, soccer, softball, men’s and women’s dent-athlete with the highest cumulative GPA at the finals site for each of the NCAA champi- swimming and diving, men’s and women’s tennis, men’s and women’s indoor and outdoor track onships. The 2013-14 SEC recipients were: Sam Malone, Kentucky (men’s basketball); Stephanie and field, and volleyball. Meadow, Alabama (women’s golf); Lauren Beers, Alabama (gymnastics); Ty Stewart, Georgia (men’s swimming & diving); Chantal Van Landeghem, Georgia (women’s swimming & diving); • In the fall of 2012, the University of Missouri and Texas A&M University became the 13th and 14th Emily Zabor, Alabama (women’s tennis); and Andrew Pisechko, Arkansas (men’s indoor track & members of the Southeastern Conference. It marked the first expansion for the SEC since 1991 and field). the second-ever increase for the league since its founding in 1933. • The SEC has had eight student-athletes win the William V. Campbell Trophy given by the National • The SEC’s mission statement reflects the priorities of the league. “The purpose of the Southeast- Football Foundation. Since the inaugural award in 1990, the SEC has had more recipients than any ern Conference is to assist its member institutions in the maintenance of programs of intercolle- other conference. The award, nicknamed the “Academic Heisman” goes to college football’s top giate athletics which are compatible with the highest standards of education and competitive scholar-athlete. In 2012, Alabama’s Barrett Jones was the SEC’s eighth recipient of the trophy. In sports.” 2009, Florida’s Tim Tebow won the honor. LSU’s won the honor in 2005, Ten- nessee’s Michael Munoz claimed the award in 2004, Matt Stinchcomb of Georgia in 1998, Ten- • The Southeastern Conference has developed a database of minority football coaches in NCAA nessee’s Peyton Manning in 1997, Florida’s Danny Wuerffel in 1996 and Brad Culpepper of Florida in Football Bowl Subdivision and the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision since 2002. The 2012 1991 was the league’s first recipient. database contained the names of 527 head and assistant football coaches from all 124 NCAA Foot- ball Bowl Subdivision universities and 73 NCAA Football Championship Subdivision institutions. • More than 2,400 student-athletes were named to the SEC Academic Honor Roll in 2013-14. The SEC begins the 2014 football season with two minority head football coaches - Derek Mason Members of the SEC Academic Honor Roll must have a 3.0 grade point average for either the previ- (Vanderbilt) and Kevin Sumlin (Texas A&M). ous academic year or his/her academic career at the SEC institution. The number represents almost half of the student-athletes that competed in the SEC last year. ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENTS • The Southeastern Conference had 46 Capital One Academic All-Americans in 2013-14. The league FOR THE STUDENT-ATHLETE had 17 student-athletes earn first-team honors. The Capital One Academic All-America Teams are • Alabama golfer Cory Whitsett and Georgia swimmer Shannon Vreeland were named recipients of voted on by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA). The 46 student-athletes the 2013-14 H. Boyd McWhorter Southeastern Conference Scholar-Athletes of the Year Awards. The represent 11 of the SEC 14 schools while seven schools had at least one person on the first-team. McWhorter Scholar-Athlete Award is the highest honor a student-athlete can receive in the SEC. Since 2003, the SEC has had 232 student-athletes earn first-team Capital One Academic All-Amer- Each McWhorter Scholar-Athlete Award recipient receives a $15,000 postgraduate scholarship, ica status. while 26 other finalists for the award receive a $7,500 post-graduate scholarship.

