Quick. Which team leads the SEC with 10 players with at least 100 receiving yards?

We’ll give you a hint. It plays in the West.

Ole Miss? Close. Led by the best receiver in the conference in Laquon Treadwell, eight Rebels have at least 100 receiving yards, tied for 2nd and only behind the team in the same state.

You heard right. Mississippi State has the most prolific group of pass catchers in the conference — and if it’s not the best receiving corps in the league, it certainly is the deepest.

Let’s start with De’Runnya Wilson. Second to Arkansas’ Drew Morgan in the SEC with 8 receiving touchdowns, the junior from Birmingham, Ala., is also 4th in the conference in receiving yards per game (69.6). Wilson also leads the Bulldogs with 626 receiving yards.

Wilson, who has 18 catches for 360 yards and 6 touchdowns over Mississippi State’s last four games, caught 47 passes for 680 yards and 9 touchdowns as a sophomore last season. He had 8 catches for 91 yards in the Bulldogs’ 25-20 loss to Alabama last November, and QB Dak Prescott obviously looks for Wilson, who was recently added to the Biletnikoff Award watch list, in the red zone.

But Prescott also has a steady target in the slot in Fred Ross. The 6-foot-2, 207-pound junior from Tyler, Texas, is 4th in the SEC in catches per game (5.7). Ross, who has 2 receiving TDs on the season, had 11 catches for 115 yards and a score in the Bulldogs’ win over Missouri last week.

As if having two reliable options wasn’t enough, Prescott has a third one in Fred Brown. The 6-foot-1, 196-pound junior from Jackson has made 20 catches for 313 yards and 2 TDs. Plus, Donald Gray, who hasn’t done much since his 4-catch, 140-yard performance in Mississippi State’s 62-13 victory over Northwestern State on Sept. 19, still leads the Bulldogs with 19.2 yards per reception.

Ole Miss leads the SEC with six players with at least 20 receptions, and Alabama has four. But no other conference team has more than Mississippi State’s trio of players with at least 20 catches, a product of Prescott’s improvement as a passer, which he also has demonstrated with his 18-1 touchdown-to-interception ratio.

Prescott’s ability to spread the ball has helped the Bulldogs (7-2) win four straight entering Saturday’s big SEC West matchup with Alabama. Mississippi State’s other players with 100 receiving yards are wideouts Brandon Holloway (162) and Malik Dear (160), running back Ashton Shumpert (117), tight end Darrion Hutcherson (116), and receivers Gus Walley (109) and Gabe Myles (101).

For comparison’s sake, Ole Miss’ group of players with 20 catches/100 receiving yards consists of Treadwell (68, 1,002), wideouts Cody Core (28, 500), Quincy Adeboyejo (33, 483), Damore’ea Stringfellow (29, 385), Markell Pack (29, 370) and tight end Evan Engram (25, 267). And it’s no surprise that with numbers such as these, the Rebels have the No. 1 passing attack in the SEC, averaging 348.8 yards a game. The Bulldogs have the conference’s No. 2 passing offense (296.3 yards per game).

So it’s true. Mississippi State’s receiving corps doesn’t boast the gaudiest numbers in the league, but Prescott has plenty of outlets when he needs to complete a pass. And that strength in numbers could put Alabama’s secondary to the test on Saturday in Starkville.