We sort of had this discussion last fall, but as good as the 2010 O-line was (I've maintained over the years that it was arguably Ohio's best ever, for the same reason you also put forth, the tackle to tight end quality established by the schools at which they ended up), it's my opinion that the 2022 O-line surpassed 2010 last year, and this upcoming version in 2023 will only further separate. Although the "eyeball test" is all I usually need, I made the argument before the state championship game that the college recruiters seem to agree with me overwhelmingly, with some 70 mostly major offers at that time. Only Kyle Kalis was of the elite stature with which Roebuck and the Armstrong twins are viewed. We're talking three NFL body types as juniors in high school on the same high school line. They will be even bigger, stronger, faster and more dominant this upcoming season. I was thinking perhaps that following the bludgeoning performance they put on in the championship game, coupled with the Ohio State and now Georgia offers to the Armstrongs, that people would stop arguing otherwise. I guess not. We're all entitled to our opinions. Mogus, Orlosky, Rivera, Brandon Jackson, Sam Grant were good. and alongside Kalis it was special. But I would argue that Ricky Wolverton was at least the equal of Rivera, Roebuck at least the equal of Kalis, and the Armstrongs are at a whole other level than Mogus, Orlosky or Jackson, to such a degree that I don't care who the other guys are. Anderson Soltis was enough of a dude last year, Bush or whoever else gets put out there next year, with maybe Balogh (or who else? Honest question.) at TE, and Eds will have a line even more punishing than a year ago, which was more punishing than 2010 was. Just my subjective opinion. But I'm quite sure the majority of college recruiters would agree with me. I could be wrong. But there are levels within Power 5. just as there are levels within say, the Big Ten. One offer to Northwestern or West Virginia is not in the stratosphere of like 30 offers that include the Michigans, Ohio States and Georgias. Even at Eds, with the legacy of 2010, we've not seen anything like this group. If the 2004 team had 3 Alex Boones, would anyone argue some other year was better (regardless of the other guys). I don't think so.