The Joel Klatt Show: A College Football Podcast - Klatt’s Top 10 Head Coaches in College Football
Episode Date: February 23, 2026FOX Sports’ lead College Football analyst Joel Klatt ranks the Top 10 head coaches in the sport following the 2025 season. He dives into where to rank the 4 active National Championship-winning coac...hes - Curt Cignetti, Ryan Day and Kirby Smart and where Dabo Swinney now sits among the CFB hierarchy. He discusses where to rank young coaches like Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman and Oregon’s Dan Lanning and whether new LSU coach Lane Kiffin and new Michigan coach Kyle Whittingham made the list. He also includes a Big 12 Coach that Klatt points out has had more success in recent years than just about any other in the sport. 0:00-1:40 Intro1:41-3:29 Top 10 coaches3:30-6:04 #10 Coach6:05-8:23 #9 Coach8:24-9:58 #8 Coach9:59-11:15 #7 Coach11:16-14:28 #6 Coach14:29-17:12 #5 Coach17:13-19:36 #4 Coach19:37-22:01 #3 Coach22:02-24:17 #2 Coach24:18-27:58 #1 Coach27:59-32:08 Honorable mentions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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My top 10 coaches in college football.
Whatever you want to think of all of that, the guy can coach football.
And this list would not be complete without him on it.
I think he's one of the great game planners in college football.
I think he's one of the great play callers in college football.
Kirby is the standard.
George is the standard in the SEC.
Let's face it.
Day has the Buckeyes at the top every single year.
And that leaves number one.
You can't put anybody else there.
He has earned this spot.
A day like today is why.
we love college football.
Hey, welcome into the program.
This is the Joel Clat Show.
I'm Joel Clatt, and we are brought to you by Graduate by Hilton.
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Okay, here we go.
Here's what I wanted to do for this episode.
And I want to give a bit of a preface here because I've never done this before.
And I have shied away from doing this only because, listen, as you, I think, would appreciate and have to understand,
my relationships with coaches across the country are important because them trusting me is kind of the currency that I have in my job.
And so I always try to present what I think is fair critiques, fair analysis,
and generally that's reciprocated with trust from their part.
So what I have not done is giving you a list of coaches, top 10 coaches in college football.
But you know what?
I think now is the time.
I think that we should do the list and we are going to do the list right now.
My top 10 coaches in college football.
Now, just so that you know, I think that the eras of college football now are so substantially different,
and we are in a very new era in this new NIL transfer portal era, I think that the coaches on this list have to have excelled in the modern era.
And I'll call it the modern era, the new era, the transfer era, whatever you want to call it.
But you would have to have excelled basically post-COVID and more specifically in the last two, three,
four years. That's, I think, the picture that I'm trying to create right now.
Who are the guys that are succeeding at the top end of the sport right now in college football?
So here are my top 10 coaches in the sport as I see them.
Okay, we're going to go 10 to 1, and then I've got some guys that did not make the list,
but I definitely wanted to give them a shout out as an honorable mention.
But at number 10, here we go, Lane Kiffin at LSU.
Now, listen, as you know, if you've listened to this show for any length of time or viewed any social media
product around college football over the last year, you'll know that Lane and I have had our run-ins
over the last year on social media. Truth be told, Lane is awesome. I love Lane, and we have a very
good relationship. I would even say friendship, even outside of what we do kind of from a professional
standpoint. That being said, I've been very critical of Lane at times. You know, he likes to pop off on
social media and I, you know, slap him around a little bit on social media. I was critical of the move leaving
old miss. I understand why he went to LSU, but I think all of that was messy. Some of that was
his doing. Some of that was the calendars doing. Some of that is old miss is doing. Listen,
whatever you want to think of all of that, the guy can coach football. And this list would not
be complete without him on it. All right? I know that the exit was messy from old miss,
but think about what he built at Ole Miss. Now, I know that he's had growing pains throughout his
career as a head football coach going all the way back to the Raiders.
And then obviously Tennessee and USC and then the debacle and then he goes back and now
he's got to be an assistant and he's there for Sabin.
And then he goes to FAU and then Ole Miss.
And what he built at Ole Miss was really special.
That's part of the reason why I argued he should stay there because as was the case and they
proved out they had a great and real chance at a national championship this last year if
he would have just stayed. And they get all the way to the national semi-final. And all of that was
because of what he built, because he's a great coach. He's basically going to guarantee you a top
five, maybe 10 offense in college football. I know why LSU targeted him. I was saying that they should.
