Amari Cooper, Sammie Coates, Bud Sasser.

Several of the SEC’s top receivers from last season are now vying for spots at the next level, leaving their respective programs in search of high-end replacements in the interim. Depth chart battles at the position won’t be finalized during spring ball, but 15 practices will give us a good idea of who’s in the mix and who isn’t as potential No. 1s.

Here’s a list of guys we think will be each team’s most targeted this fall in the SEC:

RELATED: SEC Championship odds for 2015

Alabama: Robert Foster

Will Lane Kiffin’s uptempo offense work as well as it did last season without an extension of the run game like Cooper, a Heisman finalist, at the X position? Chris Black, despite only catching 15 passes for 188 yards, is the team’s top returner after the Crimson Tide lost nearly 75 percent of its total production at the position. True freshman Calvin Ridley could be in the mix this fall, but it appears another former five-star signee has waited long enough for his role to expand. Redshirt sophomore Robert Foster has all the tools to be a gifted receiver and he’ll get more reps this fall. In the toughest ‘No. 1’ to call, we’ll give the edge to Foster over Ridley, Black, ArDarius Stewart and Cam Sims.

Arkansas: Keon Hatcher

First-year offensive coordinator Dan Enos has already expressed supreme confidence in quarterback Brandon Allen ahead of spring practice and wants to open things up a bit in the Razorbacks offense this season. That’s where Hatcher comes in, a talented pass-catcher back for his senior season with ability when given opportunities. He’ll get more targets in his final campaign with A.J. Derby and Demetrius Wilson moving on, but only has one career 100-yard game to his credit and doesn’t yet have an effect on opposing defensive gameplans.

Auburn: D’haquille Williams

While Coates was an aggressive, physical receiver in his own right, Williams is more natural at the position with better hands. Even as Auburn’s No. 2 in a run-geared attack, the JUCO transfer finished with 730 yards receiving and five touchdowns in only 10 games. He has drawn comparisons to Alshon Jeffery due to his ability to stretch the field and eat opposing corners on third down with his athleticism, but Williams has the upside to be even better. He’ll battle Treadwell for the rights to the ‘West’s Best’ label this fall.

Florida: DeMarcus Robinson

At times last season, you’d think Florida quarterbacks simply locked onto Robinson pre-snap regardless if he was covered or coming out of a break unattended. His coming out party came against Kentucky when Robinson tied Carlos Alvarez’s single-game school record with 15 receptions for 216 yards and two scores. As the season wore on, teams picked up on the sophomore’s talents and rarely left him on an island in single coverage, but he still managed three touchdowns over his final four starts. Robinson’s an underrated route runner who should flourish in Jim McElwain’s new scheme with the Gators if he gets help.

Georgia: Malcolm Mitchell

This it it for Mitchell, a fifth-year senior for the Bulldogs who hasn’t yet reached his maximum potential due to injuries, most notably an ACL tear in the 2013 opener while celebrating a touchdown alongside Todd Gurley. With last season’s leading receivers Michael Bennett and Chris Conley no longer in Athens, Mitchell enters spring ball as the offense’s go-to target, perhaps by default due to his experience. With 28 career starts under his belt, Mitchell will be leaned on to become more of a vocal leader by new offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer and could be an early security blanket for projecetd first-year starter Brice Ramsey at quarterback.

Kentucky: Ryan Timmons

SEC fans outside of the Bluegrass may not know of Timmons yet, but they will (if Kentucky sorts out its quarterback situation). Timmons blossomed into the Wildcats’ possession option last fall, letting Javess Blue handle the heavy-lifting in the big-play department. Timmons caught 10 passes in Week 2 against Ohio, but didn’t record more than five in any game the rest of the way. Former West Virginia OC Shannon Dawson has replaced Neal Brown in Lexington and we’re sure he will find creative ways to get Timmons the football as this offense’s main spark alongside tailback Boom Williams.