• The 17 SEC student-athletes who earned Capital One Academic All-America first-team status in • Florida basketball player Patric Young and Missouri gymnast Mackenzie McGill were named recipi- 2013-14 were: Florida women’s swimmer Elizabeth Beisel; LSU men’s track athlete Joseph Caraway; ents of the 2013-14 Brad Davis SEC Community Service Post-Graduate Scholarship. Each Commu- Alabama women’s tennis player Mary Daines; Florida men’s swimmer Brad deBorde; Alabama soft- nity Service Leader of the Year receives a $10,000 post-graduate scholarship while 26 other finalists ball player Molly Fichtner; Alabama softball player Kaila Hunt; Alabama gymnast Kim Jacob; for the award receive a $5,000 post-graduate scholarship. Auburn volleyball player Camila Jersonsky; Alabama softball player Haylie McCleney; Alabama women’s golfer Stephanie Meadow; Georgia football player Aaron Murray; Tennessee softball • The SEC was the first conference in the nation to assemble a Student-Athlete Advisory Committee. player Ellen Renfroe; Kentucky men’s soccer player Tyler Riggs; Georgia women’s swimmer Laura Two representatives from each of the SEC member schools are selected to serve on the committee Ryan; Tennessee softball player Madison Shipman; Alabama men’s golfer Cory Whitsett; and Ala- which meets twice a year to discuss issues of concern to the student-athlete. bama men’s golfer Bobby Wyatt COMPLIANCE AND EDUCATION • The SEC had two of its student-athletes earn Capital One Academic All-American of the Year in • The 2004 SEC Task Force Committee on Compliance and Enforcement’s report of recommendations their respective sports – Alabama gymnast Kim Jacob (women’s at-large) and Tennessee softball represents an important step in establishing a new standard of compliance excellence within the player Ellen Renfroe. Southeastern Conference. Among the recommendations included in this report is how institutions will handle reports of allegations, strengthening the relationship between the league’s institutions • The Southeastern Conference had 21 of its student-athletes earn NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships and the conference office, developing new orientation programs and establishing an annual review in 2013-14. The scholarships are awarded to student-athletes who excel academically and athleti- of compliance issues. cally and who are at least in their final year of intercollegiate athletic competition. The SEC NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship recipients are: Elizabeth Beisel, Florida (Women’s Swimming & Diving); •The SEC conducts a New Coaches Orientation Program three times a year, which supplements in- Caroline Brown, Tennessee (Women’s Soccer); Brad deBorde, Florida (Men’s Swimming & Diving); stitutional orientation programs and enhance the professional development of coaches. Topics of Mary Daines, Alabama (Women’s Tennis); Sarah DeMeo, Alabama (Gymnastics); Andrew Gemmell, discussion range from the role of the SEC and NCAA to the role of athletics in higher education. Georgia (Men’s Swimming & Diving); Lindsey Gendron, Tennessee (Women’s Swimming & Diving); Emily Holsopple, Kentucky (Rifle); Kim Jacob, Alabama (Gymnastics); Spencer Kerns, Auburn (Men’s SPORTSMANSHIP Swimming & Diving); TJ Leon, Auburn (Men’s Swimming & Diving); Stephanie Meadow, Alabama • The SEC has implemented sportsmanship policies meant to strengthen the league’s commit- (Women’s Golf); Diandra Milliner, Alabama (Gymnastics); Chloe Phillips, Mississippi State (Women’s ment to these principles. The league also developed a sportsmanship statement for its institutions Track & Field); Daniil Proskura, Alabama (Men’s Tennis); Ellen Renfroe, Tennessee (Softball); Tyler to follow. It states: Riggs, Kentucky (Men’s Soccer); Stephanie Rucci, Auburn (Equestrian); Laura Ryan, Georgia “Coaches and student-athletes of a member insititution, as well as individuals employed by or (Women’s Swimming & Diving); Shannon Vreeland, Georgia (Women’s Swimming & Diving); Cory associated with that institution, including alumni, fans, patrons and boosters, shall conduct them- Whitsett, Alabama (Men’s Golf). selves with honesty and good sportsmanship. Their behavior shall at all times reflect the high stan- dards of honor and dignity that characterize participation in the collegiate setting. • The SEC also had five of its student-athletes – South Carolina track & field athlete Radiance Bas- “For intercollegiate athletics to promote the character development of participants, to en- den; Missouri track & field athlete Sierra Gant; Missouri tennis player Jamie Mera; Missouri track & hance the integrity of higher education and to promote civility in society, coaches, student-athletes field athlete Lana Mims and Arkansas gymnast Jamie Pisani - earn NCAA Ethnic Minority and and all others associated with these athletics programs and events should adhere to such funda- Women’s Enhancement Scholarships. mental values as respect, fairness, civility, honesty and responsibility. These values should be man- ifested not only in athletics participation but also in the broad spectrum of activities affecting the THIS IS THE SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE athletics program. SECU - COMMITMENT TO THE UNIVERSITY ACADEMIC MISSION “It is the responsibility of each member institution to establish policies for sportsmanship and ethical conduct in intercollegiate athletics consistent with the educational mission and goals of the • Using its SECU academic initiative, the Southeastern Conference sponsors, supports and promotes institution. Furthermore, member institutions are responsible for educating on a continuing basis collaborative higher education programs and activities involving administrators, faculty and stu- all constituencies about these policies.” dents at its member universities. SECU is led by the president or chancellor of each SEC university and is managed by the chief academic officer. The goals of the SECU initiative include highlighting •The SEC has an annual Sportsmanship Award that will be awarded to one male and one female the endeavors and achievements of SEC faculty and universities; advancing the merit and reputa- student-athlete. Voted on by the league’s athletics directors, the award honors student-athletes tion of SEC universities outside of the traditional SEC region; identifying and preparing future lead- who, through their actions in the competitive arena of intercollegiate athletics, have demonstrated ers for high-level service in academia; increasing the amount and type of education abroad one or more of the ideals of sportsmanship, including fairness, civility, honesty, unselfishness, re- opportunities available to SEC students; and providing opportunities for collaboration among SEC spect and responsibility. The recipients of the 2013-14 award were the University of Missouri Foot- university personnel. ball Team; the Tennessee Men's Basketball Team; the Equestrian Team; and the SEC Women's Golf Coaches • The SEC Academic Leadership Development Program seeks to identify, prepare and advance aca- demic leaders for roles within SEC institutions and beyond. It has two components, a university- IN THE COMMUNITY level program and two, three-day, SEC-wide workshops held on specified campuses for all • The SEC and its member institutions have partnered with the 11-state Special Olympics organiza- participants. tions in the SEC region. The relationship is featured on public service announcements aired on SEC telecasts, and Special Olympics participate in the Dr Pepper SEC FanFare, held in conjunction with • The SEC Faculty Achievement and Professor of the Year Awards recognize faculty with outstanding the SEC Football and Basketball Championships. records in research and scholarship. There is one winner per campus and one overall winner for the Conference. • The SEC and its corporate sponsors host youth clinics each year in conjunction with several confer- ence events, including the football championship game, the men’s basketball tournament, the • The SEC Faculty Travel Grant Program is intended to enhance collaboration that stimulates schol- baseball tournament and the soccer tournament. These clinics provide children from host cities the arly initiatives between SEC universities. The program offers faculty from each SEC university the opportunity to receive instruction from SEC and other area coaches. opportunity to travel to other SEC universities to develop grant proposals and conduct research.

