The margin of victory isn't the only crazy, impressive number from Alabama's 66-3 blowout win over Ole Miss Saturday.

Here are some other crazy and/or impressive numbers from the game:

-- First of all, let's look at the point total. Eight of the other 12 SEC teams that played on Saturday scored 24 points or less. The Crimson Tide eclipsed that number by early in the second quarter and had 35 points and 330 yards of total offense by the end of the first half. Alabama then scored another 31 points and posted another 283 yards in the second half despite inserting backups at key positions early in the third quarter and despite playing with some third-, fourth-, fifth- and sixth-team players during the fourth quarter.

-- The 66 points are the most the Tide has posted in a game since beating Vanderbilt 66-3 in 1979. This is the first time since 1945 that Alabama has scored 50-plus points in back-to-back SEC games. In its first two SEC games, the Tide has outscored its opponents -- Vanderbilt and Ole Miss -- a combined 125-3.

-- At the end of the third quarter, Alabama was averaging 9.3 yards per play. That's double what's considered an average yards per play number.

-- In just more than two quarters of work, quarterback Jalen Hurts accounted for 298 yards and three touchdowns. He was 12 of 19 passing for 197 yards with two touchdowns and no interceptions while also running for 101 yards and a score on 10 carries.

-- Led by Hurts, the Tide ran for 365 yards and, most impressive, ran for an average of more than seven yards per carry for a second straight game. It's considered solid to run for an average of four yards per carry in a conference game. Alabama averaged 7.5 yards per carry against a highly-ranked Vanderbilt defense last week and then 7.2 yards per carry vs. Ole Miss. The Tide was averaging 8.9 yards per carry entering the fourth quarter, having already run for 293 yards on 33 carries.

-- In total, the Tide scored nine touchdowns Saturday night. After a three-and-out on its first possession, Alabama scored touchdowns on five of its next six possessions in building a 35-3 second quarter lead.

-- The defense was good, too. Entering Saturday, Rebels quarterback Shea Patterson, one of the top young quarterbacks in the country, was throwing for an average of 427 yards per game. Against Alabama, he was just 14 of 29 for 165 yards with no touchdowns and two interceptions.

Matt Zenitz is an Alabama beat writer for the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @mzenitz.