Dear Jim Harbaugh,

The SEC doesn’t need to set up satellite camps to steal away some of the Midwest’s best recruits.

The promise of sunny Januarys, packed stadiums, national championships and a proven path to NFL riches seem to be enough to do the trick.

Here is a look at 10 recent or current elite SEC signees who bolted Big Ten country — not even including new or fringe Big Ten territories such as New Jersey (Minkah Fitzpatrick) or metro-Washington, D.C. (Da’Shawn Hand, Jonathan Allen):

1. Laquon Treadwell, WR, Ole Miss

Treadwell was a five-star recruit, the nation’s No. 1 receiver and No. 14 player overall in the 2013 class. He starred at Crete-Monee High, an hour south of Chicago.

He told ESPN in 2013 that he wanted to “be a part of changing the Rebel culture.”

2. Ryan Kelly, C, Alabama

Kelly was a four-star recruit out of West Chester, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati. He was the No. 3-rated center in the 2011 class.

He had an offer from Michigan State but chose Alabama primarily over southern rivals.

Kelly won the Rimington Award, which goes to the nation’s top interior lineman, and is the highest-rated center entering the NFL Draft.

3. Ethan Pocic, C, LSU

LSU doesn’t venture north often, but when it does …

Pocic was the No. 3-ranked player in Illinois in 2013 … two spots behind Treadwell.

Pocic, ranked No. 57 overall, chose LSU over Michigan, Ohio State, Notre Dame … and family. His older brother, Graham Pocic, was a standout offensive lineman at Illinois.

4. Terry Beckner, DT, Missouri

Beckner was a five-star recruit in the 2015, the key get in Missouri’s class.

Rated the nation’s No. 13 prospect, Beckner was No. 1 in Illinois and chose the Tigers over Ohio State, among others.

Beckner was recently suspended following a January arrest. He was charged with marijuana possession.

He was recovering from a torn ACL and MCL in his right knee, which he suffered against Brigham Young on Nov. 14.

5. Trey DePriest, LB, Alabama

DePriest, another five-star recruit, was Ohio’s top-ranked prospect in the 2011 class.

He chose Alabama over Ohio State. He was named first-team All-SEC as a senior in 2014, when he finished third on the team with 87 tackles.

6. Jordan Diamond, OL, Auburn

Diamond was a four-star recruit in the 2012 class, the No. 10-ranked offensive lineman in the country and No. 2 player in Illinois.

Ranked No. 92 overall, he chose the Tigers over Michigan and Wisconsin.

Diamond starred at Simeon High in Chicago, a school best known for producing basketball standouts Derrick Rose and Jabari Parker. He has battled injuries while competing for snaps at Auburn.

7. Elijah Daniel, DE, Auburn

So not all of them work out. Daniel was the No. 49 overall prospect in the 2013 class out of Avon, Ind., a suburb of Indianapolis.

He was the No. 2-ranked player in Indiana and very much a signing day mystery after committing to Clemson and Ole Miss during the process.

He ultimately signed with Auburn but was kicked off the team after a 2015 arrest.

8. Alex Anzalone, LB, Florida

Anzalone was a four-star recruit in 2013, the No. 52-ranked player nationally and No. 4 in Pennsylvania.

He came from Reading, Pa., 150 miles east of Penn State, which used to bill itself as Linebacker U.

Anzalone signed with Florida only after committing to Notre Dame and Ohio State earlier in the process. Twitter trolls responded exactly how you think they would.

Injuries and better players ahead of him have limited his playing time with the Gators.

9. Clifton Garrett, LB, LSU

Garrett was a five-star recruit in 2014, the No. 28-ranked player nationally and No. 1 in Illinois.

Garrett left LSU before the 2015 season.

10. Ross Pierschbacher, OT, Alabama

Pierschbacher was a four-star recruit, the No. 74-ranked player nationally and No. 1 in Iowa in 2014. Oh, and he reportedly was a big Iowa Hawkeyes fan, and not just because stood 6-4 and weighed 295.

Pierschbacher committed to Iowa early in the process but decommitted before his senior season.

Why did he choose the Tide?

Patrick Vint had a theory.

“The only thing in (Nick) Saban’s favor is that his offense actually scores points, that his team wins SEC titles and national championships while Iowa yearns for the halcyon days of Florida bowl games,” Vint wrote for 247.  “Iowa is ahead of or even with Alabama in every factor that could be relevant to Pierschbacher’s decision except for winning, and when the odds of Iowa winning are so remote in the minds of top recruits that they trump literally every other factor, you’ve lost the war.  Pierschbacher’s decommitment is not just about 4-8.  It’s about just how far from 8-4 we really are.”

Maybe that’s why the Big Ten wants to set up satellite camps in the south.