Adams, Darvin: WR, Auburn
Austin, Marvin: DT, North Carolina
Ayers, Akeem: LB, UCLA
Baldwin, Jon: WR, Pittsburgh
Bowers, Da?Quan: DE, Clemson
Brown, DeAndre: WR, Southern Mississippi
Burton, Brandon: DB, Utah
Casey, Jurrell: DT, Southern California
Clay, John: RB, Wisconsin
Claytor, Nick: T, Georgia Tech
Cobb, Randall: WR, Kentucky
Dareus, Marcell: DE, Alabama
Doss, Tandon: WR, Indiana
Evans, Darren: RB, Virginia Tech
Fairley, Nick: DT, Auburn
Gabbert, Blaine: QB, Missouri
Green, A.J.: WR, Georgia
Gurley, Tori: WR, South Carolina
Guy, Lawrence: DT, Arizona State
Hamler, Jamel: WR, Fresno State
Harper, Jamie: RB, Clemson
Harris, Brandon: DB, Miami
Hill, Will: DB, Florida
Houston, Justin: LB, Georgia
Hynoski, Henry: RB, Pittsburgh
Ingram, Mark: RB, Alabama
Jones, Julio: WR, Alabama
Keiser, Thomas: LB, Stanford
Leshoure, Mikel: RB, Illinois
Lewis, Dion: RB, Pittsburgh
Lewis, Javes: DB, Oregon
Little, Greg: WR, North Carolina
Liuget, Corey: DT, Illinois
Mallett, Ryan: QB, Arkansas
Moore, Rahim: DB, UCLA
Newton, Cam: QB, Auburn
Parr, Zane: DE, Virginia
Peterson, Patrick: DB, Louisiana State
Quinn, Robert: DE, North Carolina
Ridley, Stevan: RB, Louisiana State
Rodgers, Jacquizz: RB, Oregon State
Rudolph, Kyle: TE, Notre Dame
Sands, Robert: DB, West Virginia
Sash, Tyler: DB, Iowa
Siliga, Sealver: DT, Utah
Smith, Aldon: DE, Missouri
Smith, Torrey: WR, Maryland
Smith, Tyron: T, Southern California
Tarrant, Jerrard: DB, Georgia Tech
Todman, Jordan: RB, Connecticut
Vereen, Shane: RB, California
Watt, J.J.: DE, Wisconsin
Wilkerson, Muhammad: DT, Temple
Williams, Aaron: DB, Texas
Williams, Ryan: RB, Virginia Tech
Wilson, Martez: LB, Illinois
The list of underclassmen kids declaring for the draft this year has twice as many SEC players than Big-10 Players. I do not know if this is a pattern or not, or if the numbers hold true over time, but if they do, then 4 X 14 = 56, versus 4 X 7 = 28. The SEC would have an extra 28 slots to fill over four years. Granted, Vandy or Mississippi would not be the ones getting the lion's share of the hits. But over four years that would be an extra 28 slots opened up for SEC programs.
This is the rankest of speculation, and I have no idea if the numbers this year were an anomaly or not, but that is one stat that I would love to see over time, as it might provide a partial explanation for the extra LOIs signed. Or not, of course.