He averaged over 500 yards per game in his six seasons at Ole Miss. That's number one in the FBS during
that span. And that's in the SEC. By the way, that's the most ever in SEC history. That's an area where
LSU really struggled, and so obviously they were going to target him.
He took Ole Miss to a sustained level of excellence that really they had never seen before.
We had seen maybe some jumps up of four 10 win seasons out of the last five years,
and only Kirby, Ryan Day, Kaelin DeBore have more wins of the last five years than Lane.
That's pretty incredible, very incredible.
So Lane Kiffin is definitely on the list.
He's number 10 at LSU, and we move on.
At number nine, I'm going to go with Mario Cristobald.
Now, before this last title run or not title run, championship game run, I should say,
to the title game, he would not been on my top 10 list.
But after that run and this season, he certainly is on the top 10 list.
He checks in at number nine.
He knows what he wants to build in the team and everywhere where he's been,
Oregon and now in Miami, builds the team in his blueprint, if you will,
and mentality, which is great up front.
And that's exactly what they've had.
He's an old line at heart, wants to be the best in the trenches,
and let's be honest, we all watched the playoff.
They were.
They were the best team at the line of scrimmage.
He knocked off two giant stigmas this year that have been plaguing him
throughout his career as a head coach.
The first being that he doesn't win big games.
Well, they won those big games this year,
and it started all the way back in week one when they were able to topple Notre Dame.
That was a huge win, and it started this trajectory of things that we haven't seen him be able to do
that this year he was able to do.
And boy, they did that in a big way.
And that goes to the second thing is win big matchups,
which something Miami has not done a long time,
down the stretch.
Okay, so the big games, and then now winning down the stretch.
So we knew that his record in November was not what we wanted it to be.
And we even touched on that during the course of the season.
So it starts week one with Notre Dame.
They win that big matchup.
And then that continued all the way through.
those big games in the month of November.
We thought, oh, listen, they're going to go to pit.
It's going to be cold.
They don't play well in November.
They get the big win.
And then throughout the playoff, they just continue to play better and better and better.
That Ohio State win, huge, went on the road against Texas A&M.
That was phenomenal.
So, listen, I got to tip my cap to what Mario Cristobal has built at Miami.
And listen, if the minza transfer works for them,
they'll be right back in this capacity.
Maybe not all the way to the championship game,
but they're going to be a very good football team
because that's what he builds.
He's a tireless, tireless recruiter.
And that's certainly a roster that I think you're going to have to contend with.
Now, him going into year five and Coral Gables,
I think that trajectory is pointing up.
So, Cristobal, at number nine.
Number eight, this one might surprise some people,
until you actually dig into the record,
Kalani Sataki at BYU.
I'm a huge fan of Kalani Sataki
and I know most BYU fans would not
they would not agree with this.
I'm a big fan of BYU.
Penn State really wanted Kalani Sataki
and almost got him at College Station
earlier in this off season
because they see what I see,
which is a phenomenal football coach
and a guy that builds a team in his own image,
all these guys, they do that.
You know, like their team,
the team takes on the character
of the coach in so many ways, the way that they play work out physical teams. You can see that
at BYU. Would it surprise you to find out that there are only two head coaches with more wins
than Sataki since 2020? There's only two. Those two are Kirby Smart and Ryan Day. Kalani Sataki
has 57 wins since 2020. Obviously Kirby's up there with 73. Ryan Day was 66 and there's
Kalani Sataki right there tied with Davosweeney, Kaelin DeBore.
Sataki is a phenomenal coach, and every single year, he builds the same caliber of team in
particular at the line of scrimmage, which I really lot.
He over the last two years have been outstanding.
He's 23 and 4 over the last two years, just outside of the playoff in both years.
I think it would have been easier for me to put him higher on the list if he would have gotten
into the playoff in one of those years, but he has.
not. At number seven, I'm going to go with Kyle Whittingham at Michigan. All right.
Obviously, Kalani learned a lot from Kyle Whittingham, and I think some people are going to argue
with this one here, Kyle Whittingham at number seven. But Kyle is a hell of a football coach,
and you have to understand where he brought Utah from all the way. Now, that was a very good
program. Obviously, he got the job after Urban Meyer had kind of elevated them to the point where they
were on the national stage, but he's the one, Kyle, that took them from, you know, the group of five
into the Pack 12 and then made the transition into the Big 12.
