Editor’s Note: This is the second installment of a seven-part series designed to prepare you for the 2015 SEC regular season. We’ve provide you with a guide of the SEC players who could get selected in next year’s NFL draft.

We’ll also offer you a printable schedule guide (Saturday), a food guide for every SEC campus (Sunday), identify every SEC team’s best fan (Monday), rank all 128 starting quarterbacks in FBS (Tuesday) and identify the most entertaining individual matchups of the season (Wednesday).

What are your bold predictions for the 2015 SEC season? We’d love to know. Let us know below.

Meanwhile, our staff has offered a few of our own predictions:

TITLE WINNERS

West Division Champ: Auburn
East Division Champ: Georgia
Conference Champ: Auburn

Alabama received one vote to win the West Division and the overall SEC title. Tennessee received two votes to win the SEC East. LSU received a vote to win the SEC West.

Overall, though, six of the seven panelists think the SEC Championship Game will feature Georgia and Auburn, with the Tigers winning the regular-season rematch.

PLAYER HONORS

Top Heisman Candidate: Auburn QB Jeremy Johnson
Offensive Player Of The Year: Georgia RB Nick Chubb
Defensive Player Of The Year: Florida CB Vernon Hargreaves III

Georgia RB Nick Chubb (two votes), Mississippi State QB Dak Prescott and LSU RB Leonard Fournette each received votes as the conference’s top Heisman Trophy candidate. We’re skeptical that the West Division Bulldogs can win enough games to keep Prescott in the discussion.

The following players received one vote for offensive or defensive player of the year: Prescott, Johnson, Alabama RB Derrick Henry, Georgia LB Leonard Floyd, Ole Miss DT Robert Nkemdiche, Tennessee DE/LB Curt Maggitt, Tennessee DE Derek Barnett.

COACHING SUPPERLATIVES

Coach Of The Year: Georgia’s Mark Richt
Coach On The Hottest Seat: Vanderbilt’s Derek Mason

Tennessee’s Butch Jones and Arkansas’ Bret Bielema each received votes to become coach of the year.

Richt and LSU’s Les Miles each received one hot seat vote.

GAME-RELATED

Biggest Upset: Kentucky over Florida
Game Of The Year: Alabama at Georgia

RELATIVE TO EXPECTATIONS

Emerging Star: Alabama LB Reuben Foster
Biggest Disappointment: Arkansas

Georgia LB Lorenzo Carter, Florida QB Will Grier, Arkansas WR Dominique Reed and Florida RB Jordan Scarlett all received a vote as emerging stars.

Alabama, LSU, Georgia and Texas A&M also got votes as the biggest disappointment.

15 BOLD PREDICTIONS

  1. Every SEC team will have at least two losses, but the conference will still get a playoff bid. (Stan Chrapowicki)
  2. South Carolina will lose to Georgia, Tennessee and Florida. Headsets will be thrown. (Christine Wang)
  3. Kentucky will enjoy its first winning season since 2009. (John Hollis)
  4. Texas A&M defensive end Myles Garrett ties the SEC’s single-season sack record with 15. (Mike Shaw)
  5. Georgia will win its first outright SEC Championship since 2005. (John Hollis)
  6. Alabama’s Derrick Henry, not Nick Chubb or Leonard Fournette, will lead the SEC in rushing. (Brad Crawford)
  7. Not a single SEC coach will get fired after this season, as the total number of job changes will hold at two in the last three years. (Christopher Smith)
  8. Kentucky will upset Florida and end the 28-game win streak. Jim McElwain will hear it from Gators fans. (Christine Wang)
  9. Tennessee’s Derek Barnett and Curt Maggitt will be the SEC’s top feared pass-rush duo. (Jon Cooper)
  10. Georgia will be ranked No. 1 at 8-0 in the first College Football Playoff Poll on Nov. 3. (Brad Crawford)
  11. Arkansas will start the season 6-0, including a win over Alabama on the road, but they will lose to Auburn at home. (Christine Wang)
  12. Florida will beat Tennessee, LSU and Ole Miss during Jim McElwain’s first season. (Jon Cooper)
  13. Each SEC West team will spend at least one week in the Associated Press Top 25 during the regular season. (Stan Chrapowicki)
  14. Mid-level SEC East teams will deliver two big victories — Florida over Ole Miss and South Carolina over LSU. (Brad Crawford)
  15. The SEC champion will have two losses and get left out of the College Football Playoff. (Jon Cooper)