• The SEC selects a Community Service Team in each of its 21 sports. The Community Service Team fea- • The SEC College Tour occurs each spring, and administrators from all SEC universities participate in tures a representative from each institution who has shown a commitment to community service. events intended to introduce SEC universities to students, parents and high school counselors from outside of the southeast region. SEC NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS HISTORY • The Southeastern Conference won seven national championships in 2013-14: Baseball (Vander- • The SEC Symposium is an academic conference-type event intended to address a scholarly issue in bilt); Equestrian (Georgia); Men’s Golf (Alabama); Gymnastics (Florida); Softball (Florida); Women’s an area of strength represented by all SEC universities. Held in Atlanta, Georgia, this marquee event Swimming & Diving (Georgia); and Women’s Outdoor Track & Field (Texas A&M). puts on display the research and innovation of SEC institutions for an audience of academicians, The SEC also had a national runner-up in six sports, including: Men’s Basketball (Kentucky); government officials, grant funding agents and other stakeholders. Equestrian (South Carolina); Football (Auburn); Softball (Alabama); Men’s Indoor Track & Field (Arkansas); and Men’s Outdoor Track & Field (Florida). • The SEC Cooperative Education Abroad Agreement provides opportunities for students from all SEC universities to access international programs offered at other SEC universities. And as part of a • The SEC became the first conference in history to win the national football championship renewable agreement, Italian engineering students from the Politecnico di Torino (PdT) have the (Florida), the national women’s basketball championship (Tennessee) and the national men’s bas- opportunity to enroll at SEC universities each fall, and engineering SEC students may study there ketball championship (Florida) in the same year (2006-07 academic year). the following spring.

• In its history, the SEC has won 211 national championships, 120 men’s and 90 women’s titles. • The SEC MBA Case Competition is an opportunity for SEC business schools to showcase their stu- Since 2000, the SEC has won 94 national crowns, including 48 men’s titles and 46 women’s titles. dents’ skills at solving simulated, real-world problems that cover the spectrum of business disci- plines. The competition is held on one SEC campus and teams of four MBA students compete • In the “big three” men’s sports – football, basketball and baseball, the SEC has won 14 national against other SEC teams, the best receiving various awards and recognition. championships during the last eight academic years. The league has won seven of the last eight football national championships. • The SEC Academic Collaboration Grant Program is intended to expand student-focused collabora- tion among SEC universities. The grant is awarded annually to one SEC institution to support joint • Since 2006, the SEC has had a national champion in 17 of its 21 sponsored sports – football, men’s activities involving all other SEC universities. Examples of collaborative activities include intra-con- basketball, baseball, men’s indoor track & field, men’s outdoor track & field, women’s indoor track & ference competitions, graduate student recruiting fairs, undergraduate research initiatives, etc. field, women’s outdoor track & field, women’s swimming & diving, gymnastics, women’s tennis, men’s tennis, men’s swimming and diving, equestrian, men’s golf, women’s golf, softball and women’s basketball.

FOR THE FANS • For the 33rd consecutive season, the SEC recorded the largest total football attendance of any conference in the country. The league has led in average attendance during the last 16 consecutive seasons. More than 7.5 million fans attended SEC football games in 2013 while stadiums were filled to 96.2 percent of capacity.

• The SEC had nearly 2.5 million fans attend its home basketball games during the 2013-14 season. In 246 home contests, SEC teams averaged 10,283 fans per game. Kentucky was second nationally in attendance, averaging 22,964 fans per contest.

• Year after year, the SEC is the leader in college baseball attendance. In 2014, for the fourth con- seecutive year, the SEC’s institutions drew more than 2 million fans, with a nation-leading atten- dance total of 2.25 million fans. The SEC averaged nearly 5,000 fans per game (4,965) in 2014. The SEC and its member schools own virtually all regular season, conference tournament, NCAA Re- gional and Super Regional attendance records.