There’s Chad Kelly, Joshua Dobbs, Brandon Harris, Trevor Knight … and everybody else.

Greyson Lambert has experience, but it’s obvious he’s just revving the engine before handing Jacob Eason the keys.

Inexperienced SEC quarterbacks will far outnumber the proven commodities on Saturdays this fall.

Question is, which one will have the best year?

Answer: Out of the inexperienced signal callers, I’m going with Florida’s Luke Del Rio. Jim McElwain has raved about Del Rio this spring, and many close to the program have said that he looked better than Will Grier during last year’s practices (Del Rio had to sit out due to transfer rule).

He looked great in the spring game, and nobody is talking about him due to him hopping around to multiple programs during his career. Del Rio’s a bit of a wild card, but he’ll have some weapons at receiver, a talented backfield and a decent offensive line. Luke Del Rio will surprise this season.

— SDS co-founder Jon Cooper (@JonCooperMedia)

Answer: Austin Allen.

I like whomever starts at Alabama as well due to Lane Kiffin’s recent track record and the incredible quantity of elite pass-catchers surrounding the starter. But outside of experience, Allen is a very similar player to his brother Brandon Allen, who excelled in Dan Enos’ first season as offensive coordinator at Arkansas. The Razorbacks suddenly look deep at receiver as well, and there will be no shortage of players to catch his passes.

I think he could be a top 5-7 starter in the SEC this year.

— Editor-in-chief Christopher Smith (@csmithSDS)

Answer: It’ll be the two quarterbacks who have the best pieces around them to succeed, and that’s Alabama QB Cooper Bateman and Arkansas QB Austin Allen.

Bateman has maybe the best receiving corps in the SEC at his disposal with pass-catchers Calvin Ridley, ArDarius Stewart and O.J. Howard, running backs Bo Scarbrough and Damien Harris along with an offensive line that I think will gel by the fall.

Apparently, the group struggled in the spring by Nick Saban’s standards.

Allen has Drew Morgan, Jared Cornelius, Dominique Reed, Jeremy Sprinkle and others to throw to, a trio of running backs in Rawleigh Williams III, Devwah Whaley and Kody Walker as well as a stout O-line.

— News editor Talal Elmasry (@TalalElmasrySDS)

Answer: Alabama has the most obvious advantages for any quarterback, but Nick Saban likes Cooper Bateman more than I do. I’ve said all along I’d go with Blake Barnett, but it’s difficult to compile stats and wins when you’re standing beside the coaches.

Eason has the brightest future and is the most projectable NFL starter the league has, but I think Luke Del Rio, Austin Allen and even Brandon McIlwain will have a better 2016.

McIlwain has the fewest weapons in the group, but there’s just something about his poise, an undeniable Russell Wilson calm about him. It’s difficult to envision him throwing 10 interceptions because he plays so much smarter than that.

Of all the young quarterbacks in the league, he and Alabama’s Jalen Hurts are the two I want to watch.

— Senior editor Chris Wright (@FilmRoomEditor)