LSU: Travin Dural

Throw it deep. The philosophy sounds elementary, but putting it up for grabs seemed to be last season’s best recipe for success in an inconsistent passing game for quarterbacks Anthony Jennings and Brandon Harris in Baton Rouge. Dural only caught 37 passes as the go-to option following Jarvis Landy and Odell Beckham’s departures, but it was 20 more receptions than his next closest teammate. He averaged 20.5 yards per grab, second-best in the SEC behind Coates, and scored seven touchdowns. A colleague recently joked that Dural’s only route is the fly and he’ll need to incorporate a few others, most importantly the hitch, to help the Tigers regain somewhat of a balance through the air.

Ole Miss: Laquon Treadwell

Rebel Nation had to feel good this month when star Laquon Treadwell posted a video showcasing a promising return from a devastating ankle injury suffered less than four months ago against Auburn. Treadwell is running again, showing little to no lingering effects from the unfortunate event. When he’s on, Treadwell is one of the nation’s best, especially on third down. He’s a matchup nightmare for most defensive backs and has developed into a complete player after being labeled a possession guy as a highly-touted freshman.

Mississippi State: De’Runnya Wilson

Prepare to hear Wilson’s name a ton during the summer and the final weeks leading up to the season as Dak Prescott’s not-so-secret weapon on the outside. Wilson’s a beast, a tough cover for any corner in the SEC at 6-foot-5, nearly 220 pounds. If a defender can maintain his stance at the line of scrimmage and not get shoved to the ground at the snap, chances are Wilson will out-jump him for the football. Jameon Lewis was supposed to be the bulldogs’ leading receiver last season but it was Wilson who finished just shy of 700 yards and reached the end zone nine times in 10 games.

Mizzou: Nate Brown

Not only is Sasser no longer with the Tigers offense, but Marcus Murphy, Darius White and Jimmie Hunt are gone as well, leaving quarterback Maty Mauk with hardly any experienced players to work with at the receiver spot. Nate Brown showed promise at times last season as a freshman, but his production this fall is difficult to project. The Georgia native signed with Mizzou over offers from Georgia and South Carolina and hopes to find his niche as a sophomore.

South Carolina: Pharoh Cooper

This first-team All-SEC pass-catcher is the next great Gamecock to play the position, following behind Sidney Rice, Kenny McKinley and Alshon Jeffery. Cooper is football savvy — he knows areas of weakness in a defense and how to exploit, leading the Eastern Division as a sophomore with 1,136 yards receiving. Cooper’s one of only three scholarship wideouts returning for the Gamecocks, a position of extreme need entering spring practice. South Carolina must have a player emerge as a true No. 2 to take pressure off Cooper, now a marked man by defensive coordinators.

Tennessee: Pig Howard

Marquez North has the look of a No. 1, but he’s battling back from injury and still has a ways to go before becoming Joshua Dobbs’ primary option in the Tennessee passing game. Insert Howard, a compact wideout who led the Vols with 54 catches last season. He could very well finish behind North and Von Pearson this fall in yards and touchdowns, but heading into the spring, Howard is Tennessee’s most reliable option at the position.

Texas A&M: Josh Reynolds

Arguably A&M’s toughest cover, Reynolds made quite a splash as an instant-impact JUCO transfer last season, leading the Aggies with 13 touchdown receptions — second only to Amari Cooper in the SEC (16). Ricky Seals-Jones has to become a more consistent option and rising sophomore Speedy Noil has already solidified a No. 2 role in the slot.

Vanderbilt: C.J. Duncan

Rising junior Latevius Rayford was Vandy’s most targeted wide receiver last season, but C.J. Duncan stepped forth as the offense’s reliable big-play guy, averaging 15.8 yards per catch. Duncan hit a redshirt-freshman wall in November but has shown signs of improvement thus far during spring practice. The third-year sophomore caught two passes for sizable gains down the sideline during Saturday’s first intrasquad scrimmage. His numbers will increase with better quarterback play.