Mock drafters already are looking ahead to 2017, where the SEC will try to supply the NFL with the most prospects for the 11th consecutive year.

The SEC had 51 draft picks this past weekend, including eight in the first round. Both totals led the country.

What can we expect in 2017? More of the same, based on numerous mock drafts and analysts rankings.

Here’s a way-too-early look at the SEC’s top 20 prospects for the NFL draft, a list that includes underclassmen we expect to enter.

1. Cam Robinson, OT, Alabama: Offensive tackles typically are safe bets and always in high demand.

2. Myles Garrett, DE, Texas A&M: Ditto pass-rushers, and Garrett has proven to be the SEC’s best for two years.

3. Leonard Fournette, RB, LSU: Running backs are back in vogue, and Fournette could become the SEC’s first back to go in the top 5 since Trent Richardson went No. 3 in 2012.

4. Jonathan Allen, DE, Alabama: He’s not as explosive as Garrett, but he’s more physical and just as dominant.

5. Carl Lawson, DE, Auburn: Next year’s version of Leonard Floyd?

6. Tim Williams, LB, Alabama: Arguably the best pass-rushing specialist in the league, if not college football. He’s a game-changer.

7. Charles Harris, DE/LB, Missouri: Another standout pass-rushing specialist who could play on his feet or with his hand in the ground.

8. Derek Barnett, DE, Tennessee: He has battled Garrett for sack titles and bragging rights since both arrived. The race to the top of the NFL draft continues.

9. Da’Shawn Hand, DE, Alabama: Some believe the 2016 defense will be better than the 2015 version. If so, count on a huge year from Hand.

10. Nick Chubb, RB, Georgia: Todd Gurley helped Chubb twice. First, by getting hurt, which gave Chubb the opportunity to shine. Then, by recovering so dramatically and effectively from a knee injury, which should give NFL teams no reason to pause on Chubb.

11. Jalen Tabor, CB, Florida: Somebody has to cover these elite receivers, and Tabor played like one of the SEC’s best in 2015.

12. Travin Dural, WR, LSU: The NFL covets speed. Dural will provide it and good size (6-2, 203). Others will put up bigger numbers, but he’ll be a Combine star.

13. O.J. Howard, TE, Alabama: Size, speed, hands, athleticism. He’s a matchup nightmare, going to a league that covets play-making tight ends more than ever. Usually one tight end a year becomes a first-round pick. Howard is the best bet.

14. Davon Godchaux, DT, LSU: Run-stuffers don’t always grab headlines, but Godchaux is considered among the best at his position in the country. Deceptively quick for a man approaching 300 pounds.

15. Ethan Pocic, C, LSU: Ryan Kelly was a first-rounder in 2016. Pocic, the top center in the SEC, will try to follow suit in 2017.

16. Ricky Seals-Jones, WR, Texas A&M: Mike Evans is the natural comparison. Same school, same kind of big, physical game. He’ll grade extremely well at the Combine and in private workouts.

17. Jarrad Davis, LB, Florida: He’s bigger than Tennessee’s Jalen Reeves-Maybin, and ultimately, that might be the difference in which one goes first.

18. Malachi Dupre, WR, LSU: Two of the SEC’s best NFL receiving prospects play on a team that threw it just 23 times a game last season.

19. Cam Sutton, CB, Tennessee: He came back to school for a reason. If he’s a key reason the Volunteers do what many expect in 2016, draft rewards will follow next April.

20. Chad Kelly, QB, Ole Miss: He might be the biggest wild card in the draft. He might throw for another 4,000 yards, but he’s still small by NFL quarterback standards. That will turn off some teams, but not all. And we saw again how desperate NFL teams are to find their franchise quarterback.