As the end of the college football season draws near, so does the beginning of the ever-turning coaching carousel.

While movement of head coaches always gets the most attention, fan bases of struggling programs are usually also curious as to whether appropriate changes at the assistant coaching level will be made. After all, if something is broken, then steps should be taken to fix it.

Here are the 10 assistant coaches who should feel the most nervous about their jobs after their performance during the 2015 season:

1. South Carolina, entire staff
2. Missouri, entire staff

These two programs both will be out a head coach. Both programs also had significant struggles on the football field this year. It should be no surprise to anyone that many of the assistant coaches on these staffs will be replaced once new head coaches are hired.

3. Cam Cameron, LSU (Offensive coordinator/Quarterbacks coach)
4. Jeff Grimes, LSU (Offensive line)

LSU’s offense has been one-dimensional at its best and stale at its worst. Over-reliance on the run game, and particularly on one individual, has made the offense predictable and stagnated the growth of the passing game. A weak offensive line on top of that is enough to stop any formerly explosive offense attack. Whether or not Les Miles is shown the door, someone on staff will most likely have to take the fall for the 2015 season.

5. D.J. Eliot, Kentucky (Defensive coordinator/linebackers coach)
6. Shannon Dawson, Kentucky (Offensive coordinator)

Mark Stoops and his coaching staff are currently scrambling to save a sinking ship. If they are unable to get their team to bowl eligibility after an entire offseason of expecting it, there will be major changes in the coaching staff. Many already think that Stoops is in danger of being ushered out. If that happens, most assuredly some assistant coaches will lose their jobs with him. If not, that still is a likely scenario. Eliot is most in danger, because of the minimal improvement to Kentucky’s defense in spite of working with experienced players. However, Kentucky’s offense also has been inconsistent.

7. Andy Ludwig, Vanderbilt (Offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach)
8. Charles Bankins, Vanderbilt (Special teams/running backs coach)

It’s unlikely that Derek Mason gets the boot at Vanderbilt, but someone might have to pay for the team’s dreadful showing on offense this year. It’s very clear that offense was the Commodores’ weak link, because the defense has been mostly good all year. Ludwig has struggled to find a winning formula since Week 1, and quarterback play has ranged from inconsistent to terrible all season, with far too many turnovers. Special teams play has also been inconsistent, with punter/kicker Tommy Openshaw struggling through the season.

9. Brian Schottenheimer, Georgia (Offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach)
10. Jeremy Pruitt, Georgia (Defensive coordinator)

There’s always the chance that nothing will change at Georgia. The Bulldogs never completely crash and burn, even if they suffer through embarrassing losses along the way. However, the coaching staff has come under more scrutiny than ever before, which should make some assistant coaches nervous. After an injury took Nick Chubb out of Georgia’s offense, its weakness was exposed and as the Bulldogs played increasingly difficult SEC opponents, their quarterback’s woes were put on blast. Those two things don’t bode well for Brian Schottenheimer, since both areas fall under his domain, and it’s looking like Georgia was not the right fit for him. There was also that strange moment during the season when the rumor mill churned about Jeremy Pruitt possibly getting pushed out of the program due to animosity within the coaching staff. Mark Richt was quick to make statements putting those rumors to bed, but all bets are off come the end of the season.