The NFL’s scouting combine is Feb. 23-29. College football’s best draft-eligible players will be put through a battery of drills, tests, measurements, interviews and more to help NFL front offices determine which players they want to draft.

It’s also a chance for prospects to grab the attention of NFL teams, and SEC players have put on some of the best performances in recent memory. Jadeveon Clowney’s blazing 40-yard dash time in 2014 (4.53) and Julio Jones’ 2011 showing (4.39) stand out. Last year, Kentucky linebacker Bud Dupree used a solid performance at the combine — and a 4.56 40-yard dash — to help him become a first-round draft pick by the Steelers.

Here is the list of who’s invited to this year’s combine. Here are the SEC players who will be on hand and below are few league players that could make a big splash while there:

DE Jonathan Bullard, Florida

Bullard was an All-SEC performer last season, piling up 66 tackles, 17.5 tackles for loss and 6.5 sacks. He’s already a first-round prospect, but he can rise even higher with a good weekend at the combine. He’s been clocked at 4.86 in the 40-yard dash, and to raise the eyebrows of NFL scouts, he’ll want to improve on that a bit. He’ll probably do well in the bench press, and showing off his quickness in the shuttle drills will also help his stock.

LB Deion Jones, LSU

Jones waited for his chance at LSU, and made the most of it as a senior with a team-high 100 tackles. His speed (he was named for Deion Sanders and has been clocked as low as 4.42) already had NFL scouts intrigued, and a strong performance during Senior Bowl week has only heightened the buzz around him. He should be one of the fastest linebacking prospects at the combine, and with some good results in some of the other tests, the New Orleans native could be on his way up NFL draft boards.

RB Keith Marshall, Georgia

Marshall had more than his share of injury woes while at Georgia, but he scored an invite to the combine — and by all accounts is healthy and ready for it. Every year, someone shows up and runs a 40-yard dash time that shocks all of the stopwatch-toting scouts in attendance. Marshall, a former five-star recruit with some sub-4.4 times on his resume, has every chance to be that guy. If he shows up in Indianapolis and lays down, say, a 4.38, he can rocket up teams’ draft boards.

RB Kenyan Drake, Alabama

A broken arm against Mississippi State in November shortened his regular season, but the speedy Drake showed off his athletic ability with an electrifying kickoff return for a touchdown in the national championship game. The early scouting report has him pegged as a third-down back and special teams guy, but a strong effort at the combine (sub-4.5 40 and good times in the agility drills) could encourage teams to take another look at him as a potential every-down back.

WR Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina

Cooper parlayed a fantastic junior season in Columbia into a chance to jump early into the NFL. He’s training hard for the combine, and he’ll need to run a sub-4.5 40 while putting up good times in the shuttle and showing off his hands in the receiver drills. He’s listed at 5-11, 207. Right now, he projects as a slot receiver and a second- or third-round draft pick. A good weekend at the combine could push him even higher.