Earlier this summer, we revealed our Top 50 SEC player rankings heading into the season, a comprehensive list featuring numerous future draft picks, potential stars and breakout players who will succeed in more expansive roles this all.

Piggy-backing off our rankings, here’s a glance at the league’s 10 best offensive players, guys we expect to produce at a higher level than their peers at the same positions.

Ranking the SEC’s 10 best offensive players in 2015

10. Greg Pyke, OL, Georgia

  • 2014 stats: Started all 13 games, helping the Bulldogs lead the SEC in rushing at 257.9 YPG

Closer look: Arguably Georgia’s most consistent player along its veteran-heavy offensive line, Pyke’s been named an All-SEC first teamer during the preseason by several publications and was the Bulldogs’ ‘Most Improved Player’ during his redshirt sophomore campaign last fall. The star guard’s strong in both run-block and pass pro situations and has exceeded expectations considering his consensus three-star rating coming out of Baltimore, Maryland in 2012. Pyke will be an essential part of this offense’s success under Brian Schottenheimer and comes in as our top-rated guard in the SEC this season.

9. Duke Williams, WR, Auburn

  • 2014 stats: 45 catches, 730 yards, 5 TD

Closer look: Ongoing off-the-field issues aside, Williams is a dynamic playmaker in the receiving game for the Tigers, especially on third down. Williams is a tough cover and plays bigger than his 6-foot-2, 225-pound frame would suggest. In his first season on the Plains, Williams contributed four 100-yard games in seven starts including spectacular performances against Arkansas and Alabama. Without Sammie Coates on the outside, Williams’ production and overall impact on the offense will increase in his final season.

8. Laquon Treadwell, WR, Ole Miss

  • 2014 stats: 48 catches, 632 yards, 5 TD (nine games)

Closer look: One of four projected first-round picks in next year’s NFL Draft for the Rebels, Treadwell is the SEC’s top returning pass-catcher according to our projections despite an ankle injury that forced him to miss the last quarter of his sophomore season. More of a possession receiver than a field-stretcher, Treadwell ranks among the nation’s most gifted athletically and is a precise route-runner. His primary strength is catching balls in traffic. Cutting weight down to 212 pounds will make Treadwell even faster out of his breaks this season.

7. Derrick Henry, RB, Alabama

  • 2014 stats: 990 yards rushing, 11 TD

Closer look: Listed as Todd McShay’s second-best draft eligible running back for 2016, this bulldozer finally gets the workhorse treatment as a junior this fall as the Crimson Tide’s featured ballcarrier in a backfield thin on depth. If Henry meets his career average of 6.6 yards per carry, he’ll exceed 1,000 yards with ease for the first time in Tuscaloosa. He’s only carried it 208 times in two years, so there’s plenty of tread left on Henry’s tires and Alabama’s going to need one of its strongest players to deliver.

6. Jeremy Johnson, QB, Auburn

  • 2014 stats: 436 yards passing, 3 TD

Closer look: Most of us are buying stock in this first-year starting quarterback, a player with limitless potential as the leader of an offense that caters to his strengths. Few newcomers ever receive Top 10 Heisman odds like Johnson, but much of that has to do with Vegas’ belief that Auburn will be competing for an SEC title in November and its quarterback will put up impressive numbers in Gus Malzahn’s system. In limited action, Johnson’s shown impressive accuracy and a big arm. We’ll see if that translates to stardom during his first season as ‘the guy’ on the Plains.

5. Cam Robinson, OL, Alabama

  • 2014 stats: Started all 14 games, surrendering just three sacks in 861 snaps

Closer look: One of the nation’s most dominant tackles as a true freshman, Robinson simply doesn’t give up sacks and was recently named to the Lombardi watch list. Nicked up by injuries during fall camp, Robinson’s taken it somewhat easy this month in preparation for what many expect to be an All-American season for the 6-foot-6, 330-pound freak. He’s become a vocal leader for the Crimson Tide offense while Nick Saban and Co. continue to search for a a starting quarterback. Robinson’s the co-anchor of Alabama’s offensive line alongside center Ryan Kelly.

4. Leonard Fournette, RB, LSU

  • 2014 stats: 1,034 yards rushing, 10 TD

Closer look: Considering the hype as the best running back in nearly a decade coming out of high school last spring, Fournette met those lofty expectations during his first season in Baton Rouge. He showed glimpses of a violent running ability that drew comparisons to great NFL backs during games against Florida and Texas A&M and even became a dynamic special teams threat later in the year. The focal point of LSU’s pro-style ground and pound offense, Fournette’s on his way to 1,200 yards (or more) with an increased workload.

3. Laremy Tunsil, OL, Ole Miss

  • 2014 stats: Started all 11 games he played, earned second team All-America

Closer look: The potential top pick in next year’s NFL draft, Tunsil’s offseason legal troubles appear to be burning embers a week out from the opener after his stepdad, Lindsey Miller, dropped all charges earlier this month. Tunsil’s a two-time All-SEC player coming off a broken fibula in the Rebels’ bowl loss to TCU that forced him to miss spring practice and is the top rated underrated classmen in college football according to CBS Sports. Like Robinson, the former five-star prospect’s light on his feet and moves well at his tackle position against faster, more agile defenders.

2. Nick Chubb, RB, Georgia

  • 2014 stats: 1,547 yards rushing, 14 TD

Closer look: Right up there with Ohio State’s Ezekiel Elliott as the best running back in the country entering September, Chubb is eyeing Herschel Walker’s SEC record rushing total as a sophomore behind one of the league’s best offensive lines. He made the most of his opportunity during Todd Gurley’s suspension as a freshman and ended the season with eight consecutive 100-yard games including a 266-yard outburst in a bowl win over Louisville. He might be college football’s toughest player to tackle. Chubb doesn’t have a weakness in his game and if he stays healthy, will have the Bulldogs competing for a College Football Playoff spot.

1. Dak Prescott, QB, Mississippi State

  • 2014 stats: 3,449 yards passing, 27 TD; 986 yards rushing, 14 TD

Closer look: Is Dak Attack prepping for a senior season even more statistically-impressive than his last? Dan Mullen’s facilitator in Mississippi State’s up-tempo attack is the SEC’s top returning player — on either side of the football — and has improved his game as a passer since the end of a 10-win season highlighted by the Bulldogs’ historic rise to No. 1. One of the league’s most polished playmakers is close to shattering numerous school records and could be a Heisman finalist by year’s end. Mississippi State’s going to need his best this fall.