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POSTED: March 31, 2011

The Colorado Daily – March, 2011


Home // 2011 Season // Spring Practice

Spring Practice - 2011 Season

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March 31st

Auburn responds

Auburn athletic director Jay Jacobs stated that the university will look into the allegations made in the HBO report.

“While HBO confirmed to us they have no proof that any of these claims are true, we contacted both the NCAA and Southeastern Conference as soon as these allegations surfaced,” Jacobs said in a statement released Wednesday night. “We have engaged outside counsel to investigate this matter and will spare no resources to find the truth.”

University president Jay Gogue said he is confident Jacobs and his department “will investigate these allegations thoroughly and completely.”

Current Auburn head coach Gene Chizik was less diplomatic in his response: “It saddens me that somebody is going to air a show with basically one side being known. I think that’s pathetic. And I think it’s pure garbage,” he said.

March 30th

Will HBO expose’ signal a change in recruiting?

On a day when Colorado self-reported a secondary recruiting violation (a ten-year old brother of a recruit had his meals covered because the recruit did not bring sufficient funds for his sibling during the official visit. The tab for the weekend ran to $103.26), HBO has run a special “Pay to Play”, in which four former Auburn players claim that they were regularly given money by boosters – and coaches – during their years at Auburn.

The four players – Chaz Ramsey, Troy Reddick, Stanley McClover and Raven Gray all played for Auburn well before the current coaching staff arrived at Auburn. Still, their allegations, if anywhere close to the truth, should rock the college football world.

SportsbyBrooks.com obtained an advance copy of the HBO show, and printed excerpts on its website. Among the more colorful allegations …

Stanley McClover: “Somebody came to me, I don’t even know this person and he was like, ‘we would love for you to come to LSU and he gave me a handshake and it had five hundred dollars in there. … that’s called a money handshake … I grabbed it and I’m like, ‘wow,’ hell I thought ten dollars was a lot of money back then. Five hundred dollars for doing nothing but what I was blessed to do. I was happy.”

HBO’s Andrea Kremer to McClover: “What did you say to the guy when he hands you five hundred dollars?”

McClover: “Thank you and I’m seriously thinking about coming to LSU.”

—

Kremer voiceover: “But McClover says there were money handshakes from boosters at other football camps too. At Auburn for a couple hundred dollars and at Michigan State. All the schools denied any wrongdoing. And things really started heating up a few months later when he went to Ohio State for an official visit where schools get a chance for one weekend to host prospective athletes. McClover says there were money handshakes from alumni there too. About a thousand dollars. And something else to entice him.”

McClover: “They send girls my way. I partied. When I got there I met up with a couple guys from the team. We went to a party and they asked me to pick any girl I wanted.”

Kremer: “Did she offer sexual services?“

McClover: “Yes.”

Kremer: “Did you take them?”

McClover: “Yes.”

Kremer: “McClover committed to Ohio State right after that weekend. The recruiter at Ohio State who says he dealt with McClover that weekend denied the school was involved in any wrongdoing.”

—

Kremer voiceover: “Reddick was growing increasingly unhappy because he says the (Auburn) coaches wanted him to change his major. Why? Because his class schedule got in the way of football practice.”

Troy Reddick: “I changed my major, so my classes didn’t interfere no more but I didn’t bother to go because I knew I was only there to play football.”

Kremer: “So what did you do?”

Reddick: “I started complaining and insinuating that I was ready to leave any day. They had to do something about that.”

Kremer voiceover: “The enticement to stay, Reddick says, became clear to him, when one of the coaches approached him after a team meeting.”

Reddick: “He (Auburn coach) said I got some mail for you up in my office.”

Kremer to Reddick: “Some mail for you?”

Reddick: “And I followed him up to his office and he gave me an envelope. I didn’t open there, I walked out to my truck, took off. … It was about 500 dollars.”

Kremer: “500 dollars in the envelope?”

Reddick: (nods yes)

Kremer: “How often did you get the money in the envelope?”

Reddick: “Over that season it happened like two or three more times. And it happened about six or seven times my senior year.”

Kremer: “So where do you think the money came from?”

Reddick: “I think that worry got back to alumni from my hometown.  Or it may have been the coaches or the staff but everybody knew I didn’t want to be there.”

—

Damning stuff.

Auburn, for its part, denied any wrongdoing, issuing a statement that “these alleged claims are apparently made by a few former football players,” stating, “compliance with all NCAA and Southeastern Conference rules is a major emphasis and a top priority for all of our athletic programs.”

The players stated that they didn’t hold anything against Auburn, and that they were not out to get the school. “I want high school athletes to know what they’re getting into,” concluded Ramsey. “This is what college football is really all about. It’s a business.”

Time will tell if this report turns into a major story, or just another footnote in the long and sad history of college football recruting lore.

March 29th

Buffs on Sunday?

Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott is always thinking outside the box.

From expanding the Pac-10 to 12 (or even 16) to the Pac-12 Network to expanding the league’s presence in the Pacific islands and Asia, Larry Scott is always in the news when there is a chance to gain greater exposure for the new league.

Now, with the NFL players locked out, and the possibility of there being no football on Sundays this fall, Scott is exploring the idea of having the Pac-12 move some of its games to Sundays for the 2011 season. “We certainly are monitoring the situation,” said Scott. “We have no plans in place at this time, but you want to be prepared and consider all options.”

“We haven’t made any alternative programming plans right now,” said Sean McManus, president of CBS News and CBS Sports. “When presented with whatever scenario develops, we will adjust. But right now, we’re not making any contingency plans or any thoughts of next season without football.”

The major problem for the Pac-12 teams, of course, is that a move to a Sunday game would cause logistical problems for the home team. Fans coming from out of state often make their arrangements for travel and lodging months in advance, and the lockout issue is likely to drag on throughout the summer.

“Thursday night football hasn’t been around forever, but we adjusted to that,” said Arizona athletic director Greg Byrne. “Sunday is a day a lot of people look to watch football. You would get good exposure.

“But Sunday games would be something we would have to think long and hard about before we jumped into.”

The main problem would be that, for the Sunday college games to work, there would have to be enough lead time for the schools and the fans to adjust. However, a significant lead time is the one thing that the networks might not be able to provide.

“From the network’s perspective, I’m sure they would welcome the programming opportunity if they knew the NFL was not going to play,” said Patrick Rishe, founder of Sportsimpacts.com, a sports consulting firm. “(But) it’s not as though you can announce these things months in advance, because, as we have seen, the NFL and the NFLPA could resolve their dispute at the last minute.”

March 28th

Will NCAA come down hard on Tressel?

Colorado fans already know that neither quarterback Terrelle Pryor nor his coach, Jim Tressel, will be on the sidelines when Colorado plays at Ohio Stadium on September 24th.

But will Tressel’s self-imposed five game suspension be enough for the NCAA?

An SI.com study of the past 177 NCAA infractions involving violations of Bylaw 10.1 revealed that coaches accused of such violations rarely retain their jobs. Of the 177 cases reviewed, 172 involved coaches or athletic administrators accused of unethical conduct. Of those, 159, or 92%, either resigned or were terminated.

More on point to what Tressel did – withhold information about violations from both his school and the NCAA – there were 81 cases, and 78 of those (or 96%) resigned or were terminated. Tressel clearly lied, and, as with most scandals, it is the coverup which may prove more costly than the crime. Tressel knew last spring that at least two of his players were trading memorabilia for cash and tattoos, but Tressel kept the information to himself. In September, Tressel signed a form indicating that he did not know of any NCAA violations. In December, when the NCAA started looking into the players’ action, Tressel again remained quiet. Tressel did, though, take the time to notify a Pryor “mentor” about potential problems for their star quarterback.

Those three actions – notifying someone other than his compliance office and the NCAA; signing the form; and the failure to divulge his knowledge in December – violate section 10.1_(d) of the NCAA bylaws, which forbids, “knowingly furnishing the NCAA or the individual’s institutions false or misleading information concerning the individual’s involvement in or knowledge of matters relevant to a possible violation of an NCAA regulation.”

Can’t be more spot on than that. Tressell clearly violation 10.1_(d), a section which has resulted in coaches getting canned 96% of the time in the past 20 years.

Still, when Ohio State President Gordon Gee (formerly of the University of Colorado – I’ve got his name on one of my CU diplomas) was asked about firing Tressel, Gee joked about him hoping that Tressel wouldn’t fire him.

We’ll see …

March 23rd

Colorado at least talking about stadium naming rights

Pardon, your slip is showing …

A poster on AllBuffs (well done, GoldenBuff!) just happened to be looking the way of Folsom Field on Tuesday, and noticed on the video screen at the stadium a sign which read, “Welcome to Frontier Stadium”.

So, have the naming rights to Folsom Field been sold?

While the negotiations were not meant to be public knowledge, the University has confirmed that CU is discussing a deal for the naming rights to Folsom Field. The message posted on the stadium video screen was designed to give Frontier officials an idea of how the stadium might look on gameday if Frontier were to become a sponsor. Frontier is already a major sponsor of Colorado athletics, but naming the stadium would take the relationship to a whole new level.

“We recognize the significant partnership and activation opportunity that exists with a stadium naming relationship,” said Colorado athletic director Mike Bohn. “We have been working for the last several years to find a partner to play a role in our continued movement to the Pac-12.

“It would be premature to reveal potential partners or naming efforts at this time.”

Bohn does have authority from the Board of Regents to look into such a deal, but only with the stipulation that any deal retain Folsom Field as part of the name.

So, how much would “Folsom Field at Frontier Stadium” be worth?

One of the largest collegiate deals was signed in 2005, when TCF Bank of Minneapolis agreed to pay $35 million for the title rights to the new University of Minnesota stadium. Colorado may be looking at a more modest amount for having to share the name of its stadium with its corporate benefactor, but $1 million per year for 10-20 years is not out of the question.

The key will likely be having a set term to the contract, or having an escalator clause in the deal, so that, as naming rights become more valuable, Colorado can reap a higher reward. “A lot of deals that were done before were on a need basis, rather than a value basis,” said Rob Vogel, president and CEO of Bonham Group, a sports and entertainment marketing company based in Denver (since renamed Bonham Sports Entertainment). “As more colleges put their names out there for corporate America to buy, they’re going to look at what the value really is for those rights.

“The assets will be more valuable in the future than today,” said Vogel. “The universities will be looking to get a certain level of protection over the years.”

With Colorado in need of an infusion of cash over the next few years before the Pac-12 money starts rolling in (see below), getting something for – in essence – nothing, would be a great boon to the athletic department’s budget.

I, for one, can live with “Folsom Field at Frontier Stadium”.

