Former LSU Tigers Lowell Narcisse and Justin McMillan became the latest to hop on the SEC quarterback transfer train. There are so many former SEC QBs at other schools that we decided to rank 10 of them for you.

We didn’t include the two former LSU guys, because we don’t even know where they’ll land. We avoided the temptation to foresee a Jalen Hurts transfer, because who knows. Plus, we had plenty of options already. Here are the 10 best former SEC QBs now at other FBS programs.

10. Sheriron Jones, New Mexico

Don’t remember Sheriron Jones? He was a Florida commit, and then a don’t-blink-or-you’ll-miss-him Tennessee quarterback in 2015 and 2016 (he threw one pass for two yards). Since then, he transferred to Colorado, back to UT, and then to went to junior college where he passed for 2,182 yards and rushed for 345 more in 2017 before he became a Lobo. Jones is somehow only a junior and he could start for the next two years in Albuquerque.

9. Quinten Dormady, Houston

Dormady was a 3-year veteran at Tennessee, where he backed up Josh Dobbs for two seasons before starting last season. He passed for 1,282 yards and 7 touchdowns before losing the starting job to Jarrett Guarantano. He since transferred to Houston, where he will probably back up D’Eriq King. Unlike the Vols, the Cougars have appeared in bowl games in each of the past five seasons.

8. Brandon McIlwain, California

McIlwain originally beat out Jake Bentley (and others) for the South Carolina starting job in 2016, but after the Gamecocks offense struggled, Will Muschamp benched him. He’s now at Cal, where he sat out last year as a redshirt. A dual-threat guy, McIlwain could be a great one, but for the time being, he’s probably stuck behind junior Ross Bowers, who threw for 3,039 yards and 18 scores last year for the Golden Bears.

7. Ricky Town, Pittsburgh

Town has been around the block a time or three. He was an Alabama commit, then a USC signee, and an Arkansas transfer. He played at none of the three schools, but after a JUCO year at Ventura College, he’s now a Panther. He’ll fight it out with sophomore Kenny Pickett for the starting QB job.

6. Woody Barrett, Kent State

Barrett was an Auburn recruit who ended up redshirting as a frosh in 2016. He spent last season at Copiah-Lincoln Community College, where he passed for 1,294 yards and rushed for 485 more. He’ll have three years to play at Kent State and given his talent and the Golden Flashes’ recent struggles (no better than four wins in any of the last five seasons), he’ll get every opportunity to star.

5. Blake Barnett, South Florida

Barnett is on his third school after starting the season-opener at Alabama in 2016 as a redshirt freshman. He threw five passes last year at Arizona State, and now finds himself slated to start for South Florida as a grad transfer. Given his 5-star passing skills, Barnett will likely perform well in Charlie Strong’s high scoring offense.

Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

4. Kyler Murray, Oklahoma

Murray is a two-sport star who is headed to play professional baseball, but first has one final season of football. He was part of the QB logjam at Texas A&M before he joined the Sooners. Murray backed up Baker Mayfield last season, and is likely to put up huge numbers at OU this fall.

3. Jacob Eason, Washington

Eason won the Georgia starting job as a true freshman in 2016, only to lose it to Jake Fromm last season. He passed for 2,430 yards and 16 scores as a freshman, but threw just seven passes last year before heading homeward to Washington. He won’t play this fall, but will get a year watching Jake Browning, and should be ready to light up Pac-12 scoreboards in 2019.

2. Will Grier, West Virginia

Grier started as a true freshman at Florida and played well in five starts before a PED suspension ended his season and sent him transferring to West Virginia. In 2017, he passed for 3,490 yards and 34 touchdowns for West Virginia, and he’s a legitimate Heisman candidate if West Virginia can win enough games.

1. Shea Patterson, Michigan

The blue-chip Patterson starred at Ole Miss as a sophomore before suffering a season-ending injury at mid-season after backing up Chad Kelly as a freshman. He bolted due to the program’s NCAA sanctions and will likely start and star at Michigan this fall. In two years in Oxford, Patterson passed for 3,139 yards and 23 touchdowns.