Poor Alabama.

How many times have those two words been uttered since 2008?

We know Alabama reloads quicker and better than anybody since Billy The Kid, but the Nick Saban’s weaponry will look much different in 2016 from 2015.

Saban lost his Heisman Trophy running back and his starting quarterback. While other teams might panic over 5,000 yards vanishing, Saban simply will replenish with newer model five-star replacements.

Must be nice.

Here’s a look at what each SEC West team returns on offense in 2016:

Alabama

Biggest loss: Henry, obviously, who rushed for an SEC-record 2,219 yards and 28 touchdowns.

Who’s back: A bunch of backups and several proven receiving targets, most notably Calvin Ridley and championship game hero O.J. Howard.

Forecast: Henry accounted for 90 percent of Alabama’s rushing yards, but Alabama has been in the replenishing business for years. After Trent Richardson ran for 1,691 yards for the 2011 championship team, Eddie Lacy and T.J. Yeldon each cracked 1,100 yards for the 2012 championship team. Yeldon and Henry acted as a tag-team last season before Henry took over in 2015. Bo Scarbrough is next in line.

There is a general question about who will replace Jacob Coker at quarterback, but you could argue the options are better this spring than last spring. This spring, Saban will choose between backup Cooper Bateman, a four-star from the 2013 class, and Blake Barnett, a 2015 five-star whom many consider the best prospect Saban has had at the position.

The winner will get to throw to one of the SEC’s best and most versatile receiving corps, led by Ridley but also including ArDarius Stewart.

Bottom line: Alabama, on paper, lost a bunch. The reality is it won’t matter.

Arkansas

Biggest losses: RB Alex Collins (1,577 of Arkansas’ 2,565 rushing yards); QB Brandon Allen (3,440 of its 3,486 passing yards and 30 of its 31 TD passes).

Who’s back: RB Rawleigh Williams was trending upward before sustaining a scary neck injury. He reportedly will be ready to roll next season. Devwah Whaley, a four-star recruit in 2016, was rated the third-best RB in his class. He could be an opening day starter.

Replacing Allen at quarterback obviously is the biggest issue, but Dominique Reed, Drew Morgan and Jeremy Sprinkle are back. The trio combined for 22 TD receptions in 2015, and each had more than Hunter Henry, who left early for the NFL.

Forecast: Bret Bielema will find a way to run the football. He always has. Media members see so little of practice that it’s difficult — if not hazardous — to handicap the QB race between Ricky Town, Ty Storey and Austin Allen.

Bottom line: Based on replacements available, Arkansas lost more on offense than every SEC West team except Mississippi State.

Auburn

Biggest loss: RB Peyton Barber (1,017 yards, 13 TDs), WR Ricardo Louis (716 yards).

Who’s back: A lot of key parts, beginning with RB Jovon Robinson and Roc Thomas, who will assume much larger roles in 2016.

Both quarterbacks also return, but they might not even win the job because Gus Malzahn also brought in JUCO standout John Franklin III, who seems to fit that Nick Marshall mold.

Forecast: The 2015 offense seemed to flow better with Jeremy Johnson than Sean White, but Franklin still might be the answer. The JUCO-to-starter route certainly has worked wonders for the Tigers before.

Bottom line: Look for Auburn to get back to being Auburn, with a running quarterback leading an explosive running attack.

LSU

Biggest loss: Nobody. After losing stars early to the NFL for years, LSU’s offense returns almost entirely intact.

Who’s back: The stars, led by Heisman favorite Leonard Fournette (1,953 yards, 22 TDs), but also play-making wideouts Travin Dural and Malachi Dupre and QB Brandon Harris.

Forecast: No SEC team — East or West, Alabama or not — has more reason to feel optimistic heading into 2016 than the Tigers. Les Miles saved his job and might finally make the system tweaks to take full advantage of his wideouts. There has to be a sense of urgency about 2016 because most of what makes the Tigers so dangerous won’t be back in 2017.

Bottom line: If Harris improves as much as most sophomores-to-juniors, LSU will have the most feared offense in the entire SEC.

Mississippi State

Biggest loss: QB Dak Prescott, only the greatest Bulldog in program history.

Who’s back: WR Fred Ross finished second in the SEC with 88 receptions and fourth with 1,007 yards. He’s much more of a possession receiver than downfield threat, however. The Bulldogs’ best running back, Brandon Holloway, also returns, but he didn’t even lead the team in rushing last season; Prescott did.

Forecast: It’s not good. There is a sense that Mississippi State is in danger of slipping back to where it was when Dan Mullen took over in 2009. Given Mullen credit: He’s found a way before when the circumstances look ominous. But it’s almost impossible to envision this 2016 offense being anywhere near as productive as the 2014 or 2015 versions.

Bottom line: The Jackson 4 weren’t quite the same as the Jackson 5, were they?

Ole Miss

Biggest loss: WR Laquon Treadwell (1,153 receiving yards, 11 TDs, both SEC-highs) and LT Laremy Tunsil.

Who’s back: Record-breaking QB Chad Kelly, and that might be enough in Hugh Freeze’s open attack. Kelly became just the third SEC QB to throw for 4,000 yards, and next season he’ll try to become the first to do it twice.

He’ll miss Treadwell (and Tunsil), but Quincy Adeboyejo, Damore’ea Stringfellow and Evan Engram will soften the blow.

Forecast: Ole Miss could use a headliner at running back, but the absence of one didn’t hurt the 2015 squad. Kelly, in fact, was the Rebels’ second-leading rusher and scored twice as many rushing TDs (10) than anybody else.

Their No. 6-ranked recruiting class also includes three four-star receivers ranked among the 36 best at their position in the country. The opportunity to play with Kelly this year and Shea Patterson for three years after that obviously was appealing.

Bottom line: Ole Miss lost more on paper than in reality and Kelly will give the Rebels a chance to approach the league-best 40.8 points per game they averaged in 2015.

Texas A&M

Biggest loss: RB Tra Carson (1,165 yards; no other RB gained more than 196), and two quarterbacks who didn’t want to be there.

Who’s back: The SEC’s best receiver tandem in Christian Kirk and Josh Reynolds, who combined for 1,916 receiving yards, 12 TDs and dozens more highlights.

Forecast: Kevin Sumlin showed in the bowl game that any quarterback can thrive in his plug-and-play attack. Jake Hubenak, with next to no reps, threw for more than 300 yards and 2 TDs.

Bottom line: Last season Texas A&M threw for 3,323 yards and ran for 2,198 — despite the QB drama. Only Ole Miss and Mississippi State had a larger pass-run yardage disparity. Whether Trevor Knight wins the job or Hubenak retains it, Texas A&M’s quarterback situation will be fine.