What if you took every superhero’s strength and meshed it all into one mega superhero?

That’s what we’re about to do, except, instead of superheroes, this will be about football teams. More specifically, we’ll take the top team position group across the SEC and morph it to create an SEC superteam.

This will be the pigskin version of Wolverine, Batman, Iron Man, Spider-Man and Superman all combined into a single life-saving, crime-killing being. In my opinion, the football version is cooler.

Note: Only one personnel group can be used per team.

Georgia offensive line

This might be more about the coach than players currently on the roster at the position.

With the head coaching change, the Bulldogs also added Sam Pittman as the team’s offensive line coach. At $650,000 per season, the first-year Georgia offensive line coach is one of the highest-paid position coaches in America and only makes slightly less than his offensive coordinator boss Jim Chaney.

Pittman has previous stints at Tennessee and Arkansas, and both places led the conference in fewest sacks allowed while he was there. His development prowess has caught the eye of college prospects with Georgia making its biggest recruiting splashes so far in the 2017 class up front.

In 2016, Pittman will have to work with the players already there, and he’s been gifted a pretty strong group already. Brandon Kublanow and Greg Pyke return as two of the more veteran linemen in the conference. Isaiah Wynn, a versatile lineman, will step in wherever Pittman needs, and his big body will give SEC defensive line’s fits.

There’s a strong core of newcomers — Tyler Catalina and Ben Cleveland — who will be able to help the transition process. Nick Chubb and Sony Michel will get the headlines, but it’s the front line that will win Bulldogs ballgames.

LSU’s running backs

Multiple teams have valuable arguments here.

In an attempt to take Georgia out of the conversation, the Bulldogs got the offensive line recognition. Tennessee can make a statement, with the thunder and lightning of Jalen Hurd and Alvin Kamara. But, regardless, the honor still goes to LSU who will boast two of the best backs in the conference (and nation) this season.

Leonard Fournette — you’ve probably heard of him — has been a grown man since kindergarten. He’s dominated SEC defenses since he rushed for his first-career touchdown and struck the Heisman pose only to tick off the “get off my lawn” folks who hated that he was Babe Ruth-ing the college football world.

Fournette hasn’t lifted the trophy yet, and with this likely being his last season as an amateur, it’s possible he never gets it. But he’s got as good a shot as anyone, and Vegas has him as the odds-on favorite to do it. But Fournette isn’t the lone freak-of-nature in the Tigers’ backfield.

Derrius Guice is the guy often standing next to Fournette in practice or on sidelines that looks like he might be Fournette’s stunt double — and, in many ways, he is. When Fournette needs a breather, Guice picks up the necessary yards to keep the LSU offense moving. Oh yeah, and Darrel Williams is a beast as well.

They won’t get the Heisman talk that Fournette does, but they’ll help make the LSU backfield the most dynamic in the conference.

Ole Miss quarterbacks

If the SEC has shown you one things, it’s that you truly never know what to expect from the quarterback position.

Sometimes, players step up and surprise. Other times, highly-touted guys end up as major disappointments and Heisman busts. With all the unpredictability, who better to pick at quarterback that the most surprising of the bunch: Chad Kelly.

Kelly has had him bumpy moments during his college career, but approximately 98 percent of those have happened off the football field. On the gridiron, Kelly has done nothing but shine. He screams NFL, and it would take an unfathomable meltdown for him to fall of NFL draft boards next spring.

In 2016, he’ll lead an Ole Miss that lost its biggest weapon Laquon Treadwell to the draft this season. With most teams in a quarterback battle, Kelly doesn’t have to work to win the job — it’s his. If Ole Miss can compete for the SEC West crown, and stay away from NCAA sanctions, Kelly will be the one the Rebels will have to rely on.

Texas A&M wide receivers

The only question with the Aggies will be whether new quarterback Trevor Knight is enough in tune with the offense to make it all operate.

Otherwise, Texas A&M — despite all the dysfunction — is designed to excel catching the football in 2016, even if it is with wide receivers coach Aaron Moorehead in the doghouse. Christian Kirk, Josh Reynolds, Speedy Noil, Ricky Seals-Jones and Damion Ratley all have big-play ability and have shown it in the past.

Kirk might be the best returning wide receiver in the conference, unless Alabama wide receiver Calvin Ridley has something to say about it. There’s no question the Aggies were built to rip it through the air.

The wide receiver corps has the firepower to make every SEC defense nervous this fall.

Tennessee defensive line

The Volunteers had to fill in somewhere, and it really could’ve been quarterback or running back. Instead, Tennessee fills in the defensive line quota, thanks to a talented group of defensive ends.

Derek Barnett might’ve been one of the most underrated players in the conference. In 2015, Barnett accounted for 10 sacks for a total of 51 lost yards. He added another 12.5 tackles for loss to prove his threat as a drive-crushing edge rusher.

Then there’s Corey Vereen, Kendal Vickers and Kahlil McKenzie, all of whom have SEC experience and can change the course of an entire drive. McKenzie garnered a lot of praise out of high school and throughout his freshman season, so he’s expected to pass the starter’s test with flying colors.

The group should get a boost from a guy who has never played in the NCAA. Jonathan Kongbo was the No. 1 junior college prospect in the nation, and Volunteers fans are hoping he comes in and translates that JUCO ability to the Division I level.

Alabama linebackers

Surprise! Alabama has good linebackers.

The Crimson Tide have made a legacy in the past decade of churning out linebacker after linebacker onto NFL rosters. That happened again this season, and there’s another batch ready to take their turn.

This could be considered a rebuilding season with Reggie Ragland leaving a big hole as last season’s leader. But there’s no such thing as rebuilding when you bring in the No. 1 class over and over. Alabama will be without the services of its outside backers, too.

Somehow, the Crimson Tide might be even better at the position in 2016.

Reuben Foster — Auburn tattoo and all — will fill into an inside role with Shaun Dion Hamilton. Ryan Anderson and Tim Williams, both seniors, will play inside. Combined, the quartet has recorded 18.5 sacks without playing a majority of the team’s snaps. Williams already is garnering first-round consideration as a sack specialist.

That’s not even to mention the incredible linebacker class Alabama just brought in, which includes Ben Davis and Lyndell Wilson, who could probably start at every SEC school not named Alabama. They’ll still get their fair share of reps as freshmen.

Florida defensive backs

LSU is “DBU,” but it’s also “RBU” and we’re limiting teams to one position.

The Gators coin their secondary as the No Fly Zone for a reason. Then again, what secondary doesn’t call themselves that nowadays?

Nonetheless, Florida earns the defensive back spot for one simple reason —Jalen Tabor.

Florida sent two first-round draft picks, Vernon Hargreaves III and Keanu Neal, to the NFL this year. Tabor is next in line. In many ways, Tabor outshined his elder Gator brethren last season, but Hargreaves got most of the love as the team’s top cover corner.

But Tabor made a household name for himself regardless, tallying the most past deflections in the conference with 18. He had four interceptions, as well. And he isn’t alone.

Marcus Maye, who could’ve been an NFL Draft selection, will be back playing safety. A whole host of underclassmen could replace Tabor’s role as Robin as he moves to Batman, but Quincy Wilson might be the post-spring favorite.

Whoever it is, good luck throwing the ball down field.