Sure beats what I have been calling for all these years … “Celestial Seasons Stadium” …

March 22nd

Road to financial recovery starts with repayment of loans

Before Colorado fans can start dreaming about how to spend all of those new Pac-12 dollars, the athletic department needs to get back to even.

The athletic department is on track to repay $8 million in loans taken in 2006 amid a coaching change and other financial setbacks. The $8 million need came as a result of almost $4 million paid to fire Gary Barnett and hire Dan Hawkins; $3.2 million in lost revenue due to declining ticket sales and donations; and $1 million for delaying a mandatory donation from season ticket holders.

Now, with the lost revenue connected with the departure from the Big 12 and the $2 million buyout of the Dan Hawkins’ contract, and the athletic department may need even more money from the school, or perhaps from the Pac-12 itself.

“The paybacks are proceeding on schedule, and the agreement is working out just as we envisioned it would,” said CU-Boulder spokesman Bronson Hilliard. The athletic department will make a payment of $756,477 in June, and is on schedule to have the loan paid off by fiscal year 2019. By the time the loan is repaid, the athletic department will have paid just over $1 million in interest.

“The general financial management has improved greatly over the past five or six years, and part of that has been staying on schedule and repaying the loan,” said David Clough, a CU professor and faculty athletics representative. “As we move forward with the realignment in the Pac-12 conference, things look reasonably optimistic from the faculty’s point of view, and it’s going to be a matter of staying the course and continuing to exercise good financial management.”

For more on where Colorado fits within the Big 12 in terms of revenue and expenses, see the Forbes story, below.

Okay, but let’s dream a little bit, anyway … There is a report in this week’s SportsBusinessJournal stating that the Pac-12 “is seeking the richest media rights deal in the country (amongst conferences) – considerably more than the SEC’s $205 million annual deal with CBS/ESPN … It’s expected to let its exclusive negotiating windows with current partners lapse and head into the open market next month.”

Yes, it’s still early in the process. The exclusive period of negotiations with ESPN and Fox won’t expire until the end of April, at which time Pac-12 commissioner is hoping that Fox and Comcast will get into a bidding war. (ESPN is not out of the discussion, but with its existing contracts and the Pacific time zone to deal with, is not likely to be the high bidder for the Pac-12’s package deal).

How high will the bidding go? Who knows. But, as we’ve discussed before, I’m very glad that it is Larry Scott who represents the league Colorado is playing for, and not Dan Beebe.

 

March 21st

Colorado football revenue middle of the pack in the Big 12

Forbes magazine has put together an article, “Who’s Making Money in Big 12 Football?”, which has some interesting numbers.

In the Big 12, Texas rules the roost. No surprise there. The surprise is just how far ahead of everyone else the Longhorns have gotten (even before the one-sided deal the Longhorns made with the “Little Seven” to stay in the Big 12). In the 2009-10 fiscal year, Texas brought in just short of $94 million. Not only is that amount over $35 million more than the second place team in the Big 12 (Oklahoma, with $58 million), but Texas was $21 million ahead of any other school in the nation (Alabama, at $72 million).

Colorado, meanwhile, ranked 6th in the conference, with $26,233,929.00 in revenue, just ahead of Texas Tech, but over $5 million behind the No. 5 school, Oklahoma State.

The difference between the haves and the have-nots in the Big 12 is illustrated when conference averages are compared with the mid-point of revenue. In terms of averages, the Big 12 was 3rd, with $35.4 million per team, but when the mid-point is considered, the Big 12’s $20.6 million ties the conference with the ACC in fourth place, far behind the SEC ($57.4 million), and even behind the Pac-10 ($24.4 million). Overall, the Big 12 had four teams below $20 million per year (both Kansas schools, Iowa State, and Baylor), while the SEC, Big Ten and Pac-10 had five teams – combined – under $20 million.

In terms of penny-pinching, Colorado was 10th in the conference in terms of football expenses, with $12,558,503.00, with only Baylor and Kansas State spending less on football. This put Colorado in the middle of the pack in terms of football profit (6th, with $13,675,426.00).

Bottom Line … In terms of overall profit, Colorado was ranked 10th in the Big 12 in terms of overall profit. The Buffs netted $930,604.00 for the 2009-10 fiscal year. Considering the Buffs had losing records in all three of its major sports, any profit is a good one.

Want to know how far behind the Buffs are in terms of basketball revenue? Kansas was dead last in football profit in 2009-10, with $1.6 million. In terms of athletic department profit, however, Kansas was second only to Texas, with a healthy profit of $11.6 million.

But wait, there’s more … Looking forward, there is sunshine on the horizon. First, the men’s and women’s basketball teams both posted a winning record in 2010-11, with the men playing before a school record five sellouts. The future finally looks bright in the monetary black hole which has been the Coors Event Center.

Plus, Colorado is moving on to a more level playing field. In 2009-10, the average athletic department profit in in the Pac-10 was $1.8, which, while double the $900,000 generated by the Buffs, is well within sight.

See ‘ya later, Big 12. Good luck keeping up with Texas, Oklahoma and Texas A&M, “Little Seven”!

 

March 19th

McCartney and Barnett back in the fold at Colorado …

… if only for an afternoon.

Bill McCartney, the head coach at Colorado from 1982-94, and Gary Barnett, head coach in Boulder from 1999-2005, will be on the sidelines in Folsom Field on April 9th.

The pair have agreed to be the coaches for the alumni flag football game which is scheduled to take place prior to the Spring Game. Both coaches, along with the players, will be available for autographs after the contest.

A little corny? Sure. Symbolic? You bet.

Colorado fans knew from day one last December that new head coach Jon Embree and new offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy would embrace the proud history of the Colorado football program. From bringing back the “bricks” in the Dal Ward Center to bringing back former players to talk to the team, Embree and Bieniemy (not to mention the other coaches with Buff ties: Greg Brown, Kanavis McGhee, Steve Marshall and Brian Cabral) want their players to bleed black-and-gold.

Having McCartney and Barnett coach a flag football game, just for fun?

Perfect.

Hunter Harrison a name to remember

Flying under the radar has been a problem for Hunter Harrison the past few seasons.

Hopefully, by 2012, he will be in the spotlight.

Harrison, a 5’9″, 170-pound cornerback, was not highly recruited out of Fort Carson high in Fountain, Colorado, in 2009. “I only played football one year in high school, because before that I was focused on football,” Harrison told BuffStampede.com. “I thought that was going to be my sport. I ended up having a pretty good high school career, and got an offer from a D-2 school in Nebraska, but I was just too short to get more interest.”

As a result, Harrison moved to Durango, and played last year as a true freshman for Ft. Lewis. He finished with 60 tackles, fourth on the team. Instead of staying at Ft. Lewis, though, Harrison decided to ply his trade elsewhere. “I didn’t want to be there. I always wanted to play either in Boulder or at another big school,” so he contacted the Colorado coaching staff.

After reviewing film on Harrison, the coaches agreed to allow him to walk on this spring. “They didn’t see any reason why they wouldn’t let me walk on,” said Harrison, “but I had to go to workouts. The workout program was the hardest thing I have ever done in my life. But I made it through, so they said, ‘You can be on the team now and start spring ball with us.’ ”

Harrison has participated in spring drills, and is doing well so far. “Coach Brown said he was really impressed by me during the one-on-ones, so that is when I started getting in on the team stuff.” The 5’9″ corner has been impressed with what he has seen in Boulder. “The players are huge”, said Harrison, who hopes to be up to 185 pounds by next year. “Even though cornerbacks don’t have to be huge, it is definitely a plus when you are coming in trying to hit these running backs that are going 100 miles per hour.”

Due to NCAA transfer rules, Hunter Harrison will have to sit out the 2011 season. If he is still with the team next year, however, he will still have three years of eligibility remaining.

 

March 17th

Ohio State head coach will also miss the Colorado game

And then there were six …

“Coach Tressel has requested that he sit out the first five games of the 2011 season,” said Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith (yes, that Gene Smith, the one who couldn’t explain why Alabama-Birmingham, USC, Clemson and VCU were better suited for the NCAA tournament than Colorado). “I have accepted his request, and we are taking action to notify the NCAA. Until the NCAA has completed its investigation, we will not be publicly discussing the details of this case.”

In case you have been out of the country … five Ohio State players, including starting quarterback Terrelle Pryor, have been suspended by the NCAA for the first five games of the 2011 season (which includes the Colorado game September 24th). The players were suspended for selling rings, trophies, and bowl game apparel in 2009. The appeal of that suspension was today denied by the NCAA, meaning that Terrelle Pryor will be the most photographed spectator during the Colorado/Ohio State game in September.

While the players were suspended for improper benefits, Jim Tressel’s transgression was that he (back in December) denied knowing about the problems with the players. As it turned out, however, he was aware of the issue last spring. For nine months, Tressel failed to notify the NCAA or his own compliance department about being aware that his players had received money and other benefits from a Columbus tattoo-shop owner.

At first, Tressel was suspended by the school for two games, and fined $250,000. Now, according to sources, the suspension has been lengthened at Tressel’s request. “I spoke with athletic diretor Smith, and our student-athletes involved, and told them that my mistakes need to share the same game sanctions,” said Tressel. “I am very sorry for the mistakes I made.”

Whether Tressel’s presence – or lack thereof – will make any difference when the Buffs face the Buckeyes remains to be seen. What is known is that the NCAA is still investigating, and that Tressel’s self-imposed suspension may not be deemed a sufficient penalty by the NCAA …

March 16th

It’s here!

The Pac-12 has introduced its new logo, doing so with a YouTube video.

Here’s what Pac-12 chief marketing officer Danette Leighton said in a statement:

“With so many of our fans active on social media outlets like YouTube, Facebook and Twitter, we wanted to create something that could easily be shared and we felt this would be a fun and natural way for us to launch the new Pac-12 mark. We wanted to do something creative that allowed some of our student-athletes and fans to give the new logo life. We also wanted to reflect the enthusiasm that all of our institutions have for the Pac-12 becoming a reality this summer.”

Okay, so it’s not much different than the current Pac-10 logo, and it’s not much different than what you would expect.

But … it does mean that Colorado is just that much closer to becoming a full-fledged member of the Pac-12!

March 14th

Big 12 close to new television deal with Fox

According to a Sporting News report, the Big 12 is nearing a deal with Fox Sports which could triple the conference’s revenue over its current contract.

The new deal, if true, would pay the league more than $60 million per year, a considerable raise from the $20 million received under the existing agreement. Fox is also in discussion with eight of the league’s schools about establishing a conference specific channel along the lines of what the University of Texas has already negotiated (in case you are wondering about the math – Oklahoma wants its own network).

(One area which would need to be clarified – would it be the “Big 12 Network” if only eight teams participate?).

The two arrangements – Fox’s cable deal and the potential league network – are separate conversations. The Big 12’s cable contract with Fox runs through 2011-12, and will pay the league $20 million during the upcoming year. The ABC/ESPN contract, which covers most of the football and some of the basketball games, runs through 2016. The network and cable deals would bring in an average of $130 million per year, to be divided amongst the ten teams. This is only slightly behind the ACC deal with ESPN, which made a deal for $155 million a year (divided amongst 12 teams.

Ten teams – geographically challenged, and with no conference championship game?

This all bodes well for the Pac-12 negotiations. The new league is getting $14.5 million for the 2011 Pac-12 championship game, so there are extra dollars right there that was not part of the Big 12 negotiations. There is also the fact that Fox is willing to pay about $60 million per year for what is, in essence, eight teams – and, the Kansas basketball team notwithstanding – are not the cream of the crop in terms of national Q rating.

Time to shift into overdrive, Larry Scott!

Side Note … While not related to the above, it is interesting to note that at the same time the Big 12 is negotiating a big new cable deal, that it is bailing out one of its “haves”.

Oklahoma was not able to pay for all of its tickets for the 2011 Fiesta Bowl against Connecticut, so the league, according to a Sporting News report, paid for 10,403 tickets, to the tune of $1.9 million. Oklahoma bought 1,530 unsold tickets, at a cost of $335,000, in order to wind up with a net gain of $9,350 for the trip.

The payoff only came to life after it was disclosed that Connecticut lost better than $1.6 million on the game, with the Big East not picking up the tab.

 

March 12th

University of Colorado – National Champions!

Gotta like the sound of that!

The University of Colorado ski team won its 18th national championship on Saturday, besting 2nd place Utah by a wide margin.

Colorado went into Saturday’s slalom competition with a good lead – 647 points to Utah’s 562.5 – but with missed gates and crashes always a possibility in the slalom races, nothing could be taken for granted.

The men’s team all but slammed the door on the competition with three solid performances Saturday morning. Gabriel Rivas finished 2nd overall to lead the Buffs, who also posted 11th and 21st place finishes. Not great, but Utah failed to take advantage, with its three skiers finishing 5th, 12th, and 30th, to actually lose ground to Colorado.

With the title all but in hand, the women’s team only had to have three finishers to clinch the title, and that is just what they did. The three Colorado women’s skiers finished a more than respectable 10th, 11th, and 12th in the slalom, making it impossible for Utah to catch the Buffs. The Utah women did have a strong run, finishing 5th, 6th, and 9th, but it was not enough.

In the end, Colorado finished comfortably ahead in the points, becoming the first team in the 29 year history of the NCAA co-ed competition to surpass 800 points, with 831. Utah finished second with 750.5, with three-time defending champion Denver University finishing 5th with 592 points. (A little shout out to Montana State – the Bobcats finished 10th overall).

NOTES: Depending on who is doing the calculating, this title is either the 17th or 18th in Colorado skiing history. From 1954-82, the NCAA crowned a national champion, but only men competed. Starting in 1983, the teams went co-ed. Counting the NCAA titles, the Buffs now have 17. The University of Colorado, however, had a women’s team competing from 1977-82 in the AIAW (Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women), with the Colorado women winning the national championship in 1982 (in Stowe, Vermont, no less). So, Buff fans are claiming 18 national titles, but you may see stories posted that this is No. 17 … In either event, this is the first title for Colorado since 2006, and the 6th national title under Richard Rokos, who has been the Colorado ski coach since 1991.

Congratulations, Buffs – 2011 NCAA national champions!!

March 11th

Colorado ski team looking good after day three of NCAA ski championships

The Colorado women’s cross country team, led by Eliska Hajkova, helped extend the Buffs’ lead at the NCAA skiing championships Friday morning. Hajkova won the women’s 15K classic, being contested at Stowe, Vermont, with teammate Joanne Reid finishing third in the race. With fellow Buff Alexa Turzian finishing in 15th place, Colorado expanded its lead in the race for the national championship.

The men’s cross country team followed suit later on Friday with three top ten finishes in the 20K. Reid Pletcher made it a double gold medal day for the Buffs, finishing in 1st place, with teammates Vegard Kjoelhamer taking third, and Jesper Ostensen finishing tenth.

Colorado came into Friday’s races with 408 points. Dartmouth, the Buffs’ closest competitor, was second with 362 points. The Dartmouth women’s cross country team, though, had finishes of 11th, 17th, and 19th, to fall further behind the Buffs. (Points are awarded on a sliding scale – 50 points for 1st; 47 for 2nd; 44 for third, etc.).

The only team to make up ground on Colorado during the women’s event was the Buffs’ western rival, Utah. The three women racers from Utah finished 2nd, 4th, and 12th, gaining only one point over the Buffs’ totals (116 to 115 points). The Utes, though, entered the day in third place, with 353.5 points, so the Buffs maintained a sizable lead, with 523 points to 469.5 for Utah, after the women’s event. In the men’s event, Utah had two top ten finishes, but still lost ground to the Buffs, who placed all three racers in the top ten.

The other two contenders for the title, Vermont and Denver University, fell back Friday morning. Vermont, which had three top ten seeds, saw its women finish 6th, 23rd, and 25th. The women of DU had finishes of 11th, 15th, and 20th. Denver is the three-time defending champion, but was in 6th place at the midway point (with 262.0 points), did not make any moves on Friday, and is too far behind the leaders to expect a fourth-consecutive title.

The team totals after day three were as follows: 1st) COLORADO, 647.0 points; 2nd) Utah, 562.50 points; 3rd) Dartmouth, 500 points; 4th) New Mexico, 492.0 points; 5th) Vermont, 451.5 points; 6th) Denver University, 409.0 points.

NOTE: While the Buffs have a good lead right now (it’s really down to Colorado and Utah), the championship always comes down the slalom races, which will take place on Saturday. With points awarded based upon how each racer finishes, if a Colorado skier or two misses a gate or catches a tip and fails ot finish, there would be no points awarded to that skier. As a result, even though the Buffs have a sizable lead on Friday, we’ll all still have to hold our collective breath on Saturday morning!

GO BUFFS!

March 9th

CU pro timing day a hit

It’s been some time since the University of Colorado has generated this much interest in its pro-timing day.

With potential first-round picks Nate Solder and Jimmy Smith on hand, there were sure to be a number of NFL scouts willing to make the trip to Boulder. But it was the five other Buffs who ran who sparked the most discussion.

Wide receiver Scotty McKnight was the “story of the day” according to the Daily Camera recap of the event. McKnight ran three 40-yard sprints, all timed in under 4.5. McKnight also broad jumped over ten feet and bench pressed 225 pounds 13 times. “I thought he made some money today,” said Colorado head coach Jon Embree, no stranger to evaluating NFL talent. “I thought he put himself in position to get drafted. I think he’s a guy who people are going to be happy they have him.

“I’d be shocked if A, he didn’t get drafted; and B, if he didn’t have a career in the league.”

I thought I did great,” said McKnight. “I think I did everything I possibly could to erase any doubts about speed or athleticism.”

McKnight was assisted by his long-time friend, New York Jets quarterback Mark Sanchez, who threw passes to McKnight for the scouts. “I don’t think it could have gone any better for him,” said Sanchez. “His drills were great. His numbers were awesome”.

In addition to McKnight, Solder, and Smith, four other Buffs worked out for the scouts: cornerback Jalil Brown; defensive lineman Marquez Herrod; tight end Luke Walters; and long-snapper Joe Silipo. Of the four, only Brown is projected to be drafted when the NFL begins its draft on April 28th.

Colorado Ski team in first place at the midway point of NCAA championships

The NCAA ski championships are normally a four day event, with two days of nordic competition and two days of alpine races.

With bad weather forecast for the weekend in Stowe, Vermont, the NCAA doubled up on Wednesday, running both the 10K (mens’) and 5K (women’s) cross-country events, and the giant slalom downhill events.

As a result, the Colorado ski team is halfway through the event, and halfway to an 18th national championship. Here are the team results so far –  (Remarkably, I have yet to see – to 7:00 p.m. MT-  any mention of the results on the CU homepage).

Colorado leads the team competiton with 408.0 points. Dartmouth is second with 362.0 points, while Colorado rival Utah is third with 353.5 points.

Host Vermont – a favorite coming into the competition, as the event is on the Vermont team’s home course – is fourth at 349.5 points, while three-time defending champion Denver University is 6th at 262.0 points.

Points are awarded based upon where a skier finishes (50 points for 1st; 47 for second; 44 for third, etc.). Each team can qualify up to three skiers per event, and Colorado has three entries in all eight events (four men’s and four women’s). There are six schools, including the Buffs, who have qualified full squads.

In the women’s 5K cross country event, Colorado women placed 2nd, 3rd, and 9th, netting the Buffs 122 points. In the men’s 10K event, the CU men placed 2nd, 14th, and 23rd.

In the Giant slalom events, the women finished 2nd, 5th, and 22nd (for 104 points, best of any team), while in the men’s GS, the Colorado men placed 6th, 12th, and 13th.

Outstanding performances by the Buff skiers!

Thursday is slated to be a practice day for the ski teams, with the cross country events set to take place on Friday, and the slalom events on Saturday – but that may be changed depending on the weather.

Stay tuned – the University of Colorado ski team is halfway to yet another national title!! 

March 8th

Ohio State coach suspended for two games

Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel has been suspended by the school for the first two games of the 2011 season, and fined $250,000, for his failure to act upon knowledge of questionable activities by his players. The penalty, self-imposed by the school, is in response to the revelation that Tressel knew about the misconduct of his players long before the story broke in December.

“I am sorry and disappointed this happened. At the time the situation occurred, I thought I was doing the right thing,” Tressel said in a statement. “I understand my responsibility to represent Ohio State and the game of football. I apologize to any and all of the people I have let down. I will grow from this experience.”

Last December, the NCAA suspended five players, including quarterback Terreel Pryor, for the first five games of the 2011 season for selling items such as jerseys and championship rings to Edward Rife, who owns Fine Line Ink Tattoos in Columbus. Yahoo! Sports reported Monday that Tressel knew of allegations of improper benefits to Pryor and five other players as early as April 2010 — at least seven months before the university found out from a U.S. Attorney.

In case you are wondering, Ohio State opens at home with Akron and Toledo from the Mid-American Conference. The third game – the first game Jim Tressel will be back on the sidelines – will be on the road against Miami (Fla.).

