Offense
   Quarterbck   
		
		
	
	
          Rex Kern, Troy Smith
        It?s all about the ?10s? here, and ? Florida disaster aside ? Troy was as good as they get.     
 
          Vince Young, Bobby Layne
        The great Bobby Layne (?44-?47) was a four-time All-SWC selection, and a great pro.      
  
Running Back   
          Archie Griffin, Chic Harley, Keith Byars, Eddie George, Pete Johnson
How do you choose just five? There are three Heisman Trophies here, and Harley might have had three all by himself, had the award existed. Johnson is here to block and pick up key thirds-and-one. I might see an argument for dropping Byars in favor of Hopalong Cassidy, but I?m partial to anyone who could lay out Pepper Johnson.
 
          Earl Campbell, Ricky Williams, Chris Gilbert, Roosevelt Peaks, Cedric Benson
        Two Heismans, three Doak Walkers and seven All-American selections in this group.  Campbell was a 
monster.        
Line   
          Jim Parker, John Hicks, Orlando Pace, Korey Stringer, Jim Lachey
        Lachey was a prototype for the NFL?s new tackle position; 
Hicks was the greatest lineman ever to grace Ohio Stadium ? just try to beat his 1973 season.     
 
          Bob Wuensch, Jerry Sisemore, Justin Blalock, Dick Harris, Scott Appleton
        Harris was a four-time consensus All-American.        
Tight End   
          John Frank, Jan White
        White      No Hamby = no dropped passes.  Hair-challenged?  Dr. Frank can 
help you.     
 
          Pat Fitzgerald
        No, not 
this guy.  Not a position of historical strength for the ?Horns, either.      
Wide Receiver   
          Cris Carter, Terry Glenn, Paul Warfield
        An embarrassment of riches at wideout, but I could only take three:  Carter was clutch, Glenn 
electric, and Warfield versatile.     
 
          Roy Williams, Cotton Speyrer, ?Hub? Bechtol
Bechtol (?44-?46) started his career a Red Raider, finished it a Longhorn, and lived to tell the tale after racking up three consensus All-American selections.    
 
Defense
   Line   
          Jim Marshall, Bill Willis, Jim Stillwagon, Mike Vrabel, Will Smith
        Will Smith was under-appreciated at OSU; Jim Marshall was an 
Ironman defensive lineman in the pros, after excelling on the offensive line at Ohio State.     
 
          Tony Brackens, Steve McMichael, Tony Degrate, Kenneth Sims, Casey Hampton
        Two Lombardi winners are here, as well as Casey Hampton, an All-Pro who plugs the middle for the Steelers? 3-4 defense.     
Linebackers   
          Randy Gradishar, Chris Spielman, A.J. Hawk, Andy Katzenmoyer
        Some might ask for Marcus Marek or Tom Cousineau, but Katzenmoyer taught Big 12 quarterbacks 
not to run the option, and Gradishar never gets the press he deserves.     
 
          Jeff Leiding, Derrick Johnson, Tommy Nobis
        Not a lot of greats here, until you get to Nobis.  Never heard of him?  Run ? don?t walk ? and 
find out. He was Jack Tatum, only at linebacker, and turned out to be an even better 
man.        
Secondary   
          Jack Tatum, Shawn Springs, Antoine Winfield, Chris Gamble, Michael Doss
        Tatum + Doss = 
no patterns over the middle, and no draw plays. 
    
 
          Bryant Westbrook, Quentin Jammer, Johnnie Johnson, Michael Huff, Raymond Clayborn
        Johnson was a unanimous All-American in ?78 and ?79, and went into the College Football Hall of Fame in ?07.        
Special Teams
   
Punter   
          Vic Janowicz
        When even your punter has a 
Heisman, you?ve got a good program.
 
          Russell Erxleben
        A straight-ahead kicker who could do it all; he hit a record-setting 67-yarder against Rice.      
Kicker   
          Mike Nugent
        Noooooooooge!!!     
 
          Russell Erxleben
        See above.        
Returner   
          Ted Ginn, Jr.
        I agonized over this one.     
 
          Eric Metcalf
        Never set the world on fire as a Brown, but 
tricky, speedy, and tough to find on kicks.