I think there is a distinction between being the best runner, and being the best running back. Like the difference between being the best passing quarterback, and being the best thrower or passer. A guy with the best spiral might be higher in the latter.
Being the best running back includes being the best runner, but it includes more. Being the best running back means contributing to the team with all the skills required. Pass blocking, reliability, how were you in a close game in the fourth. And I'd rank how you were in your era, a little higher than if you could compete in 2009. But the athleticism counts too.
I was watching the Joe Washington all timer on MNF when he was new with the Colts last night, and then his three seasons of highlights. His freshmen year was omitted. There was this brilliance and subtlety about vision and anticipation that were remarkable. If not for the probation that he had nothing to do with, he'd have won the Heisman his senior year.
Sims should have won two Heismans. Joe should have won one, but like McDonald, he won two NC's and the second one was only possible because of two incredible plays he made at the end in Columbia Missouri. Not to mention hundreds of other incredible plays. So I totally agree with Sims and Joe Silvershoes at one, two.
I think Parker's too high, and I wouldn't come close to considering Dupree. They broke down all the norms to accommodate him, and then he screwed it up, anyway.
Peterson at three seems too low, but Adrian was the prime guy as a soph and junior and we weren't great. Three is about right. It's not about being the best NFL running back, later.
I'd have Q on the list over Gaddis, because anybody who scores the only TD in an NC win and is undefeated against Texas, including one win where he scored six touchdowns must be in the list.
McDonald at four is fair. He didn't lose a game in five years, won two NC's and had a more than a decade pro career. And I'd have Pruitt over Demarco. Nobody Murray this high until he had a great year in Dallas. That's noteworthy, but it doesn't count.