Last week, we discovered the Pac-12 is tied for tops when it comes to producing 1,000-yard rushers.

Well, turns out it's more of the same with passing.

Sixty-five passers reached the 2,500-yard mark last season, and more came from the Pac-12 than anywhere else in the Power 5. It wasn't even close. Seventy-five percent of Pac-12 teams boasted a passer who reached that milestone. Compare that to the next-best conference, the Big 12, which saw six out of 10 teams meet the criteria.

The Pac-12's dominance wasn't a one-year anomaly, either. Over the past five seasons, the conference has produced 41 such passers in 60 attempts. Compare that to the ACC, which was second by producing those QBs at a 55.7 percent clip, or the Big 12, which was right behind at 54 percent.

The worst conference? Maybe it shouldn't come as a surprise that it's the one with a reputation for its ground-and-pound style, the Big Ten. No conference had fewer passers reach 2,500 yards last season -- the Big Ten had only five -- and no conference had fewer passers reach that plateau over the past five seasons.

Among individual teams, triple-option Georgia Tech has gone the longest without a 2,500-yard passer at 14 years. Eight teams -- including three in the Pac-12 -- boasted a 2,500-yard quarterback in each of the past five seasons.

Here's an overall look, by Power 5 conference, of each team and its most recent 2,500-yard passer: