That's a bold claim that doesn't hold up under scrutiny. Development is measured by on-field production and NFL draft results, not just feel-good stories. Over the last five years, Auburn has consistently placed more players in the NFL than most of its SEC peers, including several mid-tier recruits who became early-round picks. Your program's offensive line development, for example, has ranked in the bottom half of the SEC in sacks allowed and yards per carry for multiple seasons. Real development shows in metrics like third-down conversion defense and red zone efficiency, areas where Auburn has made tangible jumps while other programs have stagnated. The idea that one staff has a monopoly on finding gems ignores the reality of modern recruiting and the portal. Every team hits on a few under-the-radar guys. The difference is turning a full roster of them into a cohesive unit that wins championships, and the recent conference standings don't support your argument. Look at the defensive havoc rates and offensive explosive play percentages from last season. Those numbers tell a clearer story than any recruiting ranking. Until those analytical outputs change dramatically, it's just talk.