Speed threats. Playmakers. Gamebreakers.

All of the above.

The SEC has several ‘home-run hitters’ on offense and special teams heading into the 2015 season, but we’ll take it a step further to differentiate this year’s showstoppers from the average player. Earlier this summer, we labeled five running backs as long ball threats, distance guys with enough blaze to out-race defenders.

We’ve added a couple others on the outside who moonlight in the return game as well. These guys will have you thirsting for more this season:

1. Isaiah McKenzie, Georgia, WR

The Human Joystick … such a filthy nickname. McKenzie had Kentucky special teamers gasping for air at Commonwealth Stadium last season after returning a punt and kickoff for touchdowns during a memorable blowout. His three total scores on special teams led the SEC and he was only a freshman. McKenzie’s future is bright between the hedges.

2. Jaylen Walton, Ole Miss, RB

Easily the SEC’s most elusive player, Walton doesn’t have the size to accumulate tough yards between the tackles, but that’s not what the Rebels expect out of their 5-foot-8, 170-pound hybrid playmaker.

3. Speedy Noil, Texas A&M, WR

Pick your poison with this guy. You’ve seen the highlights from his freshman season, an impressive reel featuring an acrobatic grab over LSU’s Tre’Davious White for a touchdown and his sprawling score against Mississippi State. When his hands are on the football, Noil’s fun to watch.

4. Leonard Fournette, LSU, RB

Pound for pound one of college football’s best at the position, Fournette can beat a defense at any angle and is especially proficient at picking up yards in chunks. Rarely thrown to as a freshman, when he did catch the football Fournette made defenders miss.

5. Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina, WR

Need a candidate for the most underrated player in college football this season? Cooper literally does it all for the Gamecocks. He catches passes, throws passes, returns kicks, handles direct snaps. Everything Steve Spurrier asks, his King can handle. Cooper’s an All-American candidate who averages a first down every offensive touch.

6. Nick Chubb, Georgia, RB

At an SEC-best 7.1 yards per carry last fall among regulars, Chubb moves the chains with nearly every touch and is a threat to score whenever there’s a crease. He posted seven runs of 40 or more yards including 83 and 82-yard touchdowns.

7. Russell Hansbrough, Mizzou, RB

One of the league’s more underrated backs, Hansbrough’s will try and put together another 1,000-yard season as the Tigers’ top rusher doing so this season without sidekick and all-around threat Marcus Murphy. Hansbrough wears many hats for the Mizzou offense and is the kind of ballcarrier who can wear a defense down before hitting the big one at any time.

8. Kenyan Drake, Alabama, RB

Drake may not be the Crimson Tide’s best all-around back, but what he lacks in brute strength and pure physicality he makes up for with an explosive gene. When he’s healthy, Drake runs like a gazelle as one of the West’s fastest players in the open field.

9. Ryan Timmons, Kentucky, WR

One of several speedsters within the Wildcats’ young crop of wideouts this season, Timmons is one of the SEC’s best at making defenders miss when he’s healthy. He has 1,000-yard talent at the position if Kentucky solves its quarterback dilemma.

10. Demarcus Robinson, Florida, WR

The fact Florida’s offense never found consistency at the quarterback position last fall made Robinson’s 53 catches for 810 yards and seven touchdowns that much more special. Double-teamed often when it was discovered early the Gators lacked depth at receiver, Robinson still managed to find holes in opposing coverages and made plays for his offense. As a junior, he’s trying to become Florida’s first 1,000-yard receiver since Taylor Jacobs managed 1,088 for Steve Spurrier’s Fun-N-Gun in 2002.