Shawn Jones is up there for me. He would have been amazing in this era of spread offenses and read options. Way before his time.
Josh Nesbitt didn't put up crazy numbers, but he was a "playa"...he was also a Heisman candidate. There's a reason he started the whole "f" in the initials...JfN!
Jonathan Dwyer his sophomore year, and in CPJ's first year, was as dominant of a RB as I've ever seen. He followed it up with a special JR season as well. When JD was healthy, he was the perfect combination of size and speed for a RB.
Looking outside of the skill positions, let's give some OLs and defenders some love.
I wasn't around for the John Davis era, but I've heard stories of how dominant he was.
Shaq Mason and Omoregie Uzzie were BEASTS in CPJ's offense. Multiple all conferences for them both. I believe they also made All American teams.
Ken Swilling was as good as there was in the defensive backfield when he was healthy.
Morgan Burnett was also VERY good. He was one of the top safeties for his time in college and had a very long NFL career.
Derrick Morgan would single handedly collapse his side of the LOS. Watch the Clemson games during his time here...Dabo wanted nothing to do with running plays to Morgan's side.
At the end, IMO, Calvin and Little Joe are probably the leaders in the clubhouse for any GOAT talk. Obviously on talent alone Calvin stands above almost everyone, but Joe Hamilton's impact and dominance against high level teams is why he was Heisman finalist.
This is a fun discussion because GT has had a LOT of really good players since I've been a fan.