You're talking about reloading from within like it's some new concept. We invented that at Pitt back when Dan Marino was handing off to Tony Dorsett. We lost Hugh Green to the draft and just plugged in another All-American. That's the standard. Your program might celebrate finding one guy on specil teams, but we built whole dynasties on three-year apprenticeships. I watched Mark May and Jimbo Covert wait their turn, then become first-round picks. You mention Mel Kiper. The man has been gushing over Pitt linemen since Bill Fralic was pancaking people in the early 80s. That pipeline you're so proud of? Ours has been flowing since before your coach was born. We don't just replace guys, we send legends to the league, and the next group wears that legacy every day. You talk about culture. Our culture was forged in the Steel Curtain era, when waiting your turn wasn't a slogan, it was a requirement. You lose a couple of dogs to the draft? We've been sending entire kennels for fifty years. So while you're patting yourself on the back for developing one linebacker, remember we've been doing it for generations, and our ring collection from the 70s proves which program really knows how to reload.