-
Colorado coach Deion Sanders believes the NCAA or the Rose Bowl should step in and reimburse his players for the items that went missing from the Buffaloes' locker room while they played at No. 20 UCLA over the weekend.
-
Injured receiver and defensive back Travis Hunter helps Colorado by lending his expertise as a coachColorado two-way standout Travis Hunter may be injured but he's finding ways to contribute as a coach, mentoring defensive back Cormani McClain and receiver Omarion Miller, who is fresh off a seven-catch, 196-yard performance.
-
Colorado coach Deion Sanders has condemned the death threats sent to Colorado State safety Henry Blackburn after his late hit that sent Buffaloes star Travis Hunter to the hospital with a lacerated liver.
-
Colorado's double-overtime victory against Colorado State, which ended in the early hours of Sunday morning in most of the country, drew 9.3 million viewers. That makes it the most watched late-night college football game ever on ESPN, the network said.
-
Deion Sanders will lead No. 22 Colorado into Folsom Field for the coach's much-anticipated home debut against longtime rival Nebraska.
-
The Buffaloes are ranked for the first time since a brief stay in the 2020 season. The Buffs were also ranked for two weeks in 2018, but have only finished a season in the Top 25 once (2016) in the last 20 seasons.
-
Colorado is about to find out if it is ready for prime time with new coach Deion Sanders after nearly nine months of extreme hype.
-
The Sanders Era at Colorado kicks off with a road game against TCU on Sept. 2. The first home game is the following week against former Big 12 rival Nebraska.
-
Hidetora Hanada was a highly ranked sumo wrestler in Japan. He decided he wanted to try something different. The 21-year-old is learning to play college football at Colorado State and has improved his English and discovered a love for lasagna.
-
Larry Scott boasted five years ago that the Pac-12 Conference would be able "to adapt, react and take advantage of this new world media order that's coming in a way others can't." As it turns out, Scott's statement instead ended up reflecting what rival conferences and commissioners did.