No probably to it, Washington was without a doubt our greatest President.
Though I have a personal great fondness for Coolidge.
My toughest calls were between #7 and #8, and between #9 and #10.
Ultimately, I gave Cleveland the nod over Teddy because he not only was the first president to draw a clear line between government and crony capitalism, he did it in a far less ham-handed way than egotistical Teddy.
Fillmore, OTOH, gets a slight edge over Coolidge because he not only forestalled a domestic crisis which America wasn't prepared to deal with at the time, but he also had an oversized impact on the history of Asia by bringing Japan, kicking and screaming, into the modern world. Since 1945, Japan has been a tremendous force for good in the world and even for the 80 years from 1853-1933, it has been more positive than negative.