Good thing Tressel didn’t commit any worse of a discretion – A three game suspension could’ve hurt the team.

Three Buffs on College Football Hall of Fame Ballot

This past December, Alfred Williams was enshrined as a member of the College Football Hall of Fame in South Bend, Indiana. The Hall of Fame is run by the National Football Foundation, which boasts over 12,000 members.

This year, there are 79 players and nine coaches who are have been nominated, including two former Buff All-Americans – running back Eric Bieniemy and offensive lineman Joe Garten – along with their coach, Bill McCartney. Bieniemy and McCartney have been on the ballot before, but this is the first time for Joe Garten.

“It’s an enormous honor to just be on the ballot when you think that more than 4.79 million people have played college football,” said NFF President & CEO Steven J. Hatchell in his March 7th announcement. “The Hall’s requirement of being a First Team All-American creates a much smaller pool of only 1,900 individuals who are even eligible to be on the ballot, so being in today’s group of 79 names means an individual is truly among the greatest to ever have played the game, and we are proud to announce their names today.”

The new class will be announced in May, with an induction scheduled for December 6th at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York.

Joining Garten amongst the first-time nominees are some familiar names, including Nebraska quarterback Tommie Frazier, Alabama linebacker Derrick Thomas, and Michigan State running back Lorzeno White.

Here is a link to the entire list of candidates …

And here are the bios of the three Colorado nominees, as listed by the National Football Foundation …

Eric Bieniemy, Colorado-Running Back- Played in two national championships, leading Buffs to 1990 national title. . .Unanimous First Team All-America and finished third in 1990 Heisman voting. . . Two-time All-Big Eight pick, still holding eight CU records.

Joe Garten, Colorado-Offensive Guard-Two-time First Team All-America, garnering consensus honors in ‘89 and unanimous laurels in ’90. . . Led Buffs to 1990 National Championship and three-straight bowl berths. . . Member of two Big Eight championship teams.

Bill McCartney-Colorado (1982-94) -Led Buffs to 1990 National Championship and three Big Eight Conference titles. . .Three-time Big Eight Coach of the Year and 1989 National Coach of the Year. . .Helped CU to nine bowl games in 13 seasons. . .Coached 18 First Team All-America players, including Heisman Trophy winner Rashaan Salaam.

 

March 7th

Nebraska/Iowa set post-Thanksgiving dates

It’s official … the Big Red has swapped one black-and-gold rival for another.

Nebraska and Colorado faced one another on the Friday after Thanksgiving ever year of the Big 12’s existence. Now a member of the Big Ten, Nebraska will face Iowa at the end of the regular season, and the teams have agreed to move the game from Saturday, November 26th back to Friday, November 25th. The two teams will meet in Lincoln to end the 2011 season, and will face off in Iowa City to conclude the 2012 campaign.

Colorado and it’s new year-end rival, Utah, are still scheduled to meet on the Saturday after Thanksgiving, November 26th, though that date may still be subject to change.

March 5th

Pac-12 officials to have a different look

As part of it’s initiative to improve football officiating, the Pac-12 conference will replace 11 officials who worked games last fall.

Mike Pereira, the Pac-12’s interim coordinator of football officiating, said that there will be at least 16 new officials in the conference next year, hired away from the Big 12, Mountain West, and WAC. Pereira, who has three decades in officiating, and who served as an on-air NFL rules analyst for Fox last season, said that a review of officiating was necessary.

“I certainly did not think that for a geographic area like the West coast that can draw from a lot of officials, I certainly didn’t think it was at the level that it could be,” said Pereira. “I’m not saying it was horrible, but it was not at the level that it deserved to be, and that this conference deserves to have.”

Adding 16 officials will give the new Pac-12 a total of 49 officials, or seven seven-man crews. Some of the officials who were not asked back may be used as assistants in the replay booth. Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott, who instigated the changes, said that the changes come as part of what is “a new accountability and a new emphasis on training that I think is good for officiating, period.”

In addition to the new on-field hires, the conference is hiring seven supervisors to oversee each of the seven officiating positions. Six of the seven, Pereira said, are existing NFL officials who will work during the week with the Pac-12. “This concept has never been used before at any one of the college conferences,” said Pereira.

Sounds good to me …

Quick hits …

USC senior defensive lineman Armond Armstead was taken to the hospital Thursday for undisclosed reasons. Armstead’s family is with him, but the reason for the hospitalization has not been disclosed. In 2010, Armstead had 43 tackles and three sacks. Armstead was a potential candidate for early entry to the NFL, but decided to return for his senior season.

Two Iowa State players have been suspended indefinitely from the team. Junior defensive end Jacob Lattimer and junior tight end Ricky Howard were suspended after being arrested this Friday. Lattimer, who played in all 12 games last fall, was arrested for assaulting a police officer, while Howard was arrested on a DUI charge.

Oklahoma defensive back Marcus Trice has left the school and will transfer. A sophomore, Trice played in all 13 games last season, mostly on special teams. Trice, from Mesquite, Texas, was a four-star prospect from the Class of 2009, and was considered to be the 20th-best cornerback recruit in the nation that year.

Washington running back Johri Ferguson has been arrested for resisting arrest and possession of marijuana. Fogerson, 21, was The Seattle Times State Player of the Year as a senior at O’Dea High in 2007 as a running back and safety. He played safety for the Huskies as a true freshman in 2008, then moved to tailback as a sophomore in 2009, appearing in nine games. He played in just one game last season, the opener against Brigham Young, before suffering a hip injury that held him out the rest of the season.

March 4th

Restricted access

In a departure from the Dan Hawkins’ era, spring practices will largely be a private affair.

Of the 15 practices allowed under NCAA rules, only five will be open to the public and the media. Included in the five are the first three practices, March 11-13, with two of those practices taking place in shorts and helmets only. The other two practices which will be open to the public will take place on April 2nd, when the Buffs will conduct their one and only scrimmage of the spring, and the Spring Game, scheduled to kickoff at 6:00 p.m. on April 9th.

Champions to be honored

As the current Buff squad seeks to avenge a humbling loss from last season, another team which overcame adversity will be honored.

On September 10th, Colorado will face California in the 2011 home opener. Kept on the schedule as a non-conference game, the Buffs will be looking to put behind them a 52-7 beatdown by the Bears in 2010. That same weekend, the University will be honoring the 2001 Big 12 championship team.

The 2001 Colorado team, coming off of a 3-8 season in 2000, lost to Fresno State in the season opener. The Buffs later were dominated by Texas, 41-7, in Austin, before rebounding to win the final four games of the regular season, including a memorable 62-36 victory over No. 2 Nebraska. Redemption was earned a week later, as the Buffs then took down No. 3 Texas, 39-37, in the Big 12 championship game.

Another title team will be honored this fall, as the 1961 Big Eight champion Buffs will be honored during the Washington State game. Celebrating the 50th anniversary of its title, the 1961 team went 9-2, including a 7-6 win over No. 10 Missouri. The ’61 Buffs swept the Big Eight, going 7-0 for the first time as a member of the Big Eight. The only losses on the season came against Utah in the regular season, and against No. 4 LSU in the Orange Bowl. The 1961 team finished the season ranked 7th in the nation.

November Blackout?

The November 5th home game against USC may be moved to Thursday, November 3rd, according to CU athletic director Mike Bohn.

Bohn has contacted the university faculty about trying to minimize the disruptions caused by a mid-week game, and, with Boulder being Boulder, has found those who feel that it would be a bad idea. According the Daily Camera, Boulder Faculty Assembly chairman Joseph Rosse suggested that weeknight games be held on campuses where the stadiums are farther removed from the main campuses (Translation: NIMBY), while Kate Belford, a first-year law student at CU, was quoted as saying she’s opposed to weeknight games at CU “because tailgaters will congest the campus and make parking difficult”.

Really?

My concern would be more substantive. Unlike other years (like the West Virginia game in 2008), Colorado will not be coming off a bye week before playing USC. The Buffs will be on the road against Arizona State on October 29th, and would have a short week to prepare for the Trojans. By the same token, USC will be coming off a home game, but it will be against Stanford, which figures to be a top ten team in 2011. The Colorado game will also be the third road game for USC in four weeks, as the Trojans play on the road against Cal and Notre Dame before returning home to face Stanford.

On second thought, the weeknight game, on national television, with a CU blackout against a team the Buffs have never beaten (0-5 all-time)?

Okay, I’m in. Remind the faculty that the football program is the most recognized representative of the University, and that letting students off for a day (especially with eight month’s notice), is not too great a hardship. As for law school student Kate Belford … I have no comment …

 

March 3rd

Senior nose tackle; red-shirt freshman running back not returning

It is being widely reported that two players have left the team. Red-shirt freshman running back Trea Jones and senior nose tackle Eugene Goree will not return for the 2011 season.

Jones is a red-shirt freshman from Wake Forest, North Carolina. His high school team was 14-0 when Jones broke his fibula, going on to lose in the state semi-finals the next game. There have been reports that Jones has not fully recovered from that injury, and that he was not impressive this past fall on the scout team.

Goree has been with the team since 2007. After red-shirting his first fall in Boulder, Goree was on the field for 89 snaps as a red-shirt freshman, and even played 17 snaps at guard against Kansas State. As a sophomore in 2009, Goree was in on 91 snaps over ten games, registering four tackles and a fumble recovery. In his junior year last fall, Goree played in three games, but only six snaps total, posting one tackle (it did go for a sack). Despite the overall lack of depth along the defensive line, Goree never found a way to force his way into the starting lineup.  

Without fanfare … it’s Cal

There was no separate announcement, just an acknowledgement of what has been “known” for some time … Cal will be the Buffs’ opponent for the home opener on September 10th.

With the announcement of the new season ticket packages, the Colorado athletic department put it simply: “All but one game on CU’s schedule this fall, its inaugural season as a member of the Pacific-12 Conference, has been known for months.  The one open date, earmarked for a home game on Sept. 10, will in fact be a non-league game against a Pac-12 member, with California confirmed to  play at Folsom Field to complete a home-and-home series between the two; the Buffaloes played in Berkeley last Sept. 11. 

“The Pac-12 Conference office approved of CU and Cal playing the game as a non-league affair to fulfill the contractual obligations.  The last time Colorado played a conference school with the game not counting in the standings was in 1923 versus Northern Colorado when both were members of the 11-team Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.”

The University also announced that it is standardizing its donor seating program, and will from hereon require all season-ticket holders in premium seating areas to participate. The donor seating program was introduced in 2004, with season-ticket holders kicking in an extra $50-$300 per seat, depending upon their location. Some fans complained, and about 1,200 season-ticket holders received a three-year waiver, which was then extended another two years in 2009.