Like, he did a lot of things at Utah, made them a perennial top 15, 10 team in the country.
And he did so, I would argue, without the best talent in the country.
And again, as is the case with all these other guys, his teams play exceptionally hard.
They're physical, their sound, and they're well-coached.
So Kyle Whittingham is going to be there.
It's still kind of weird for me to think, like, Kyle Whittingham at Michigan,
he's so Utah to me, but now obviously he's a Michigan man,
and I can't wait to see what he does in Ann Arbor for Michigan.
All right, number six.
Steve Sarkeesian at Texas.
This one was interesting for me because,
in one respect, I'd like to put Steve Sarkesian higher.
And in another respect, I think that you could argue that he should be lower than this.
And so I thought that this was a good middle ground.
As much as I think that we, and certainly the Texas fan base,
just believes that you can roll the helmets out there,
the old pearly whites, and Texas is just going to win 10 games,
that's not the case. And we saw that for the better part of, what, two decades? At least a decade,
I should say. Ever since that Colt McCoy championship game run, Texas gets beat by Alabama,
Mack kind of lost his edge there. And then they roamed through the wilderness. You had the one,
you know, Sam Ellinger year, they go to the Sugar Bowl and beat Georgia and he says, we're back. And, you know,
and it just never stuck. And guess what? Steve comes in there and he has solidified.
Texas. I think he's one of the great game planners in college football. I think he's one of the
great play callers in college football. You could make an argument, you could, that he may need to
give up play calling duties at some point if he wants to go ahead and achieve what he ultimately wants,
which is a national championship. That's really hard for a guy at that level from a play calling
perspective. Ryan Day gave up play calling duties, won a national championship. We just constantly see these
guys that call their plays. And now there's too much going on for the head coach. So that's,
you know, that's kind of a side right now for Sark. But Sark has now had three straight seasons
of 10 plus wins in Austin. They only had one in the 11 seasons before that, like I was mentioned,
they were just kind of roaming through the wilderness of average for about a decade. Last season,
there was a lot of hype. And this is why I think you can make an argument that he should be
lower is that there was a ton of hype. There were preseason number one. Arch was the
Heisman Trophy frontrunner at the beginning of the year, and then they did not meet those
expectations. Now, I think to be fair to him, the offensive line underperformed.
He's made a change on the defensive side, and he's going to try to, I think, revamp that
side of the football. In 2024, that was a team that very easily could have gone to the national
championship game. Ohio State ended up winning that national championship, but that
semifinal against the Buckeyes was incredible. He's in the semifinal against Washington. That goes
down to the last play in the year prior to that. Stark is an elite, elite ball knower and coach.
All right. And that's why he has to be on this list. Like I said, I wanted to put him higher,
but because of last season and falling short of expectation and what I did to another coach
that's not on this list, because of falling short of expectation, I had to keep him at six.
So there's 10 through 6. Lane Kiven at 10, Mario Cristobal at 9, Kalani Sataki at 8, Kyle Whittingham at 7.
Steve Sarkesian at 6.
Okay.
At number five, here we go.
We get into the nitty gritty.
Top five coaches as I see him in college football.
By the way, I like a lot of coaches.
So, like, I know I'm going to catch some flak for this, but that's okay.
I like a lot of coaches.
There are going to be a number of coaches that I have an honorable mention.
And this list is just, these are the guys that I would go after right now, okay, right now,
if I was making a hire as an athletic director.
Number five would be Marcus Freeman at Notre Dame.
I think Freeman's outstanding.
I think if you look at what Notre Dame was when Brian Kelly left,
we as a college football public,
and I think Brian Kelly as well,
assumed that Notre Dame had peaked
and that there was a ceiling over Notre Dame
and that it couldn't be done.
And you couldn't get the caliber of player needed to go
and potentially win a national championship.
Now listen, I know that he hasn't
won a national championship.
But he played for one.
And guys, like, they were right there with Miami in week one with a guy that was making his first start in C.J.
Carr, you could make it a strong argument that they should have been in the playoff.
In fact, if the ACC has their, you know what together and does right by college football in Miami plays for the ACC championship game and wins it,
they're probably in.
But because of the way that all crumbled,
they needed that extra champ.
Duke wasn't going to be that champ.
We get two group of five teams in
and Notre Dame is the first one left out
because of the head-to-head to Miami.
