A group is $d$-quasirandom if every nontrivial complex representation has dimension at least $d$. Gowers introduced quasirandomness in this paper and proved that every nonabelian finite simple group of order $n$ is $\sqrt{\log n}/2$-quasirandom.
Question: What is the correct (asymptotic) lower bound for the quasirandomness of nonabelian finite simple groups?
Gowers indicates that a theorem of Jordan (Theorem 14.12 here) implies a slightly better bound. Indeed, this theorem gives that a nonabelian simple group of order $n$ has a nontrivial representation of dimension $d$ only if $n\leq (d!)12^{d(\pi(d+1)+1)}$, which implies that these groups are $\Omega(\sqrt{\log n\log\log n})$-quasirandom.
Of course, the correct bound should be obtainable using the classification of finite simple groups. The sporadic groups are irrelevant to the asymptotics, and the alternating groups are $\Omega(\log n/\log\log n)$-quasirandom. It remains to study the groups of Lie type. What I want can be read off the first column of the generic character tables of these groups, but to my surprise, these aren't known yet (see LeechLattice's answer here). Interestingly, the answer here describes how to find an upper bound on the smallest nontrivial representation in these cases, whereas I want a lower bound.