[To be honest, I didn’t know that anyone was still receiving a waiver … I’ve been making this “donation” since the beginning …]

For some, 2011 will actually be cheaper, with some 4,000 seats available for $120 per seat (no mandatory donation). Those same seats cost $235 per seat last fall. The idea here (and its a good one) is to expand the season-ticket holder base. With the excitement over the new coaching staff, coupled with the renewed interest in the program as a member of the new Pac-12, this is the time to make just such a move.

Berglund out for spring practice at KU

Heralded freshman quarterback recruit Brock Berglund will not be a participant in spring practices at Kansas. Berglund, who committed to Colorado before the coaching change, is enrolled for spring classes at Kansas, but, due to a “personal matter”, will not be on campus when spring practice begins April 1st.

Berglund is reportedly in good standing as a student, and has made arrangements to continue taking classes on-line while he is away.

Kansas fans had been hoping that the dual-threat quarterback would participate in spring practices, and compete with Jordan Webb and Quinn Mecham for the starting job this fall. While that remains a possibility, not participating in spring drills will set Berglund’s development back, leaving Jayhawk fans to pick between Webb and Mecham, neither of whom was overly productive (except for one quarter v. CU) in Kansas’ 3-9 2010 season.

March 2nd

Arizona State adds two wide receivers

The book on the Class of 2011 never quite seems to close …

Arizona State added two wide receivers to its recruiting class this week … and no, neither was named Michael Thomas.

The Sun Devils added Karl Holmes and Rashad Ross to their roster. Holmes is a high school senior from Pasadena, California. Considered a two-star prospect, Holmes was going to grey-shirt at 1-AA Sacramento State, but got a late call from Arizona State. Part of the reason for his late recruitment was that Holmes was considered by some schools to be an academic risk.

Rashad Ross is a junior college wide receiver prospect from Butte Community College in Oroville, California. Also a two-star prospect, Ross had offers from Arkansas State and Utah State.

Arizona State loses only one wide receiver from the Class of 2010, Kerry Taylor, who led the team with 54 receptions. However, the Sun Devils have five seniors, including the No. 2, 3, 4 and 5 receivers from this past season, who will play their final games in 2011.

No word, in case you are wondering, about the elusive four-star wide receiver recruit Michael Thomas. I haven’t heard or seen anything about him in the past two weeks …

March 1st

Embree interview by Mile High Sports

If you have not read this interview of Jon Embree done by Mile High Sports Magazine, you are in for a treat.

If you have read the interview, it’s worth taking a second look.

If this interview doesn’t get you excited about the future of Colorado football, then you are a lurking Husker/Huskie fan, and I don’t know what you are doing on this site.

Some highlights from “Big Bad Jon: Filled with Pride and a Sense of Responsibility, A Former Buff takes over the Reins at CU“, by Doug Ottewill:

From the intro: “You could feel something different in the air – a party, a celebration, a vibe that I’d never felt before standing in this particular spot. I’ve stood in the Flatirons Club at the Univesity of Colorado more times than I can count – for games, award luncheons, for meet-and-greets, and for press conferences. Never had it felt like this, though. On this particular day, the University of Colorado was about to appoint a new football coach. But this was much more than a simple announcement. This was different …”.

On the identity of the Colorado football team … “We’ll be physical. We’re going to run the football. And we’re going to be good on special teams … I always believe that a team is a reflection of the head coach. When people see our team play, they’ll see a team that’s physical, a team out there having fun.”

On the need for better facilities … “If we need better computer rooms for our student athletes, then let’s get it for them. If we need better food at the training table, then let’s get that for them. If we need a treadmill that you can run on underwater for rehab, then let’s get that … New buildings don’t affect your athletes directly … I consider myself a ‘need guy’. I just don’t get the stuff I want; I get the stuff I need … There’s a certain badge you ask guys to wear at the University of Colorado. There’s a certain badge about having to walk up that hill every day (after practice). There was a certain badge about, ‘Okay, well, we don’t have a bubble. We’re practicing outside for the Big 12 championship and it’s 12 degrees, and it’s dimly lit.’ Our guys went down there saying, ‘We’re going to kill Texas because we know they aren’t working like we are’. There’s a fine line with facilities between needing things and wanting things.”

On locking down the borders on Colorado in-state recruits … “I think that it’s imperative that we keep local athletes here. When I look back at the program turning, there was a commitment from some in-state kids, Eric McCarty, David Tate, Barry Helton, Sam Smith, Ed Reinhardt. We had some guys who decided, ‘Hey, we’re going to stay here’. I mean, we all could have gone to legitimate places, and all of them, at that time, were significantly better than Colorado. But we all chose to stay together to see what we could do … So, when I talk to a kid in-state, I’ve been where he’s at.”

On his pitch to recruits … “There’s no such thing as seniority. My job, and I’ll tell this to my team, and I told this to my son at UCLA, my job, every year, is to find 25 guys who can beat out the 22 starters. That’s my job. If they can’t, that means those starters that I have are doing a pretty good job. If they can beat them out, then that means I have some really good players. But either way, we’re going to have good players … I told the team that you know you have a legitimate program when a kid comes in there, and he’s there at least four years, he’s going to get a ring. Then, you’ve arrived. Then, you have a program.”

On his biggest challenges … “The whole job is tough. If it wasn’t, Dan Hawkins would still be sitting here. I’m here because of the situation of the program. The goal is that when (a kid) comes in here, they get a ring at least once every four years … And so, to do that, it’s a process. You want to build it and do it right. We have a heck of a schedule and I’m excited about it. It’s a tough schedule and that’s great … I understand that there will be challenges. That’s fine. You don’t want it to be easy. It’s just like I tell the players, ‘It will be hard, but at the end of the day, it will be worth it’. Nothing worthwhile is easy.

“It’s just one big challenge.”

In Jon we Trust … Bring on the Pac-12!

