ESPN ranks which programs produce best WRs, DBs and LBs

ESPN took to Instagram to release a few ‘top-ten’ lists for which collegiate programs have produced the best wide receivers, defensive ba…

ESPN took to Instagram to release a few top-ten lists for which collegiate programs have produced the best wide receivers, defensive backs and linebackers.

Alabama made an appearance on all three, but Crimson Tide fans may not agree with where they are ranked on these lists.

Here are ESPN’s rankings..

Wide receivers:

Starting off with the top-ten schools that could be considered ‘WRU,’ Alabama pops in at No. 9 on the list.

The notable Alabama alum listed include Amari Cooper, Calvin Ridley, Julio Jones and Jerry Jeudy.

There are some great names included on the list for the other nine programs, but are they good enough to top the four Nick Saban products and more that weren’t mentioned? You can decide that.

Georgia football is recent history’s LBU

Is it possible to be both LBU and RBU? It is, because apparently the University of Georgia is, at least in the BCS and playoff eras.

The University of Georgia’s football program has long been known for its development of tailbacks and consequently stakes among the strongest claims to the title of RBU, or running back university. Ten tailbacks in the past 20 NFL Drafts have seen professional action by way of Athens, Georgia.

(Interesting piece of trivia: 34 Georgia running backs have been selected in the draft. That number looks a bit familiar when discussing Bulldog tailbacks.)

However, the Dawgs dominate at a different position at the NFL Draft, sending 20 linebackers to the National Football League, more than any other school can claim across the same span of time.

To put that number in perspective, only 14 Bulldog linebackers had been drafted prior to the year 2000.

(Which brings us to more happenstance trivia: that equates the total of tailbacks drafted from Georgia.)

Is it possible for one school to be both LBU and RBU? It is, because apparently the University of Georgia is, at least in the BCS and playoff eras.

It might have something to do with two incredibly talented position groups running into, over, but ultimately with each other across twenty years’ worth of practices.

Iron sharpens iron, et cetera, et cetera.