There's a misplaced debate that occurs regularly among college football fans. It's the Position U debate, the tussle for bragging rights over which program regularly produces the best NFL talent at any given position.

Hidden inside that debate is the question that really matters: Which program employs the best coaches for producing NFL talent? Because ultimately what logo is on the side of every player's helmet is much less of an indicator for NFL draft stock than the logo on the front of certain coaches' polo shirts.

Below I break down the offensive coaches that have had the most success producing NFL talent at every position.

Quarterbacks: FSU HC Jimbo Fisher (previously OC/QB at FSU, LSU)

Resume: Jameis Winston (1st round), EJ Manuel (1st round), Christian Ponder (1st round), JaMarcus Russell (1st round), Rohan Davey, Matt Mauck, Matt Flynn, Josh Booty.

While this list is primarily reserved for assistant coaches, quarterback is the one position in which head coaches regularly play a primary role and Jimbo Fisher is as good as it gets. When you combine his offensive coordinator stints at LSU and Florida State followed by his current head coaching stint, Fisher has produced eight NFL draft picks and four first-rounders. If Deondre Francois develops into a first round pick – a realistic possibility – then that would give Fisher first-rounders in 5 of his last 7 starters. Let's look at this from another angle. Assuming Francois is an eventual draftee, over the last 17 seasons that Fisher has been an offensive coordinator or head coach, his starting quarterback from 13 of those seasons has gotten drafted. To have that kind of success you've got to be an elite evaluator, recruiter and developer. Fisher is the gold standard in all three.

Honorable mention:

- Dan Mullen, head coach Mississippi State (Florida OC/QB, Utah QB, Bowling Green QB) – Dak Prescott, Tim Tebow, Chris Leak, Alex Smith, Josh Harris.

- Kliff Kingsbury, head coach Texas Tech (OC/QB Texas A&M, OC/QB Houston) – Patrick Mahomes, Johnny Manziel, Case Keenum, Baker Mayfield, Davis Webb.

- Brent Vigen, OC Wyoming (OC North Dakota State) – Carson Wentz, Josh Allen.

- Jim Harbaugh, head coach Michigan (HC Stanford, HC San Diego) – Jake Rudock, Andrew Luck, Josh Johnson.

- Mark Richt, head coach Miami (HC Georgia, OC/QB Florida State) – Matt Stafford, Aaron Murray, Brad Kaaya, Chris Weinke, Danny Kannel.

Running backs: Alabama's Burton Burns (previously RB coach at Clemson)

Resume: C.J. Spiller (1st round) James Davis, Glen Coffee, Mark Ingram (1st round) Trent Richardson (1st round), Jalston Fowler, Eddie Lacy, T.J. Yeldon, Kenyan Drake, Derrick Henry.

Sure, Burns has been the beneficiary of Nick Saban's remarkable run at Alabama but Saban has also been the beneficiary of Burns' remarkable run as running backs coach. There's a reason why Burns is the only coach on Alabama's staff that has been with Saban since Day 1 in Tuscaloosa and that reason is his steady, unprecedented production at the running back position. Burns has presided over three first-round draft picks and a pair of Heisman Trophy winners during his career and things don’t look to be slowing down with this year's backfield, which is maybe his most talented yet. Not only has Burns been instrumental in Alabama recruiting a freakish stable of backs but due to his background as a high school coach in New Orleans, he's also a big reason why Alabama has emerged as the only program that can regularly win recruiting battles with LSU in Louisiana.

Honorable mention:

Tim Horton, Auburn (Kansas State, Arkansas) – Thomas Clayton, Peyton Hillis, Felix Jones, Darren McFadden, Knile Davis, Jay Prosch, Tre Mason, Cameron Artis-Payne.

