Here’s our weekly look at the SEC quarterbacks with most difficult assignments on Saturday:

GREYSON LAMBERT or FATON BAUTA, GEORGIA

Opponent: vs. No. 11 Florida at Jacksonville

A glance at Lambert’s raw numbers tell an incomplete story. Nine touchdowns, two interceptions, 8.2 yards per attempt, 64 percent completion rate. What’s not to like?

Indeed, Lambert has been pretty good more often than not this season. But what the numbers don’t show is that when he’s been bad, he’s been wretched. In back-to-back losses against Alabama and Tennessee, he completed less than half his passes, and though the Bulldogs hit some big plays against the Vols, they were also maddeningly inconsistent.

Georgia likely will need Lambert to be at his best this weekend in Jacksonville. The Gators are yielding less than 200 yards per game through the air and have one of the nation’s best cornerbacks in Vernon Hargreaves III, making one side of the field treacherous territory. That could neutralize some of the effectiveness of Malcolm Mitchell — Georgia’s leading receiver by a wide margin — and put more pressure on Lambert and the rest of the Bulldogs offense to make plays.

Late Thursday, GridironNow reported that Faton Bauta, Georgia’s third-teamer to start the season, will get the nod against the Gators. Perhaps Mark Richt is trying to catch lightning in a bottle with Bauta, who the Gators know very little about coming in.

SEAN WHITE, AUBURN

Opponent: vs. No. 19 Ole Miss

Sean White is doing what’s being asked of him. Now he needs his receivers to do the same. The Tigers dropped six passes  in the first half last week against as the Hogs built a two-touchdown lead.

Against an Ole Miss defense substantially more adept at covering the pass than the past two defenses Auburn has faced, the Tigers need to be clicking on all cylinders. The Rebels rank fourth in the SEC in pass defense efficiency and second in interceptions.

TO BE DETERMINED, TEXAS A&M

Opponent: vs. South Carolina

For the second straight year, the Aggies have a mess on their hands after a once-ascending quarterback crashed and burned at midseason. Going against a pair of formidable defenses, Kyle Allen endured epic struggles in the last two weeks against Alabama and Ole Miss, eventually getting benched in the second half against the Rebels.

But the drama was just getting started. When Allen was yanked, freshman phenom Kyler Murray was bypassed in favor of Jake Hubenak. Rumors are swirling as to why Murray didn’t see action, but coach Kevin Sumlin has said all three quarterbacks are being evaluated this week and a starter will be named prior to Friday’s practice.

South Carolina doesn’t present an especially stiff challenge — especially not compared to the last two defenses the Aggies have seen. But the turmoil adds significant pressure to the quarterback that gets the call.