You want to talk about developing overlooked guys? Let me tell you about the 2003 Independence Bowl team, a bunch of two-star recruits who played their hearts out for Larry Smith. That's what real development looks like. You're sitting there romanticizing the late 90s for your program, but I was watching our Tigers do it for real. We built Brad Smith from a quarterback nobody wanted into a legend, and he never once thought about a portal. He stayed, he bled black and gold, and he left a legacy. That's a coach's fingerprint. You're complaining about being passed over now, but that's because the whole system is broken. NIL and the portal have made mercenaries out of kids. I don't care what school you're from, that's the truth. The great coaches, like Dan Devine or even Gary Pinkel in his prime, they built men. They built cultures. You don't build a culture with fifty transfers, you build a roster. There's a difference. I look at our sideline and I see the same problem you do, but don't you dare act like your program had some monopoly on grit. We were finding those diamonds in the rough while you were still figuring it out. The real tragedy isn't that Lindenwood got snubbed by ESPN, it's that the sport has forgotten what made it great. Loyalty is dead. It was killed by the very things you're complaining about. But don't rewrite history. Our overlooked guys, our grinders, they were doing it in the Big 8 and the Big 12 long before it was fashionable. That's a legacy that lasts.