Wide Receivers - Clemson's co-OC Jeff Scott

Resume: Jacoby Ford, Adam Humphries, Martavis Bryant, Jaron Brown, DeAndre Hopkins (1st round), Sammy Watkins (1st round), Mike Williams (1st round)

Other coaches are more tenured and have more names to their credit but nobody is recruiting and developing first-rounders more consistently at the position right now than Jeff Scott. Scott took over as the receivers coach at Clemson in 2008 and Clemson hasn't had a receivers room without a first-rounder in it since 2009. That success is due not only to Scott's ability to develop the position but also his ability to recruit the position. Deon Cain could be Scott's best hope to keep the streak alive heading into the 2017 season but with an incoming recruiting class featuring Tee Higgins and Amari Rodgers, the pipeline is not showing any signs of slowing down.

Honorable mention:

- Gunter Brewer, North Carolina (North Carolina, Oklahoma State, Marshall) - Mack Hollins, Ryan Switzer, Donte Moncrief, Dez Bryant, Sam Aiken, Randy Moss, James Williams

- Zach Smith, Ohio State – Michael Thomas, Braxton Miller, Devin Smith, Evan Spencer,

- Tee Martin, USC (Kentucky) – Robert Woods, Marqise Lee, Nelson Agholor, Juju Smith-Schuster, Randall Cobb

- Billy Gonzales, Mississippi State (Florida, LSU) – AJ Jenkins, Reuben Randle, Odell Beckham, Chad Jackson, Dallas Baker, Andre Caldwell, Louis Murphy, Percy Harvin, Riley Cooper, Paris Warren.

Tight Ends - Arkansas' Barry Lunney Jr.

Resume: AJ Derby, Hunter Henry, Jeremy Sprinkle.

Tight end coaches are tough to pin down. Often they share duties as a special teams coordinator, shift duties to offensive line coach or other positions over the course of their career and depending on the system, tight ends often just fold into the receiver room. But Lunney jumps out due to what he's done recently at Arkansas. As the Razorbacks continue to feature the tight end position they've spit out an NFL draft pick in each of the last three drafts, something no other program has done. Lunney has only even been the tight ends coach in Fayetteville for four years and he's got some big-bodied talent on his current roster to keep the hot hand led by the physical and versatile Austin Cantrell.

Offensive Line - Stanford's Mike Bloomgren

Resume: Jonathan Martin, David DeCastro (1st round), David Yankey, Cameron Fleming, Andrus Peat (1st round), Kyle Murphy, Joshua Garrett (1st round).

Some old heads that have been in the game for a long time have put together some crazy resumes but right now, nobody is recruiting and developing NFL talent like Bloomgren. Only 40 years old, Bloomgreen has handled offensive line duties at Stanford for the last six seasons. In that time he's averaging more than an offensive lineman drafted every year and has produced three first rounders. The unit took a step back last fall but it has reloaded with a vengeance as Bloomgren helped recruit two of the top three offensive linemen in the country in Foster Sarell and Walker Little during the 2017 cycle.

Honorable mention:

- Jeff Grimes, LSU (Auburn, Arizona State, Boise State) – Highlights include: Matt Hill, Kyle Kosier, Travis Scott, Scott Peters, Levi Jones, Drew Hodsdon, Scott Young, Lee Ziemba, Brandon Mosley, Greg Robinson, Vadal Alexander, Jerald Hawkins, Ethan Pocic.

- Rick Trickett, Florida State – Lance Nimmo, Rodney Hudson, Andrew Datko, Zebrie Sanders, Menelik Watson, Bryan Stork, Bobby Hart, Tre Jackson, Cameron Ervin, Roderick Johnson.

- Neil Callaway, USC (Western Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama, Houston, Auburn) – Keith Uecker, David Jordan, Steve Wallace, Ben Tamburello, John Hudson, Rob Selby, Ed King, Bob Meeks, Chris Gray, Wayne Gandy, Marcus Spriggs, Jimmy Herndon, Billy Millner, Chris Samuels, Shawn Draper, Jonathan Stinchcomb, George Foster, Max Jean-Giles, Ken Shackleford, Forrest Lamp, Zach Banner.