Like, you had to put Miami in
because they beat Notre Dame head-to-head, obviously.
Like, you can't argue against that.
It was the ACC's bungled championship game
tiebreaker rule that really screwed Notre Dame
or else they would have been in the playoff.
and I got a, they could have made some noise.
No, I'm not saying they would have won the national championship.
We had a team go undefeated in Indiana.
But I'm just saying, like, this is the level that they're playing at.
He's elevated the talent in South Bend.
I think that's absolutely better.
There's a reason that the NFL has been knocking around this guy and sniffing around.
And there were talks that the Giants wanted Marcus Freeman at one point.
Notre Dame was smart to redo his deal back in December.
I was very smart on their part.
He's just 40 years old.
Like the guy, to me, is class, integrity, toughness.
His teams are physical.
I think he's learned along the way.
He made some mistakes early as a head coach when he got this job,
in particular in critical moments in big games.
He's gotten much better in terms of game management.
So there's Marcus Freeman.
Number five at Notre Dame.
Number four, another guy that's also very young.
Freeman's only 40, Dan Lannning, just behind him.
39 years old for a couple more months, Dan Lannning at Oregon.
I have said for a long time, if I had to buy stock in a coach,
I said this a couple of years ago,
in a coach that it would have been Dan Langing.
And I still feel that way.
Oregon is a perennial national championship contender under Lannning.
He has elevated them above what they were before he got there, period.
He just has.
He is a phenomenal coach.
And now he's going to have to deal with losing assistance,
which all great coaches have to deal with,
and he's going to try to hire from within,
and we'll see how he does.
But here's the deal.
He's 48 and 8 in his four seasons at Oregon.
48 and 8, and 6 of his 8 career losses
came against teams that reached the title game.
Four of those losses to the eventual national champ.
So he's lost five games over the last three years.
Think about this.
Five games in three seasons that he's lost.
Every single one against teams that reach the national championship game,
you do not beat Oregon unless you are the best teams in college football.
And you can make an argument that he's gaining on those teams and gaining on those teams.
Every single year for landing, it's just one step further.
So his first year at Oregon, he goes in there, wins 10 games.
And by the way, you remember how that year started.
His first game at Oregon, they rolled down there and played that Georgia team and got thumped.
And they ended up winning 10 games in his first year.
second season reached the Pac-12 title game and won the Fiesta Bowl.
In his third year, he won the Big Ten, was the number one seed in the playoff and reached the quarter final before Ohio State the eventual champion beat them.
In his fourth season, reached the semifinal.
Who beat him, the eventual champion in Indiana.
One more step this next year with his most veteran team, all those defensive linemen coming back, Dante, more coming back.
I'm just saying this is why in my way too early top 10 after the season,
Oregon was number one.
One more step would be the national title game.
Most wins in his first four seasons.
You saw that list right there.
This guy, again, 48 and 8 in four years at Oregon.
He's just 39, turns 40 in April.
I think he's phenomenal.
And he's the last guy that has not won a national championship on the list.
And number three, now we get to the, I don't know if you want to call it the nitty-gritty,
but you had to parse out these three guys.
Again, I'm not going from old eras of college football.
In the modern recent vintage, the last two, three, four years,
who've been the best coaches.
Well, there's three that have won titles.
Really, four, if you count Jim Harbaugh, he's not in college football anymore.
So three guys have won titles, and now you have to say, like, well, how do you rank them?
So here's the way I rank them, just so that you know.
I rank them based on the recency of the titles.
So at number three is Kirby Smart.
Kirby Smart at Georgia is number three.
He won two titles back in 21 and 22.
He's only lost seven games of the last five years combined.
Five of those have come over the last two, however.
So it hasn't been as good in the last two years as maybe they were in previous years,
but that's obvious with those back-to-back national titles.
Seems like a dip, but that's only because their standards are insanely high.
They've won the SEC the last two years and three of the last four.
And check this out.
The only year in the last nine seasons that Georgia wasn't at least in the SEC title game was the 2020 COVID season.
That's ridiculous consistency in a really tough conference.
And Kirby is the standard.
Georgia's the standard in the SEC.
Let's face it.
And the reason that the Big Ten may be overtaking the SEC a little bit is one, they've got, they've equated the talent.
I think there might be more Big Ten players selecting the first round of the NFL draft than SEC players, maybe by one.
