For many football fans, commentators add or take away from the game. Some are good, some are funny, some are neither of those things.

We’ve spent the 2014 season chronicling the best announcing gaffs and spelling out weekly which announcing pair would be calling your favorite team’s game so you could anticipate it or brace yourself.

There have been rumblings that the 2014 campaign may be the last for the SEC’s stalwart crew — CBS’ Verne Lundquist and Gary Danielson. Neither broadcaster’s representatives, nor the network has commented on the situation.

Should we see a shakeup, either with CBS or ESPN, who would you like to see broadcasting SEC games in 2015?

Saturday Down South has a few suggestions.

Gus Johnson: FOX’s lead announcer is under contract through at least 2018 — he’s set to call the next World Cup — but a leap to a network with SEC rights would be great for SEC fans. Arguably the premier broadcaster in all of sports, Johnson made a name for himself calling epic March Madness games in addition to some wild NFL games. It seems there’s a classic just about every week in the SEC, and having Johnson there to describe it would elevate the SEC product.

Jim Nantz: He’d likely not step down from his top announcing position at CBS. With his current schedule of the NFL, March Madness, The Masters and more, it’s doubtful Nantz would take Lundquist’s position. Still, he’d be a great addition to the SEC’s announcing lineup. Could you imagine Nantz calling the afternoon CBS slate, then flipping over to listen to Brent Musburger on the SEC Network’s night cap?

Dan Shulman: ESPN’s lead college basketball and Major League Baseball voice has a year-round job with those two duties, but Shulman would be fantastic covering the SEC. He’s familiar with college sports doing the network’s biggest games alongside Jay Bilas, and in the game’s biggest moments, he lays out and lets the pictures speak for themselves. Shulman with a good color analyst would make as good a pairing as there is calling SEC football.

Mike Breen: This may be an outside-the-box suggestion, but Breen — a former NBA official — is the best play-by-play man calling NBA games. Breen has called the occasional college basketball game for ESPN during its annual “announcer switch,” but I think he could be very good calling big-time college football. Sure, he’s more knowledgeable about basketball, but pair him with a good color guy, let him develop a good chemistry and he could be good.

Mike Tirico: He has the best job in all of sports broadcasting in ESPN’s Monday Night Football. Tirico and analyst Jon Gruden just signed an extension, and with his additional responsibilities of college basketball, tennis and golf for ESPN, he doesn’t have time to add SEC football. However, Tirico is as classy a broadcaster as there is, and he could be a network’s cornerstone for a sport.