A typical breakout season comes when developing talent combines with opportunity.

Each season, the SEC features several players that go from serviceable to great seemingly overnight thanks to this phenomenon.

While breakouts can be tough to predict, and can be defined in different ways, we’re going to try our best to highlight some players that could post career-best seasons that put them among the league’s elite at their positions.

Note: If your team’s player has already “broken out,” then they didn’t make the list. That’s not a knock on them, rather a compliment that they are already considered a force in the league.

Here is a six-pack of SEC skill position players that could be on their way to a monster 2015 season:

De’Runnya Wilson, WR, Mississippi State: Since he was the Bulldogs leading receiver as a sophomore in 2014, there is an argument to be made that Wilson is already “too good” to be on this list. But the truth is that we don’t yet know just how high Wilson’s ceiling at receiver can really be. After dropping basketball to dedicate himself solely to catching passes from Dak Prescott, the potential is there for a breakout season that will bring attention on the national scene. He’s already talking about surpassing 1,000 receiving yards and approaching a 20-touchdown season, numbers which would make his 680 yards in 2014 seem minuscule.

Marquez North, WR, Tennessee: This could be the season that Vols fans have expected from North since he arrived on campus in 2013. At 6-foot-3 and 229-pounds with speed to burn, North looks the part of a future NFL receiver. His 816 yards during two years at Tennessee are nice, but there’s a chance that he could surpass that total in just one season if things click with QB Joshua Dobbs. After an injury scare during fall camp, which resulted in some erroneous reports of him missing the season, it appears as though North will be ready to start the season with the Vols against Bowling Green next month.

Stanley “Boom” Williams, RB, Kentucky: After scoring three touchdowns of more than 50 yards as a true freshman in 2014, Wildcats fans have high expectations for the sophomore tailback. Williams has both the talent and the opportunity to deliver with a breakout season. The Kentucky offense is expected to place a greater emphasis on the running game in Shannon Dawson’s version of the spread, which could give Williams a chance to double the 486 rushing yards he had as a freshman.

Kelvin Taylor, RB, Florida: Remember when Fred’s son ran for 197 yards and two touchdowns in an upset win against Georgia last October? That’s the type of ability that makes you believe there is more here than we’ve seen in his first two seasons on campus. Entering his junior season with very little in the way of competition for carries and a lack of a sure thing at quarterback, Taylor may be in line for a monster season running the football for the Gators if the inexperienced offensive line is up to the task.

Kyle Allen, QB, Texas A&M: After beginning the 2014 season as the backup to QB Kenny Hill, the former five-star recruit received an opportunity to show Aggies fans what he was capable of in the latter part of his true freshman season. The results (1,322 passing yards and 16 touchdowns) were mostly positive, but a full offseason to train with a talented receiving corps that includes Josh Reynolds, Speedy Noil, Ricky Seals-Jones and Christian Kirk could result in a big-time breakout in 2015. Think upwards of 4,000 passing yards if things break the right way for Allen this season.

Jeremy Johnson, QB, Auburn: Based on the amount of preseason hype the new Auburn starting quarterback has received, you would assume that his breakout has already happened. But Johnson has just 78 passing attempts in two seasons behind former starter Nick Marshall. The Tigers are certainly counting on big things from Johnson in his first tour of the league as a starter in 2015, and their SEC championship aspirations hinge on his ability to be one of the league’s premier players right out of the gate.