It would be about even, maybe nine, one conference, ten the other, one way or the other.
But also because, like, Georgia hasn't been up there and winning it.
Meanwhile, you've got three different champions from the Big Ten.
But Kirby runs that conference.
You think of the SEC?
It's Georgia.
It's Georgia. It's Georgia. It's Georgia.
You've got to take down Georgia in order to be.
crown the champion in that league, and certainly it's been tough to do. As long as Kirby is there,
Georgia is not going anywhere. They're still recruiting and developing at an elite level.
This guy is 100% one of the best coaches in college football. He's number three on my list.
And again, it's because of the recency of these championships, which moves to number two.
And now you know exactly where I'm going with this. Number two is going to be Ryan Day at Ohio State.
Ohio State is an absolute pressure cooker. Day has the Buckeyes at the top every single year.
there's not a coach that I deal with more in college football than Ryan Day.
Now, it's becoming Kurt Signetti.
I deal with Kurt Signetti quite a bit, and it'll obviously be Kyle Winningham.
Because you guys know with Big Noon, we do a lot of Ohio State, Michigan, and Indiana.
We do those top teams in particular in that time zone in the Big Ten.
That's kind of what we do.
That's my job.
This guy is excellent.
He is excellent.
My conversations with Ryan Day just about football, about running the program, about his
philosophy, how he goes about recruiting, how he goes about talent evaluation, how he goes about
game planning, hiring assistants, evaluating losses, all of those things. I learn so much when I
talk with Ryan Day. He is excellent, absolutely excellent. He has reached the top two in the AP
poll at some point in every single season that he's been a head coach. He's never lost more
than two games in a season. He got his national championship in 2024, and he had the number one
team in the country for most for most of the season this last year until they ran into
Indiana. Ohio State is the most consistent program in college football. Full stop through
the eras. And we are seeing one of the great eras of Ohio State. So you've got this entity,
right? And it's you could make an argument that there is not a more consistent, in particular
in the last three decades, let's call it.
There's not a more consistent college football program in America.
And yet, we are watching it at its zenith.
Like, this is Ohio State at its peak.
And a lot of that is because of Ryan Day.
He's fantastic.
I know Urban is going to, he'll text me and get all upset about this.
Urban was insanely good at Ohio State.
And Ohio State is actually a little better
when you really look at it, when you really look at the way that they've recruited,
the way that they have been ranked in the polls.
I mean, like, I know it's very consistent, but boy, this is an era of Ohio State football
that is up there with any of the areas of any program in the country.
So Ryan Day is number two at Ohio State right now in college football.
And that leaves number one, the number one head coach in college football is Kurt Signetti.
Guys, you can't put anybody else there.
He has earned this spot.
This spot and this ranking is no longer subjective.
No, no, no, no.
Not when you take the losing-est program in the history of the sport,
and in two years you win the national championship with that team.
It is not up for debate.
He is number one, and it has to be him.
The losing-est program.
And here he is.
two years in, and he's 27 and 2.
And the only two losses, the only two,
were on the road at Ohio State,
who was the eventual national champion in that season,
and on the road in the playoff to Notre Dame,
who eventually played for the national championship.
That's his only two losses.
So again, everything else on this list is subjective.
And you know what?
You can make arguments that guys should be higher and lower.
Maybe there should be guys incorporated on this list that I don't have on this list.
And you might be right.
And that's completely fair.
But the one that you cannot argue with that is no longer objective but absolutely subjective,
I think I'm saying that right, it's Kurt Signetti.
Kurt Signetti.
He has proven to be the best talent evaluator in this area of college football.
He's also a great game planner.
I mean a great game planner.
When I go in and I watch the tape of Indiana, it's like, oh, it's like a symphony.
There's these old adages.
Sometimes you can watch film.
I hope this doesn't give me any trouble.
Sometimes you can watch film.
And there are teams that you're like, it seems like this game plan was drawn up with crayons.
And then there are teams that you're like, okay, like they're playing checkers.
You know, they're playing checkers at a high level.
And then there are some that are like, all right, this is chess.
And it's like, okay, now it's singing.
It's like, okay, here we go.
I love seeing this.
I love seeing them set things up.
I love seeing how structured the defense is.
I love seeing how they disguise things on defense and how they go after the offense
and how they go after the defense with their offense.
And what do they do with the personnel?
And what do they do with the movement?
And what do they do with the quarterback's eyes?