Tags: Bill McCartney, Brock Berglund, Eric Bieniemy, Gary Barnett, Hunter Harrison, Jalil Brown, Jimmy Smith, Joe Garten, Joe Silipo, Jon Embree, Luke Walters, Marquez Herrod, Michael Thomas, Nate Solder, Pac-12 logo, Scotty McKnight
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    • Sept. 5th – CSU – Canceled (CU 1-0)
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    • Sept. 19th – Texas A&M – Canceled (CU 2-1)
    • “Fall Camp” – October, 2020
    • Nov. 7th – UCLA – 343 Days – It was a long wait (but worth it!)
    • Nov. 14th – at Stanford – “We’re Still Learning”
    • Nov. 21st – Arizona State – (Canceled) – The Story of Tori
    • Nov. 28th – San Diego State – Survive and Advance
    • Dec. 5th – at Arizona – Watershed Moments
    • Dec. 11th – Utah – Breakfast With Champions
    • Dec. 19th – Oregon – (Canceled) – The Winding Road to San Antonio
    • Dec. 29th – Alamo Bowl – Texas
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    • Aug. 30th – Colorado State – “It’s Just the Beginning of our Program”
    • Sept. 7th – No. 25 Nebraska – “Trust the Process”
    • Sept. 14th – Air Force – Respect
    • Sept. 21st – at No. 24 Arizona State – “Everyone Chipped in, Everyone Did Their Job”
    • Oct. 5th – Arizona – The Big Picture
    • Oct. 11th – No. 13 Oregon – 1,111 Days – The Legacy of Steven Montez
    • Oct. 19th – at Washington State – Pac-12 Parity – Just not For Colorado
    • Oct. 25th – USC – Loyalty? What it Means to be a CU fan in 2019
    • Nov. 2nd – at UCLA – What is it Going to Take?
    • Nov. 9th – Stanford – Credible Evidence
    • Nov. 23rd – Washington – Senior Moments
    • Nov. 30th – No. 6 Utah – Same Record; Different Outlook
    • Post-Season
    • Mel Tucker Departs
    • Colorado Basketball – 2019-20
  • 2018 Season
    • Recruiting Class of 2018
    • Spring Practice – 2018
    • Spring/Summer – 2018
    • Fall Camp – 2018
    • Aug. 31st – Colorado State – Coming Out Party
    • Sept. 8th – Nebraska – “We have to beat them. It’s the only thing they understand”
    • Sept. 15th – New Hampshire – Meeting (and Exceeding) Expectations
    • Sept. 28th – UCLA – The New Normal?
    • Oct. 6th – Arizona State – Nothing to Say, A Lot to Prove
    • Oct. 13th – USC – Un-Lucky 13
    • Oct. 20th – No. 15 Washington – Tear Off the Band-Aid and Move On
    • Oct. 27th – Oregon State – Gut Punch
    • Nov. 2nd – Arizona – The Definition of Insanity …
    • Nov. 10th – No. 10 Washington State – I Would Be Happy Either Way
    • Nov. 17th – No. 21 Utah – Snowed Under
    • Nov. 24th – California – “Our Long National Nightmare Is Over”
    • Mike MacIntyre “dismissed” as CU head coach
    • Mel Tucker hired as CU’s 26th head coach
    • Post-season
    • Colorado Basketball – 2018-19
  • 2017 Season
    • Recruiting – Class of 2017
    • Spring Practice – 2017
    • Spring/Summer – 2017
    • Fall Camp – 2017
    • Sept. 1st – Colorado State – “We’ll Correct it. We’ll move on”
    • Sept. 9th – Texas State – First World Problems
    • Sept. 16th – Northern Colorado – The Bite Sized Rise
    • Sept. 23rd – No. 7 Washington – I’m Keeping My Towel
    • Sept. 30th – at UCLA – “It’s Real Frustrating”
    • Oct. 7th – Arizona – Broken (by Kahlil Tate)
    • Oct. 14th – at Oregon State – Buffs “Less Worse”
    • Oct. 21st – No. 15 Washington State – Same Song, Different Verse
    • Oct. 28th – California – Any Given Saturday
    • Nov. 4th – at Arizona State – Gold Games
    • Nov. 11th – No. 15 USC – “We Gave The Game To Them”
    • Nov. 25th – at Utah – Lasting Impressions
    • Post-season – Dec./Jan.
    • Colorado Basketball – 2017-18
  • 2016 Season
    • Recruiting – Class of 2016
    • Spring Practice – 2016
    • Spring/Summer – 2016
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 2016 Season
    • Fall Camp – 2016
    • Sept. 2nd – Colorado State – “Welcome to the Fight”
    • Sept 10th – Idaho State – Great(er) Expectations
    • Sep. 17th – at No. 4 Michigan – “Good guys who want to win”
    • Sep. 24th – Oregon – Halfway There
    • Oct. 1st – Oregon State – A Let Down? Not so Much
    • Oct. 8th – USC – Moving (Just a Little) Too Fast
    • Oct. 15th – Arizona State – Making a Statement
    • Oct. 22nd – Stanford – Changing of the Guard
    • Nov 3rd – UCLA – Even the Ugly Wins Count
    • Nov. 12th – Arizona – Time to Get a Little Greedy
    • Nov. 19th – No. 20 Washington State – Giving Thanks
    • Nov. 26th – No. 21 Utah – No Conflict, No Story
    • Dec. 2nd – No. 4 Washington – Dawg Pounded
    • Dec 30 - No. 13 Oklahoma State – Alamo Bowl – Remember the Alamo
    • Colorado Basketball – 2016-17
    • Post-Season – 2016-17
  • 2015 Season
    • Recruiting – Class of 2015
    • Spring Practice
    • Spring/Summer – 2015
    • Fall Camp
    • Sep. 3rd – at Hawai’i – A Brick Too Far, Part Two
    • Sep. 12th – Massachusetts – How the Other Half Lives
    • Sept. 19th – Colorado State – A Matter of Trust
    • Sep. 26th – Nicholls – Crooked Numbers
    • Oct. 3rd – Oregon – Back to the Future … Almost
    • Oct. 10th – at Arizona State – Sisyphus
    • Oct. 17th – Arizona – Shades of Grey
    • Oct. 24th – Oregon State – “We’re No. 1(1)!”
    • Oct. 31st – at No. 24 UCLA – Colorado’s “Glass Ceiling”
    • Nov. 7th – No. 9 Stanford – A Different Mindset
    • Nov. 13th – USC – “We’re Just Not Able to Finish”
    • Nov. 21st – at No. 24 Washington State – Apples … and Oranges
    • Nov. 28th – at Utah – “It Just Wasn’t Meant to Be”
    • Post-Season
    • Colorado Basketball – 2015-16
  • 2014 Season
    • Recruiting – Class of 2014
    • Spring Practice
    • Spring/Summer – 2014
    • Fall Camp
    • Aug 29th – Colorado State – Gashed!
    • Sept. 6th – Massachusetts – A Close Shave at Gillette
    • Sept. 13th – No. 16 Arizona State – “We Can Play at This Level”
    • Sept. 20th – Hawai’i – No Such Thing as a Bad “W”
    • Sept. 27th – California – Learning What it Takes
    • Oct 4th – Oregon State – “There Are No Moral Victories”
    • Oct 18th – at No. 22 USC – Nowhere to Turn
    • Oct 25th – No. 25 UCLA – The Wrong Anniversary
    • Nov 1st – Washington – “Just Keep Believing, and We’ll Keep Battling”
    • Nov 8th – at No. 19 Arizona – Reading Between the Lines
    • Nov 22nd – at No. 2 Oregon – A Day of Celebration
    • Nov 29th – No. 25 – Utah – Air of Inevitability
    • Postseason
    • Colorado Basketball – 2014-15
  • 2013 Season
    • Recruiting – Class of 2013
    • Spring Practices
    • Spring/Summer – 2013
    • Fall Camp
    • Sep 1 - Colorado State – A Will to Win in Mac’s Debut
    • Sep 7 - Central Arkansas – Ahead of Schedule
    • Sep 14 - Fresno State – Postponed – Mixed Emotions
    • Sep 28 - Oregon State – Three Years, not Three Games
    • Oct 5 - No. 2 Oregon – Point / Counterpoint
    • Oct 12 - Arizona State – Beaten Like a Red-headed Stepchild
    • Oct 19 - Charleston-Southern – I Want to be Spoiled Again
    • Oct 26 - Arizona – Closing the Gap
    • Nov 2 - No. 17 UCLA – “Bye Week” for the Bruins
    • Nov 9 - Washington – Regression to the Ugly
    • Nov 16 - California – Blown Away
    • Nov 23 - No. 23 USC – Checklist
    • Nov 30 - Utah – Heart of a Buffalo
    • Post-Season
    • Colorado Basketball – 2013-14
    • Recruiting – Class of 2014
  • 2012 Season
    • Recruiting
    • Spring Practice
    • Pre-Season
    • Fall Camp
    • Sep 1 - Colorado State – Fourth Down, Forever to Go
    • Sep 8 - Sacramento State – The Shirt of Shame
    • Sep 15 - Fresno State – Five Stages of Grief
    • Sep 22 - Washington State – NEVER Give In!
    • Sep 29 - UCLA – Grasping at Straws
    • Oct 11 - Arizona State – Half as Good
    • Oct 20 - No. 11 USC – Reassessing Goals
    • Oct 27 - No. 2 Oregon – Green With Envy
    • Nov 3 - No. 15 Stanford – Sometimes, you just have to Laugh
    • Nov 10 - Arizona – “No Más”
    • Nov 17 - Washington – “Hopelessly Devoted”
    • Nov 23 - Utah – Record-Keeping (reader discretion advised)
    • Coaching Change – The Hiring of Mike MacIntyre
    • CU Men’s Basketball – 2012-13
  • 2011 Season
    • Recruiting
    • Spring Practice
    • Pre-season
    • Fall Camp
    • Sep 3 - Hawai’i – A Brick Too Far
    • Sep 10 - California – Buffs fall in overtime despite Paul Richardson’s record-setting effort
    • Sep 17 - Colorado State – E Pluribus Unum
    • Sep 24 - Ohio State – Skull Sessions / Band of Brothers
    • Oct 1 - Washington State – Deja vu – “Cougin’ It”
    • Oct 8 - No. 7 Stanford – Reflections on Turning Fifty
    • Oct 15 - Washington — “Loyal, we will be to you…”
    • Oct 22 - No. 9 Oregon – Birth of a Rivalry
    • Oct 29 - No. 23 Arizona State – A deal with the Devils
    • Nov 4 - No. 21 USC – “I feel bad that I don’t feel worse”
    • Nov 12 - Arizona – “The Survivors” – Part Two
    • Nov 19 - UCLA – The Long Road Back
    • Nov 25 - Utah – One for the Road … Finally
    • Doldrums – 2011
    • Post-season
  • 2010 Season
    • Recruiting
    • Spring Practice
    • Buffs move to the Pac-12
    • Preseason – CU at Pebble Beach / A Dog named Mouse
    • Sep 4 - Colorado State – “Wake Me When Its Over”
    • Sep 11 - California – The more things change …
    • Sep 18 - Hawai’i – Eight minutes of Emulation
    • Oct 2 - Georgia – “Is it too much too ask?”
    • Oct 9 - No. 24 Missouri – Missouri Five-O
    • Oct 16 - Baylor and RG III – The End of an Error?
    • Oct 23 - Texas Tech – CU in 2011, Because 2010 is Over
    • Oct 30 - No. 11 Oklahoma – No Reason to Be Nervous
    • Nov 6 - Kansas – Dead Dan Walking
    • Nov 13 - Iowa State – The First Victory of 2011
    • Nov 20 - Kansas State – “How ’bout Them Buffaloes!”
    • Nov 26 - No. 16 Nebraska – A November to Remember
    • Out with Hawkins, In with Embree
    • Postseason
  • 2009 Season
    • Colorado Recruiting Class of 2009
    • Spring Practices – “I think it was the best spring we’ve had”
    • Preseason
    • Sep 6 - Colorado State – We waited nine months for this?
    • Sep 11 - Toledo – Reflections from the Glass Bowl
    • Sep 19 - Wyoming – Buffs win wearing “Throwback” uniforms
