What is your team’s win probability this week? Below is a list of every SEC team’s win probability for Week 10, according to ESPN’s Football Power Index.

  • Alabama (80 percent): The fact that Nick Saban has yet to name his starting quarterback doesn’t seem to matter; the Tide is expected to roll regardless of whom will be taking the snaps Saturday night. The Badgers, led by new coach Paul Chryst, do have an outstanding running back in Corey Clement and a veteran QB in Joel Stave, but their inexperienced offensive line, usually a staple of their recent success, might prove to be their undoing against Alabama. The Crimson Tide’s projected FPI record for 2015 is 9-3, with losses expected at Georgia, at Texas A&M and at home to LSU.
  • Arkansas (98.8 percent): Believe it or not, this game is not the easiest for the Razorbacks to win this season; that honor goes to the Hogs’ Halloween matchup against Tennessee-Martin at 99.2 percent. The Miners finished 7-6 — including 5-3 in Conference USA — last season, but Arkansas should handle them easily, even if they are opening 2015 without star tailback Jonathan Williams, whose foot injury has knocked him out for the year. The Hogs’ projected FPI record in 2015 is 7-5.
  • Auburn (76.4 percent):  The Tigers definitely have the edge on offense with Jeremy Johnson at QB, Roc Thomas, Peyton Barber and Jovon Robinson at running back and their receiving corps. But former Auburn offensive coordinator and current Louisville coach Bobby Petrino might have some tricks up his sleeve on offense, and coordinator Todd Grantham leads one of the country’s top defenses from last season. FPI projects Auburn to go just 6-6 this year.
  • Florida (97.5 percent): Optimism abounds in Gainesville — and it should, because FPI-wise Florida’s opener against New Mexico State is the easiest game on the Gators’ schedule this year. In case Florida fans were wondering, FPI predicts a 7-5 finish for first-year coach Jim McElwain, even giving the Gators a 52 percent chance of beating Florida State in their regular-season finale on Nov. 28. The bad news is that Florida is expected to lose its other five games against teams currently ranked in the Associated Press Top 25.
  • Georgia (98.9 percent): If you’re a Georgia fan and believe in the FPI — I’m sure there are people out there who fit that description — you’ll be happy to know that the Bulldogs are expected to run the table this year, beginning with their opener Saturday against Louisiana Monroe. If Kolton Browning — who lifted the Warhawks to a upset at Arkansas in 2012 — were still quarterbacking Louisiana Monroe, coach Todd Berry’s squad might have a better shot this week. But Browning is currently with the Brooklyn Bolts of the FXFL, so the Bulldogs can exhale.
  • Kentucky (88.2 percent): The good news for the Wildcats is that their season opener against Louisiana-Lafayette is projected to be their third-easiest game on their 2015 slate. The bad news is that they are expected to finish 5-7 this season, according to FPI. That could be worse news for Mark Stoops and the Wildcats, who failed to reach a bowl game last season, despite getting off to a 5-1 start.
  • Mississippi (99.3 percent): Ole Miss won its first seven games of 2014 — including a victory over Alabama at home — but went 2-4 over its last six contests. But even with a new quarterback in Chad Kelly, the Rebels are projected to go 11-1 this season, with the only defeat expected to be a loss to the Crimson Tide in the rematch in Tuscaloosa on Sept. 19. Saturday’s opener against Tennessee Martin is considered the Rebels’ easiest game of the year.
  • Mississippi State (88.4 percent): The Bulldogs are definitely facing a rebuilding year after their 10-3 2014 campaign, which included a five-week stay at the top of the polls. Even though potential Heisman candidate Dak Prescott returns at QB, Mississippi State will struggle to have a winning season in 2015, with FPI projecting a 5-7 finish for Dan Mullen’s team, which visits Southern Miss in its season opener Saturday night.
  • Missouri (99.1 percent): Kudos to Gary Pinkel and Co. for winning the SEC East two years in a row. However, according to FPI, the Tigers aren’t expected to three-peat this year — Georgia will obviously have a lot to do with that — but a 9-3 projected finish is nothing to sneeze at. Mizzou’s next expected winning campaign kicks off on Saturday against Southeast Missouri State.
  • South Carolina (43.8 percent): Someone alert Steve Spurrier. According to FPI, the Gamecocks were projected finish only 4-8 this year before their opener Thursday night, which is noteworthy when you recall that the Head Ball Coach took shots Arkansas and Tennessee at this year’s SEC Media Days, where he hinted that both programs celebrated their 7-6 2014 seasons a bit too much for his liking. Well, he and South Carolina proved the FPI wrong Thursday night as they held on to beat North Carolina, 17-13, in that aforementioned opener. Maybe the Gamecocks will now finish 5-7 this year.
  • Tennessee (96.5 percent): Maybe Missouri and Georgia will be challenged for supremacy in the SEC East this year. In addition to projecting the Volunteers to roll in their season opener against Bowling Green on Saturday night, FPI has Butch Jones’ squad finishing 10-2 in 2015, with its only losses coming to Georgia and Alabama in between a bye week in October.
  • Texas A&M (77.0 percent): Texas A&M is one of two SEC teams facing a top 20 opponent this week in its opener — third-ranked Alabama takes on No. 20 Wisconsin Saturday night —  as the Aggies play host to 15th-ranked Arizona State on Saturday night in the first meeting between the schools. According to FPI, it should be a banner year in College Station, with A&M projected to lose just twice in 2015 — at Ole Miss on Oct. 24 and at LSU in its regular-season finale on Nov. 28.
  • Vanderbilt (61.5 percent): The Commodores, whom FPI projects to finish 4-8 in 2015, came up just short Thursday night, losing, 14-12, to Western Kentucky in their season opener.