We’re just two weeks into the regular season, and already there has been significant movement in the polls and rankings.

At Saturday Down South, we enjoy the subjective nature of rankings. Who doesn’t love arguing in favor of your favorite player, or against that team whose fans always annoy you?

Each week, we rank the top quarterbacks, running backs and receivers in the SEC, not to mention the 10 best team and individual performances of the 2015 season. So why not rank the coaches as well?

We’ll update this list throughout the season. Essentially, this post will serve as a way to identify the 10 best SEC coaches of the year, irrespective of their title.

Here is our top 10 after each team’s first two games:

1. John Chavis, Texas A&M defensive coordinator

The Aggies are threatening to push back into the top 15. But this team has the feel of Kevin Sumlin’s most complete group in College Station. The 2014 version of Texas A&M looked like a paper giant to me, even when an early-season throttling of South Carolina eventually propelled them into the top 10.

With three takeaways and an SEC-leading 10 sacks — despite some personnel holes — Chavis already has transformed this defense into an aggressive force that creates negative plays.

2. Nick Saban, Alabama head coach

The Tide is ranked a ho-hum No. 2 in the Associated Press Top 25 after just two weeks — ahead of buzzy teams like TCU, Michigan State, Baylor and USC.

Despite offseason talk of Alabama’s demise, heavy turnover on offense and the departure of a few key assistants, the Crimson Tide again is a national favorite, especially with Auburn’s early-season struggles.

More than his four national championships, and more than “The Process,” Saban’s most impressive attribute is his consistent excellence in every phase of his job. The man never lets up — at anything.

3. Jeremy Pruitt, Georgia defensive coordinator

The Bulldogs don’t look very explosive in the passing game. Nick Chubb and the running backs are productive, though. Pruitt has provided the team with a defense to match that conservative approach. The first two weeks of the season, he’s molded players like Jordan Jenkins and Leonard Floyd into menacing and disruptive standouts.

Georgia is the clear SEC East favorite, and one of two SEC teams in the national top 10. If the program remains there all season, don’t be shocked to see Pruitt start to get buzz as a future head coach.

4. Hugh Freeze, Ole Miss head coach

At 2-0, with a team that’s scoring more than 70 points per game and a defense with a cool nickname and first-round talent to match, the Rebels are a trendy team right now. Freeze has put together a legitimate contender. If he can find a way to upset Alabama in back-to-back years, Ole Miss could be the hottest team in the country.

NFL scouts should flock to Oxford all season regardless, and Freeze has shown he’s more than a one-trick pony (2013 class) when it comes to recruiting.

5. Barry Odom, Missouri defensive coordinator

Most wondered — worried, even — how the Tigers defense would fare without players like Shane Ray, Markus Golden and Harold Brantley. But Odom’s aggressive schemes have allowed linebackers Kentrell Brothers and Michael Scherer to thrive, and with help from the new alpha defensive lineman Charles Harris, Missouri leads the nation with 25 tackles for loss through two weeks.

So far, Odom has been an excellent re-hire after spending the last few years as coordinator at Memphis.

6. Kevin Sumlin, Texas A&M head coach

Aggies fans have to be feeling cautious optimism right now. The offense appears to have two promising quarterbacks, an array of pass catchers and at least a real commitment to trying to run the football. The defense features Chavis and a great pass rush.

What will happen once the team faces some physical SEC West opponents, especially those that can run the ball, like Alabama and LSU? For now, though, Sumlin has notched a neutral-site win against a ranked Pac-12 team and yet another hot start to the season.

7. Frank Wilson, LSU running backs

The Tigers rushed for 266 yards in the season debut Saturday — against what has been a pretty respectable run defense in recent seasons (Mississippi State). Leonard Fournette is a Heisman Trophy candidate, and between the glimpse we got in Starkville and things we’ve heard all season from the LSU coaches, he’s going to be even better than last season.

But already Wilson has done a nice job of grooming sophomore backup Darrel Williams, and the team’s ground game was effective even when LSU stopped passing the ball and the Bulldogs knew what was coming.

8. Shannon Dawson, Kentucky offensive coordinator

The Wildcats’ Air Raid hasn’t bloomed yet, but there are some exciting pieces in quarterback Patrick Towles, running back Boom Williams and an array of capable, fast receivers.

Dawson, who arrived in Lexington from West Virginia, comes across as both exacting and relatable, a man who exudes passion and may even be an upgrade over Neal Brown, who left this offseason to coach Troy. UK beat South Carolina on Saturday, and there’s a real sense that this is the year the Wildcats return to a bowl game.

9. Mario Cristobal, Alabama offensive line

Though the Tide’s identity still is taking shape, it appears that Alabama’s offense is trending back toward a reliance on its ground game. Derrick Henry and Kenyan Drake have a case to be the best tandem in college football.

Left tackle Cam Robinson and center Ryan Kelly are a powerful combination along the line, but the three new starters have more than held their own in the first two games. Cristobal, one of the best recruiters in the sport every year, also has his unit playing well and clearing space for the Tide ball-carriers.

10. Dan Werner, Ole Miss co-offensive coordinator/quarterbacks

Werner can claim responsibility for what could be the buzziest player in all of the SEC right now: Ole Miss quarterback Chad Kelly. The junior-college transfer is averaging 13.9 yards per pass attempt. Even against inferior competition, that’s an outstanding figure.

The Ole Miss offense put up such crazy numbers the first two weeks that it’s become a national story. Yes, Freeze is an offensive coach and Werner shares coordinator duties with Matt Luke. But he deserves credit for how well that unit is performing.