And is everything in sync?
And is there a plan?
and is there a purpose to everything that they do and everything that I'm talking about?
That's Indiana.
That's Indiana.
They are the best coach team in college football.
They just won the national championship with a talent composite that was lower than any in history.
I mean, what just happened, I don't think can be overstated.
It's not just catching lightning in a bottle.
This guy has been doing it for a long time.
And so I know that it's just two years at this level, but he did it back at JMU.
He's lost 10 total games over the last six years.
He's 68 and 10 over his last six years at JMU in Indiana.
So Kurt Signetti is going to be my number one head coach and college football.
I do not think that that is up for debate.
I think it has to be him.
It has to be him.
Which leads me to the next category, which were the honorable mentions.
All right, let's get to some honorable mentions here.
All right, some guys that I wanted to incorporate and,
I just couldn't get them on the list.
It's only 10.
There are a lot more college football coaches that I really like.
Number one, Kaylon DeBoer at Alabama.
I couldn't quite get him on there because of the trajectory.
I just didn't love what happened at Alabama this last year.
Everywhere he's been, he's won.
And he's winning at Alabama.
But there's this idea of the arrow pointing down that I can't get over.
I can't get over.
I think Kalin is a wonderful coach.
I think it's probably amiss by me to not have him.
on the top 10, but DeBoer is a guy that just missed this list. A few other guys that I was banging
around. Ret Lashley at SMU. I really thought about Ret Lashley. He's 38 and 16 over his last
four years at SMU. He's been really good for them. Goes to a playoff, dealt with him at the
Holiday Bowl. I think he's a phenomenal coach. Joey McGuire at Texas Tech just goes to the
playoff. Everybody thinks that that's just about money and certainly money plays a part.
Money plays a part and everything, even Indiana's success, Ohio State's success, Georgia,
success, Miami's success, all of it. But he's building a really special environment.
You don't get that until you go and sit with them for a game. And so that game that we called
when Gus and I and Jenny called the Texas Tech Utah game, we got to sit with Joey
McGuire and his assistant coaches and his players, that's where you really feel it. That's a special
organization. So I thought about Joey McGuire on this list. Mike Elko is a guy I wanted to include,
has A&M where a lot of people thought that they should have been in previous eras.
and coaching 10 years, and they were not anywhere close,
and Elko has built something really nice down there.
I think A&M still, in my eyes, a bit of a sleeping giant.
Even as a playoff team, that's a team like, all right,
like you in Texas, you guys could really get things going
and kind of own that conference.
And then one last name that didn't make the cut.
And I'm sure everyone was like, I know he's about to say,
Dabo.
Dabo didn't make the cut.
And here's why.
this era has not been very good to him.
It really hasn't.
And last year was even tougher.
For a team that came in preseason number four with a ton of expectations,
heck, I had them winning the national championship in my first bracket that I did in the preseason.
They had everything that you needed, all the experience there,
they had all the starts, the old players, everything.
They had the talent, all of it.
And they go seven and six?
Like, I don't get that.
five straight seasons finishing outside of the top 10 at the end of the season.
They were preseason top five and three of those.
And so I understand that he built something really special at Clemson.
And if I was doing this list in 2017, 18, and 19, he would have been one or two, hands down.
But college football evolved and Dabo never evolved with it.
And because of that, currently, he's not in the top 10.
And that's tough to say because, again, I think he's a wonderful coach and he's been outstanding for the sport.
And, man, we were, we desperately needed a team like Clemson during that era because Bama was just going to win every single championship.
Nick Saban was about to go John Wooden on everyone.
And thank goodness, Kirby, Smart, and Davos Sweeney were like, you know what?
We'll stand up and try to play these guys.
and we're able to do that with some success, some success, not a ton, but some in that era.
But over this last three or four years, you just can't say that.
You just can't say that about Clemson.
You can't say that about DaBoh.
So DaBow did not quite make the list.
Okay.
We'll be back next Monday.
That's right.
New Joel Clat Show next Monday.
We're going to dive into, I believe we're going to do top 10 offensive players for the NFL draft.
So I'm going to rank my top 10 offensive players for this spring's NFL draft that's coming up next.
Monday right here on the YouTube channel. Make sure to subscribe, hit the notification button.
You'll know when everything drops. Follow us on social media at Joel Flatsio.
But for now, have a wonderful week, everybody, and we'll see you next week.
