An impressive 66 SEC players were invited to the NFL Combine. In the opinion of one analyst, former Florida LB Jarrad Davis and former LSU S Jamal Adams are the two SEC products most likely to turn in Indianapolis later this month.

Mike Renner of Pro Football Focus recently named five prospects he expects to dominate the combine, including Davis and Adams. Davis made No. 2 on Renner’s list for his potential as a pass-rusher:

If there is one position where it’s difficult to “wow” on film with athleticism, it’s linebacker. Rarely do they ever get up to full speed, with the vast majority of plays coming in a 10-15 yard radius. Even with that in mind, the first play from Davis’s draft film elicited a “Wow!” On a quarterback rollout, Davis covered 10 yards in the blink of an eye – making the angle the fullback took to block him too long – and destroying the U.-Mass. quarterback after he released the ball.

Davis goes into the combine projected as a second-round pick by CBS Sports at No. 44 overall and could see his stock climb if he performs in the event some call the “underwear olympics.” A stat from 2015, Davis’ last full season at Florida due to injuries this past fall, particularly impressed Renner:

Listed at 6-2, 238 pounds, Davis has rare explosiveness for the position that shows up most when utilized as a blitzer. In his last full season in 2015 (he suffered an ankle injury in 2016), the Florida linebacker managed 16 QB pressures on only 49 pass-rushing snaps for the second-best pass-rushing productivity of any Power Five linebacker.

Adams, the No. 4 prospect on Renner’s list, didn’t deal with the injury bug, playing in all 12 games for the Tigers. Renner likens him to a high pick from last year’s draft:

Last year, we saw Jalen Ramsey come into the combine with safety size and then test like a cornerback. This year, Jamal Adams figures to do exactly the same. Listed at 6-1, 214 pounds, the junior safety has the type of movement skills capable of executing any task in coverage. So much so that the LSU defense legitimately asked him to play every position on their defense (besides on the line).

Renner sees versatility as a huge plus for Adams, currently projected No. 1 at strong safety and No. 6 overall.

Of his full workload, 14.2 percent of his snaps came lined up as a true linebacker, 14.1 percent came as a strong safety, 32.8 percent came as a slot corner, 38.5 percent came as a free safety and he even took three snaps as a true corner on the edge. The result was PFF’s highest-graded safety in all of football, and a top-10 lock in the upcoming draft.