    • Oct 1 - West Virginia – “Best Effort by Far”
    • Oct 10 - No. 2 Texas – CU at the Game takes in Friday Night Lights
    • Oct 17 - No. 17 Kansas – Returning the Favor
    • Oct 24 - Kansas State – Road, Dreary Road
    • Oct 31 - Missouri – One Last Record for Hawkins to Break
    • Nov 7 - Texas A&M – The “Blue Out” Game at Folsom
    • Nov 14 - Iowa State – Reality Check
    • Nov 19 - No. 12 Oklahoma State – “If You Are Going to Win Only One Game … “
    • Nov 27 - Nebraska – Dan Hawkins retained as CU head coach
    • The Doldrums – 2009 – “Crisis of Faith”
  • 2008 Season
    • Recruiting – A breakdown of the class by position / CU v. the Big 12
    • Spring Practice – What we were looking for; What we saw / 2008 NFL Draft
    • Preseason – 2008 – Fall Practice coverage; Roster battles; predictions
    • Aug 31 - Colorado State – Weathering the Storm
    • Sep 6 - Eastern Washington – Undefeated; Untied; and Unimproved
    • Sep 18 - No. 21 West Virginia – Rocky Mountain High
    • Sep 27 - Florida State – Patience Remains A Virtue
    • Oct 4 - No. 5 Texas – A Silk Purse from a Sow’s Ear
    • Oct 11 - No. 16 Kansas – Mid-Season Blues
    • Oct 18 - Kansas State – Tyler Hansen’s debut
    • Oct 25 - No. 16 Missouri – Shutout!
    • Nov 1 - Texas A&M – Six Plays decide a season
    • Nov 8 - Iowa State – “I Need a Beer”
    • Nov 15 - No. 13 Oklahoma State – The “Haves” and the “Have-Nots”
    • Nov 28 - Nebraska – Coach Hawk v. Coach Mac – the first three seasons
    • Doldrums, 2008 – “Ten wins; no excuses”; Early Look at 2009 Depth Chart
    • Post Season – Recruiting Class of 2009
  • 2007 Season
    • Preseason – Buffs have a formula for a bowl bid
    • Sep 1 - CSU – Desperate Times Call for Desperate Measures
    • Sep 8 - Arizona State – Buffs wilt in 102-degree heat
    • Sep 15 - Florida State – Basic Black for CU’s First “Blackout” Game
    • Sep 22 - Miami (Ohio) – “The Last Time…” – Buffs set records in rout
    • Sep 29 - No. 3 Oklahoma – Hawkins’ Signature Win – “They Think They Can Win!”
    • Oct 6 - Baylor – Undefeated in New England
    • Oct 13 - Kansas State – Not ready for Prime Time
    • Oct 20 - No. 15 Kansas – Land of Opportunity
    • Oct 27 - Texas Tech – Last road win for four years – Top Ten lists
    • Nov 3 - #9 Missouri – Proving they’re for real
    • Nov 10 - Iowa State – Physically painful
    • Nov 23 - Nebraska – 65-51 win sends the Buffs bowling; Cornhuskers packing
    • Dec 30 - Independence Bowl Preview
    • Dec 31 - Independence Bowl – Alabama takes out Colorado
    • Post-Season – 2007 Review by position and by the numbers
  • 2006 Season
    • Preseason, 2006 – A New Coach, but Unchanged Expectations
    • Sep 2 - Montana State – “Quite simply, it was one of the worst losses in CU history”
    • Sep 9 - Colorado State – Buffs held to 146 yards of total offense
    • Sep 16 - No. 22 Arizona State – The Last Link to 1989
    • Sep 23 - No. 9 Georgia – The Quiet Bus Ride back to Atlanta
    • Sep 30 - No. 25 Missouri – Chasing Infamy
    • Oct 7 - Baylor – “It Builds Character … After It’s Finished Stinking”
    • Oct 14 - Texas Tech – Be True to Your School
    • Oct 21 - No. 20 Oklahoma – A Matter of Perception –
    • Oct 28 - Kansas – Buffs’ Offense Offensive … (Ryan) Miller Time
    • Nov 4 - Kansas State – Only Opportunity Left: Staving off Disaster
    • Nov 11 - Iowa State – Mason Crosby’s Senior Day Send-off
    • Nov 24 - No. 23 Nebraska and the Kansas City Chiefs – Seeing Red
  • 2005 Season
    • Aug 15 - Preseason – Buffs look for fourth title in five years
    • Sep 3 - Colorado State – Three-Peat over the Rams
    • Sep 10 - New Mexico State – Klatt Attack: Former walk-on leads Buffs to shut out win
    • Sep 24 - No. 12 Miami – Statement Game for Buffs
    • Oct 1 - Oklahoma State – “Cautious Optimism” Returns
    • Oct 8 - Texas A&M – Watching Buffs trash Aggies … from the Pressbox
    • Oct 15 - No. 2 Texas – Vince Young shows his Heisman-worthy talent
    • Oct 22 - Kansas – Klatt & Klopfenstein set records in a “Special” win
    • Oct 29 - Kansas State – The Process of Elimination
    • Nov 5 - Missouri – Lawrence Vickers – “V” is not only for “Versatile”
    • Nov 12 - Iowa State – Gone With the Wind
    • Nov 25 - Nebraska – Couch Potato Champions
    • Dec 3 - No. 2 Texas – Big 12 Championship Game – Gary Must Go
    • Dec 5 - Barnett out; Hawkins in – Seemed like a good move
    • Dec 27 - No. 23 Clemson – Champs Sports Bowl, a/k/a The Lack of Interest Bowl
  • 2004 Season
    • Preseason – Chronology of a “Sex Scandal” – Roster Issues; Schedule
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 2004 Season
    • Sep 4 - CSU – The Marcus Houston Game – “Win One for the Stripper”
    • Sep 11 - Washington State – Goal line stand preserves Buff win in Seattle
    • Sep 18 - North Texas – “Time Spent in the Lead”
    • Oct 2 - Missouri – A Very Un-Happy Birthday
    • Oct 9 - No. 22 Oklahoma State – Plus: The top five games of my first 25 years
    • Oct 16 - Iowa State – CU (3-2, 0-2) v. ISU 2-3 (0-2) … For the Big 12 North title
    • Oct 23 - No. 17 Texas A&M – Modern Technology
    • Oct 30 - No. 8 Texas – “We weren’t ready to play”
    • Nov 6 - Kansas – “Why Not Us?”
    • Nov 13 - Kansas State – Senior Day Parts I & II
    • Nov 26 - Nebraska – Cornhuskers finish 5-6; numerous records fall
    • Dec 4 - No. 2 Oklahoma – Big 12 Championship Game – Smoke and Mirrors
    • Dec 29 - Houston Bowl – CU v. UTEP – Goin’ back to Houston
    • National and Big 12 recap – USC and Matt Leinhart win the national championship
  • 2003 Season
    • Aug 10 - Preseason 2003 – CU offense returns only three starters
    • Aug 30 - No. 23 CSU – Joel Klatt sets records in an “Electrifying Performance”
    • Sep 6 - UCLA – Welcome home to Dorrell, Embree, and Bieniemy
    • Sep 13 - Washington State – Cougars first to post 45 in Folsom in 20 years
    • Sep 20 - No. 10 Florida State – “Manhandle in the Panhandle”
    • Oct 4 - Baylor – Bye-Bye Week
    • Oct 11 - Kansas – Happy Canadian Thanksgiving
    • Oct 18 - Kansas State – Northwestern Revisited – Barnett Part II?
    • Oct 25 - No. 1 Oklahoma – “I guess you have to take this as a moral victory”
    • Nov 1 - Texas Tech – Third Quarter Doldrums haunt Buffs
    • Nov 8 - No. 22 Missouri – Long Drive Contest
    • Nov 15 - Iowa State – Bowl talk returns after rout of Cyclones
    • Nov 28 - No. 25 Nebraska – So long, Frank Solich
    • Jan 10 - National and Big 12 recap – 2003 Season
  • 2002 Season
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 2002 Season
    • Aug 25 - Preseason – Buffs look to capitalize on 2001 championship
    • Aug 31 - Colorado State – Barnett O-fer Openers
    • Sep 7 - San Diego State – Meeting Marwan Hage
    • Sep 14 - No. 17 USC – Barnett: “Awful … Just Awful”
    • Sep 21 - No. 20 UCLA – Buffs take down Bruins in 99-degree heat
    • Oct 5 - No. 13 Kansas State – Hodge-Ball leads Buffs to upset
    • Oct 12 - Kansas – Chris Brown goes for a career-high 309 yards in rout
    • Oct 19 - Baylor – Buffs cruise to Big 12 North lead in shutout of Bears
    • Oct 26 - Texas Tech – Kliff Kingsbury: 65 passes; zero TD’s; four INT’s
    • Nov 2 - No. 2 Oklahoma – D-fiant in Norman
    • Nov 9 - Missouri – Kory Mossini: “That’s the fastest I have ever crawled”
    • Nov 16 - Iowa State – Houston, I don’t think we have any problems
    • Nov 29 - Nebraska – Brian Calhoun brings a Red Sunset to Lincoln
    • Dec 7 - No. 8 Oklahoma – Big 12 title game – History doesn’t repeat itself, it rhymes
    • Dec 28 - Wisconsin – Alamo Bowl – 2002 a Dramatic Act in three parts
    • Jan 10 - Black Friday – In one day, Colorado loses half of its backfield
  • 2001 Season
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 2001 Season
    • Preseason – CU ranked 27th despite 3-8 record in 2000
    • Aug 26 - Fresno State – Buffs “on the brink of disaster”
    • Sep 1 - No. 24 Colorado State – Relief
    • Sep 8 - San Jose State – Buffs amass 560 yards of offense in rout
    • Sep 15 - Washington State – Cancelled – Remembering September 11th
    • Sep 22 - Kansas – Chris Brown and Cortlen Johnson go for 100+ yards each
    • Oct 6 - No. 12 Kansas State – Ethan McLean Geiger
    • Oct 13 - No. 25 Texas A&M – “This one’s for Fred Casotti”
    • Oct 20 - No. 9 Texas – Bobby Pesavento in for Craig Ochs
    • Oct 27 - Oklahoma State – 33-yard two-point conversion lifts Buffs
    • Nov 3 - Missouri – Buffs spot Tigers to 14-0 lead before roaring back
    • Nov 10 - Iowa State – Cortlen Johnson records CU’s first-ever double/double
    • Nov 23 - No. 2 Nebraska – 62-36 — The score says it all!! —
    • Dec 1 - No. 3 Texas – Big 12 Championship Game – Buffs Claim Big 12 Title
    • Jan 1 - No. 2 Oregon – 2002 Fiesta Bowl – Duck Soup
  • 2000 Season
    • Recruiting 101 – Marcus Houston leads a top ranked CU Class
    • Preseason, 2000 – A Schedule from Hell: Five top 15 teams
    • Sep 2 - Colorado State – A Mile High Farewell
    • Sep 9 - No. 11 USC – Where have you gone, Ben Kelly?
    • Sep 16 - No. 9 Washington – 10:25 left in the First Quarter
    • Sep 30 - No. 5 Kansas State – The End of An Era
    • Oct 7 - Texas A&M – Freshman Craig Ochs wins in his first start
    • Oct 14 - No. 25 Texas – Buffs hang tough … for 55 minutes
    • Oct 21 - Kansas – “Our team has a choice to make”
    • Oct 28 - Oklahoma State – Six Freshman Starters Lead Buffs to Victory
    • Nov 4 - CU escapes Missouri with yet another “illegal” play
    • Nov 11 - Iowa State – Another One Bites the Dust
    • Nov 24 - No. 9 Nebraska – The Terrible Twos
  • 1999 Season
    • Gary Barnett Hired – Buffs to “Return to Dominance”
    • Aug 1 - Preseason, 1999 – Buffs looking for “A Season of Paybacks”
    • Sep 4 - CSU – Role reversal: “Return to Dominance” put on hold
    • Sep 11 - San Jose State – Gary Barnett collects first win in rout
    • Sep 18 - Kansas – A Sense of Optimism Returns
    • Sep 25 - Washington – Buffs v. Neuheisel – Round One
    • Oct 9 - Missouri – “A Tough Team to Love”
