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Ranking the NFL's top 10 defensive tackles for 2022: Execs, coaches, players pick the best interior pass-rushers, run-stoppers

We all love best-of lists, but what if people around the NFL created their own? To preview the 2022 NFL season, we surveyed more than 50 league executives, coaches, scouts and players to help us stack the top 10 players at 11 different positions, from edge rusher to interior offensive lineman. This is the third edition of these rankings, and there are several players who moved up or dropped from last year's lists. Today, we focus on the defensive tackles.

Here's how our process worked: Voters gave us their best 10 players at a position, then we compiled the results and ranked candidates based on number of top-10 votes, composite average, hundreds of interviews, research and film-study help from ESPN NFL analyst Matt Bowen. In total, more than 50 voters submitted a ballot on at least one position, and in many cases all positions. We had several ties, so we broke them with the help of additional voting and follow-up calls with our rankers. Each section is packed with quotes and nuggets from the voters on every guy -- even the honorable mentions.

The objective is to identify the best players right now for 2022. This is not a five-year projection or an achievement award. Who are the best players today? Pretty simple.

We rolled out a position per day over 11 days. Here's the schedule: edge rushers (July 5), defensive tackles (July 6), off-ball linebackers (July 7), cornerbacks (July 8), safeties (July 9), interior offensive linemen (July 10), quarterbacks (July 11), running backs (July 12), wide receivers (July 13), tight ends (July 14) and offensive tackles (July 15).


The discussion for any interior defensive line list naturally starts with No. 2. Aaron Donald takes his rightful place as the top defensive tackle and possibly the best player in all of football, then the rest of the field fills in behind him.

This year's group featured a reshuffled top five and two new players. Overall, the crop was slightly thinner than a year ago, when nearly 20 interior defensive linemen garnered serious consideration. The retirement of Pittsburgh's Stephon Tuitt (No. 8 last year), opened a spot. Let's look at some of the game's top interior pass-rushers and run-stoppers as ranked by execs, coaches, scouts and players around the NFL.