Auburn might have the perfect quarterback — if you could combine Jeremy Johnson’s size and arm strength with Sean White’s pocket presence and John Franklin III’s speed.

Alas, this isn’t Xbox.

But you could build a pretty good quarterback by choosing the SEC’s best in various areas.

Here, then, is a guide to SEC quarterback superlatives in 2016.

Best future: Jacob Eason, Georgia

True freshman struggle in the SEC. It’s a fact, with extremely few exceptions, so don’t judge Eason after one start or even 12. He already throws one of the prettiest balls in the league and is drawing comparisons to former first-round picks. There will be bumps in the road in 2016, many, likely, but he’s the also the most likely eventual first-rounder on any SEC campus.

Best present: Chad Kelly, Ole Miss

Encore, anyone? Kelly threw for a school-record 4,042 during his first lap around the SEC in 2015. He’ll be throwing to some new targets in 2016, but Hugh Freeze has it rolling in Oxford, and the new targets are every bit as impressive, physically, at least, as Laquon Treadwell.

Most improved: Joshua Dobbs, Tennessee

The expectation is that Dobbs will make a Brandon Allen-like leap as a senior.

Allen threw for 2,285 yards and 20 touchdowns as a junior in 2014, then spiked to career highs of 3,440 yards and 30 touchdowns last season as a senior.

Dobbs threw for 2,291 yards and 15 touchdowns as a junior. He’s more of a dual-threat, but Tennessee has provided him with more outside weapons this season in an attempt to expand the passing game beyond seam routes and checkdowns.

Most capable of a breakout year: Brandon Harris, LSU

Harris is entering his junior season surrounded by more playmakers than anybody in the conference. He threw for 2,165 yards last year in an offense that seemed to pass only out of desperation.

The percentage needs to improve, but there’s no better cure for that than simple screens on first down.

If LSU is indeed serious about going to the air, 3,000 yards and 25 touchdowns seem like attainable goals.

Strongest arm: Jeremy Johnson, Auburn

As Johnson again showed in Auburn’s spring game, arm strength is not an area of concern. He can fairly effortlessly float the ball 60-plus yards.

Best runner: Joshua Dobbs, Tennessee

He led SEC quarterbacks in 2015 with 671 rushing yards. He’s not a threat — nor is there a need — to reach 1,000 like Cam Newton (2010), Johnny Manziel (2012) or Nick Marshall (2013), but he is dangerous and effective in the zone read game.

Fastest runner: John Franklin III, Auburn

We’ll see him this fall, if not as Auburn’s starter then as a fairly regular part of a Wildcat package.

Auburn doesn’t recruit slow defensive backs, and those guys raved about Franklin’s speed throughout spring workouts.

Biggest: Jeremy Johnson, Auburn

The SEC has numerous tall quarterbacks, but at 6-5, 240, Johnson looks as big as any of Auburn’s tight ends.

Mississippi State’s Elijah Staley is even bigger — 6-6, 248 — but he’s a longer shot to win the Bulldogs’ starting quarterback job.

Smallest: John Franklin III, Auburn

A big deal has been made about Franklin’s size — he was listed at 6-1, 174 this spring — but he’s been adding to it since arriving. His goal is to get to 185, 190 this summer. Even that is light by SEC standards.

Franklin obviously offsets his size with his speed, mitigating the opportunity for much larger players to deliver a wipeout hit.

Texas A&M Trevor Knight (6-1, 206) and South Carolina’s Brandon McIlwain (6-1, 200) aren’t significantly bigger.