The SEC has its share of household names. Everyone knows Chad Kelly, Fred Ross, Leonard Fournette and Calvin Ridley.

Here are three guys from Mississippi State and Ole Miss you may not have heard of, and if you have, you definitely haven’t heard enough about.

MISSISSIPPI STATE

Johnathan Calvin, DE

Johnathan Calvin, who spent two years in junior college and behind a load of four-star signees, did not arrive with a large amount of fanfare to Starkville in 2015.

He may continue to stay out of the spotlight with A.J. Jefferson (13.5 TFLs, 5 sacks in 2015) at the other end, but Calvin, who had 5.5 TFLs and 1.5 sacks last season, showed in the spring game his ability to get after quarterbacks, even if they were his own.

Jamaal Clayborn, C

One (or more) of the four quarterbacks will eventually win the job. Having Clayborn start every regular season game last season was important, but magnify that with the quarterback battle heading into 2016.

The former guard had a team-high 848 snaps last season, and the Bulldogs need him healed from an ankle injury that kept him out of the Belk Bowl to match those numbers again.

Malik Dear, WR

Dear caught 22 passes last season, so he isn’t a guy off opposing defenses’ radar, but his potential is still off the radar. Dear is explosive. In only 11 carries last season, he gained 113 yards. In the spring game, Dear harked back to his prep days by running, catching and throwing, the throw being a touchdown pass.

Also in that game, he caught 6 passes for 67 yards, one of them a 38-yard touchdown with him doing most of the work after the catch. He is a perfect fit for Dan Mullen’s athlete factory and could be on the verge of stardom.

OLE MISS

Fadol Brown, DE

Brown doesn’t get the recognition sack-machine Marquis Haynes gets, but he sure gets to the quarterback. In 2014, he was second on the team with 5 quarterback hurries with a half-sack. Last season, Brown started eight games and had a team-high 10 hurries and a sack.

Haynes had 10 sacks last season, and if Brown continues to get to the quarterback on the other side, one of them will rack up the sacks this season.

C.J. Hampton, S

Hampton is almost too obvious to include. The junior will start at free safety in a secondary that lost a lot with the departure of Mike Hilton and Trae Elston, who were tied for second on the Rebels in tackles.

Hampton is now the veteran who can be a run-stopper but make plays on an island. He had 27 tackles last season, 23 of them solo.

Markell Pack, WR

Nobody talks about Pack, probably because he’s in a pack with some elite SEC wide receivers. However, even with the expected rise of redshirt freshman Van Jefferson, the versatile junior can own a defense from the slot.

Pack did not start a game last season but had 31 catches for 380 yards and 3 touchdowns. He only had seven fewer catches than Quincy Adeboyejo and Evan Engram, and just six and five fewer than Cody Core and Damore’ea Stringfellow, respectively. All four are more talked about. Pack belongs in that conversation.