Need a viewer’s guide on what to watch for during the fourth Saturday in the SEC? We’ve got you covered.

Week 4’s 5 best individual matchups

Tennessee’s offensive line vs. Florida defensive line — Jalen Hurd and Alvin Kamara matched up against the SEC’s best run defense over the first three weeks of the season? Count me in. Florida State’s Dalvin Cook is the last player to surpass 100 yards rushing against the Gators last November and since then, Florida’s front seven has had the upper hand against every offensive front it has faced. Geoff Collins’ group has allowed just 55.8 rushing yards per game this season, part of the reason last week’s win over Kentucky was so frustrating offensively for the Wildcats. Keep an eye on whether or not Tennessee can establish a balanced attack Saturday afternoon. Failing to generate push and becoming one dimensional would fall right into Florida’s plan for a low-scoring, ugly game.

Freshman QB starters vs. first-game jitters — The matchups are considerably different on a difficulty scale, but it doesn’t make the nervousness any less intense for Auburn redshirt freshman Sean White and South Carolina true freshman Lorenzo Nunez at quarterback this weekend. Both are starting for varying reasons — White due to Jeremy Johnson’s inconsistency and Nunez to try and provide a spark on an offense heading in the wrong direction. Nunez has the luxury of facing winless UCF while White battles a Mississippi State (2-1) team that’s hungry to win on the road in the SEC. Minimizing mistakes is paramount to impress each respective coaching staff and both quarterbacks figure to move out of the pocket a bit to showcase play-making ability.

Vanderbilt WR Trent Sherfield vs. Ole Miss secondary — Coming off an outstanding 16-catch, 240-yard explosion against Austin Peay, how will the Commodores’ most athletic wide receiver fare against the best quartet of defensive backs he’ll face the rest of the way? Vanderbilt must get creative in finding ways to get Sherfield the football — tunnel screens, well-timed slants, pop passes, etc. One of his best attributes is making things happen after the catch, but being covered by Tony Bridges, Trae Elston and the rest of the Rebels’ crew in the secondary should make for a four-quarter headache in 1-on-1 situations.

Myles Garrett + Daeshon Hall vs. Dan Skipper + Denver Kirkland — To quote Kevin Sumlin, “the SEC is a line of scrimmage of scrimmage league.” We’ll see that tenfold at AT&T Stadium when the Aggies and Razorbacks get together Saturday. The battle of wills up front features the SEC’s sack leaders (Texas A&M, 15) against an offensive front that has given up the league’s fewest (0 in three games). On the edges, you’re looking at future NFL players Garrett and Hall matched up with Skipper and Kirkland, veteran tackles who have been lights out in the early going.  Garrett leads college football with 5.5 sacks while Hall’s managed four total — all coming in the opener against Arizona State. Texas A&M’s pass-rushing pair represents the toughest challenge the Razorbacks’ edge blockers will face all season.

Mizzou, Kentucky vs. the over/under of 44 points — We’re all expecting a low-scoring, hard-to-watch game here between a struggling offense and a team that isn’t sure where it’s at right now. The Wildcats are a three-point favorite at home and a win would almost assure Kentucky of its first bowl appearance in several years. Meanwhile, the two-time defending division champs know they won’t be able to overcome a loss in their SEC opener if intentions are a return trip to Atlanta — not with Georgia (whose clearly the East’s best team) and Tennessee (noticeably improved) bearing down in the coming weeks. Moreover Maty Mauk’s in danger of losing his job with another stomach-turning outing. The first team to 24 points wins, but how will they get there?