Georgia-Tennessee is attracting most of the attention this week, and rightfully so, but don’t sleep on another intriguing matchup:

Drew Lock vs. DBU.

The knock on Lock thus far has been his competition. He’s ahead of pace to break Tim Couch’s single-season SEC record for passing yards, but 852 of his 1,508 yards came against lightweights Eastern Michigan and Delaware State.

There’s nothing lightweight about LSU’s secondary, and what to expect from Lock on Saturday leads off this week’s list of pressing quarterback questions (and answers).

Question: Lock has thrown for 300-plus yards in each of his past three games. Can he stretch that streak to four Saturday against LSU?

Answer: Missouri’s scheme certainly will give Lock the opportunity, but history shows how difficult it might be.

Last season, Chad Kelly became the third QB in SEC history to throw for 4,000-plus yards. His longest 300-yard game streak was three.

Dak Prescott had a five-game streak last season, but threw for 303 and 300 yards in two of those games.

Dylan Thompson only strung together two consecutive 300-yard games when he led the SEC in passing yards in 2014.

Johnny Manziel became the second SEC QB to reach 4,000 in 2013, but the best he could do was a three-game streak. He won the Heisman in 2012 and never even had back-to-back 300-yard games.

Teams are passing more, but that’s still a big number in this league.

Then there’s this: In 2014, LSU didn’t allow a single 300-yard passing game. Last season it allowed just two. That’s the fewest among West teams over that two-year span.

The combination of LSU’s pass rush, the talent in the Tigers’ secondary and Ed Orgeron’s first home game — at night, no less — will be too much.

Question: Continuing with 300-yard games, Tennessee’s Josh Dobbs threw for a career-high 319 last week to beat Florida. Dobbs has just three 300-yard games in his career. Can he make it four Saturday against Georgia?

Answer: Dobbs is at his very best when there is an actual second element to his dual-threat game.

If he’s going to string together 300-yard games for the first time in his career, Saturday’s the day. Georgia has some ballhawks, but the Bulldogs have allowed back-to-back 300-yard passing days, first to Lock and then to Chad Kelly.

Given the health of Tennessee’s secondary and Jacob Eason’s passing prowess, logic suggests Eason will throw for more yards than Dobbs. But after throwing 91 passes over the past two weeks, expect Georgia to dial it back a bit Saturday and get the running game more involved. It has to.

Eason has the better chance to get there, but it’s unlikely that either quarterback reaches 300 on Saturday.

Question: Last season, only three SEC teams failed to register a 300-yard passer (Auburn, Florida and Missouri). Nine quarterbacks already have topped that mark at least once this season, including two at Kentucky. Which teams won’t have a 300-yard passer in 2016?

Answer: Alabama, Auburn, LSU, Mississippi State, South Carolina and Vanderbilt are the six still waiting to crash the 300-yard plateau.

Alabama didn’t get there last year until the championship game, when Jake Coker threw for 335 yards to beat Clemson.

Jalen Hurts will get there much earlier — Saturday against Kentucky seems like a good bet. He threw for 287 yards in his second college game — and first career start.

LSU’s Danny Etling threw for a career-high 485 yards against Indiana in 2013. With all of the weapons the Tigers have, and now apparently the permission to deploy them, he’s a good bet to get to 300 a couple of times this season. Maybe even Saturday night against Missouri, in somewhat of a show-me game for new coach Ed Orgeron.

Auburn has had exactly one quarterback top 300 yards under Gus Malzahn: Nick Marshall. He threw for 456 in the 2014 loss to Alabama and 339 a year earlier against Mississippi State. Could Sean White get there? Sure. At this point, it’s a matter of attempts.

If Malzahn let him throw the ball 40 times, he’d be a lock for a 300-yard day. But that’s not exactly how Auburn plays offense, is it? White’s season-high is 27 attempts. He’s only reached 30 attempts once — and threw for a 254 yards. If you’re going to commit to him, you have to commit to doing more of what he does best.

It will be an upset if Mississippi State and South Carolina quarterbacks have a 300-yard day in 2016, but only somewhat surprising if Vanderbilt’s Kyle Shurmur has one. Shurmur threw for 279 last week and still has games against Kentucky, Tennessee State and Auburn.

Chris Wright is Executive Editor at SaturdayDownSouth.com. Email him at cwright@saturdaydownsouth.com.