    • Oct 16 - Texas Tech – Who needs Ricky Williams?
    • Oct 23 - Iowa State – Cortlen Johnson goes for 185 yards on a windy day in Ames
    • Oct 30 - No. 24 Oklahoma – Mike Moschetti leads Buffs to upset of No. 24 Sooners
    • Nov 6 - No. 6 Kansas State – Be Careful What You Ask For
    • Nov 13 - Baylor – Buffs bowl-eligible in Year One of the Barnett Era
    • Nov 26 - No. 3 Nebraska – Buffs rally late; fall in overtime
    • Dec 31 - No. 25 Boston College – Insight.com Bowl blowout
    • National and Big 12 recap – Florida State the team of the ’90’s
  • 1998 Season
    • Preseason, 1998 – Buffs In Search of Redemption
    • Sep 5 - Buffs take down ranked Rams in Mile High rout
    • Sep 12 - Fresno State – Late Goal Line Stand preserves victory
    • Sep 19 - Utah State – Darrin Chiaverini scores twice in rout
    • Sep 26 - Baylor – Despite win: “We’re not a very good football team”
    • Oct 3 - Oklahoma – Buffs post fifth consecutive win in Norman
    • Oct 10 - Buffs hold No. 5 KSU 41 points under average (and still lose)
    • Oct 17 - No. 22 Texas Tech – Defense shines as CU becomes bowl-eligible
    • Oct 24 - Kansas – The Clock Strikes Midnight for Cinderella
    • Nov 7 - No. 18 Missouri – Say Goodbye to another Positive Streak
    • Nov 14 - Iowa State – Numbers games: 600; 29; and one
    • Nov 27 - No. 14 Nebraska – Interpretation
    • Dec 25 - Aloha Bowl – CU outscores Oregon / Rick Bolts; Barnett hired
    • 1998 National and Big 12 Recap – Tennessee wins the title
  • 1997 Season
    • Feb 9 - Preseason – CU choice for No. 1 in The Sporting News
    • Sep 6 - No. 23 Colorado State – The Rivalry Lesson
    • Sep 13 - No. 14 Michigan – Hail, No!
    • Sep 27 - Wyoming – Buffs need an unlikely finish to pull out win … “If you’ll excuse me”
    • Oct 4 - No. 21 Texas A&M – Yell Practice in Denver
    • Oct 11 - No. 20 Oklahoma State – Statistics are for Losers
    • Oct 18 - Kansas – “Relentlessly Positive” and A New Routine
    • Oct 25 - Texas – “Continue to Climb” theme works against the Longhorns
    • Nov 1 - Missouri – CU’s 56-0-2 streak against unranked conference opponents ends
    • Nov 8 - Iowa State – “Now or Never” – Buffs rally from 17-point deficit
    • Nov 15 - No. 10 Kansas State – Wildcats take over No. 2 spot in Big 12 North
    • Nov 28 - No. 2 Nebraska – “Phil! Pitch the Ball!! Phil!”
    • Dec 1 - Dr. Tom retires / Buffs forfeit the 1997 season
    • Dec 31 - National and Big 12 recap for 1997 Season – “Ralphie” and Me
  • 1996 Season
    • CU at the Game – Birth of a Notion
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 1996 Season
    • Aug 1 - Preseason 1996 – Mission: Possible
    • Aug 31 - Washington State – Buffs take out Ryan Leaf
    • Sep 7 - Colorado State – Buffs take out WAC champs in Ft. Collins
    • Sep 14 - No. 11 Michigan – ESPN GameDay crew on hand for Wolverines’ revenge
    • Sep 28 - Texas A&M – First-ever game in the Big 12 a Big success
    • Oct 12 - Oklahoma State – Rosga’s 105-yard interception return seals win
    • Oct 19 - Kansas – “Just Win, Baby!”
    • Oct 26 - Texas – Hessler & Rosga lead Buffs to comeback win over Longhorns
    • Nov 2 - Missouri – Detmer and Carruth set records in rout
    • Nov 9 - Iowa State – Second half scoring blitz allows Buffs to pull away
    • Nov 16 - No. 9 Kansas State – Despite victory, Buffs still in search of R-E-S-P-E-C-T
    • Nov 29 - No. 4 Nebraska – “Ooh, so Close”
    • Dec 3 - The $8 Million Dollar Extra Point / Rooting for Nebraska??
    • Dec 30 - Holiday Bowl – Buffs take down No. 13 Washington Huskies
    • Jan 5 - National and Big 12 recap – 1996
  • 1995 Season
    • Preseason – Rick Neuheisel hired / CU Preview
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 1995 Season
    • Sep 2 - No. 21 Wisconsin – Baptism by Fire
    • Sep 9 - Colorado State – Walter Mitty and Me
    • Sep 16 - NE Louisiana – Records fall like rain
    • Sep 23 - No. 3 Texas A&M – “Fightin’ Words” / Detmer Injured
    • Sep 30 - No. 10 Oklahoma – Hessler’s record-setting debut
    • Oct 7 - No. 24 Kansas – Time to focus on new goals
    • Oct 21 - Iowa State – A “lucky” 22-point win
    • Oct 28 - No. 2 Nebraska – ESPN Gameday on hand for Huskers win
    • Nov 4 - Oklahoma State – Neuheisel v. Simmons, Round One
    • Nov 11 - Missouri – Buffs post a shutout in 60 mph Boulder winds
    • Nov 18 - No. 7 Kansas State – Hessler comes through late
    • Jan 1 - No. 12 Oregon – The “Forgotten” Cotton Bowl
  • 1994 Season
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 1994 Season
    • Pre-season: 1994 – Adios, Southwest Conference – Colorado returns 16 starters
    • Sep 3 - Northeastern Louisiana – Break out the record books
    • Sep 17 - No. 10 Wisconsin – Badger Mania at Folsom
    • Sep 24 - No. 4 Michigan -The “Miracle In Michigan”
    • Oct 1 - No.16 Texas – On IV’s in Austin; On Oxygen in Bozeman
    • Oct 8 - Missouri – A break after three straight ranked opponents
    • Oct 15 - No. 22 Oklahoma – An Evening in Paradise
    • Oct 22 - No. 19 Kansas State – End of the Preliminaries
    • Oct 29 - No. 3 Nebraska – “Now What?”
    • Nov 5 - Oklahoma State – Lethargy the Buffs’ greatest opponent
    • Nov 12 - Kansas – Heisman Hype – BSN Prescience
    • Nov 19 - Iowa State – Salaam’s 2,055 overshadowed by Coach Mac
    • Mac’s announcement – Neuheisel hired / Salaam; Hudson honored
    • Jan 2 - Fiesta Bowl – Notre Dame – McCartney, Stewart & Salaam go out winners
  • 1993 Season
    • 1993 National and Big Eight Recap – “Hitting the Jackpot”
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 1993 Season
    • Preseason ’93 – CU takes on the nation’s most difficult schedule
    • Sep 4 - Texas – No. 11 Buffs Open with a Thumping of the Longhorns
    • Sep 11 - No. 24 Baylor – Buffs cruise past Bears in dominating fashion
    • Sep 18 - No. 20 Stanford – Cardinal scores 14 points late to stun Buffs
    • Sep 25 - No. 3 Miami – Buffs lose after a brawl; Stuart wins after all
    • Oct 9 - Missouri – Bill McCartney ties Fred Folsom for most wins
    • Oct 16 - No. 9 Oklahoma – Lamont Warren/Charles E. Johnson team up for national “Play-of-the-Year”
    • Oct 23 - Kansas State – 16 times three / Moving Day
    • Oct 30 - No. 6 Nebraska – “I can’t remember being this disappointed”
    • Nov 6 - Oklahoma St. – Kordell Stewart becomes CU all-time leading passer
    • Nov 13 - Kansas – Buff offense posts 598 yards of total offense in rout
    • Nov 20 - Iowa State – “A win is a win” – 1993 Season Honors
    • Dec 25 - Aloha Bowl vs. Fresno State – Buffs outscore Bulldogs on Christmas Day
  • 1992 Season
    • 1992 Season Preview – “Air Bill”
    • Sep 5 - Colorado State – Kordell Stewart sets numerous records in his first start
    • Sep 12 - Baylor – Buffs exact revenge for 1991 upset with 57-38 romp
    • Sep 19 - Minnesota – Detmer’s 1st game becomes 3rd-best comeback ever
    • Sep 26 - Iowa – Detmer; Defense help Buffs overcome six turnovers
    • Oct 8 - Missouri – First game in Columbia since 5th down game a Thursday night thriller
    • Oct 17 - Oklahoma – Koy Detmer’s first career start a record-setter
    • Oct 24 - Kansas State – Defense sets Big Eight records in 54-7 rout
    • Oct 31 - No. 8 Nebraska – The Halloween Massacre – (First mention of a “Pac-12”)
    • Nov 7 - Oklahoma State – Buff defense posts second shutout
    • Nov 14 - No. 20 Kansas – First game against a ranked Jayhawk team since 1975
    • Nov 21 - Iowa State – Records set by Stewart, Detmer, Westbrook, and Johnson
    • Jan 1 - No. 6 Syracuse – Fiesta Bowl – Lost luggage, lost jacket, lost holiday
  • 1991 Season
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 1991 Season
    • Sep 1 - Preseason 1991 – Conferences realign / Scouting the Nation
    • Sep 7 - Wyoming – Buffs up series record to 23-2-1
    • Sep 14 - No. 23 Baylor – Blocked kick leads to last minute loss
    • Sep 21 - Minnesota – Buffs roll up 612 yards in rout
    • Sep 28 - Stanford – Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes
    • Oct 12 - Missouri – Fear Factor
    • Oct 19 - No. 12 Oklahoma – Two 99-yard drives take down Sooners
    • Oct 26 - Kansas State – Nerves of Spaghetti
    • Nov 2 - No. 9 Nebraska – “We don’t go out in that kind of weather to play for a tie”
    • Nov 9 - Oklahoma State – A fake field goal saves Buffs
    • Nov 16 - Kansas – Vance Joseph leads Buffs back from two TD deficit
    • Nov 23 - Iowa State – “Three-peat” clinched before crowd of 2,500
    • Dec 28 - No. 8 Alabama – New CU offense not a Blockbuster in bowl game
  • 1990 Season
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 1990 Season
    • Aug 1 - Preseason – Expectations vs. The Schedule from Hell
    • Aug 26 - No. 8 Tennessee – Buffs tie Volunteers in Pigskin Classic
    • Sep 6 - Stanford – Bieniemy leap gives Buffs last minute win
    • Sep 15 - No. 21 Illinois – Preseason top ten Buffs fall to 1-1-1
    • Sep 22 - No. 22 Texas – Bieniemy rallies the troops in Austin
    • Sep 29 - No. 12 Washington – Deon Figures pick preserves win
    • Oct 6 - Missouri – The “Fifth Down” Game
    • Oct 13 - Iowa State – Buffs finally win without last minute heroics
    • Oct 20 - Kansas – Buffs become poll watchers after rout of Jayhawks
    • Oct 27 - No. 22 Oklahoma – The Return of Great Expectations
    • Nov 3 - No. 3 Nebraska – Bieniemy goes for four scores in 4th quarter rally
    • Nov 10 - Oklahoma State – Fate, once again, intervenes
    • Nov 17 - Kansas State – Passing the Torch
    • Dec 1 - Orange Bowl Preview: Cheer, Cheer for Old Notre Dame?
    • Jan 1 - No. 5 Notre Dame – Orange Bowl – National Champions!*
  • 1989 Season
    • Preseason – Sal Aunese at Spring Practice
    • A Look Back: A Game-by-Game Snapshot of the 1989 Season
    • Sep 4 - Texas – Hagan goes for 75 yards on 2nd play of the season
    • Sep 9 - Colorado State – Bieniemy goes for three scores in comeback win
    • Sep 16 - No. 10 Illinois – Jeff George falls / A Farewell to Sal
    • Sep 30 - No. 21 Washington – Road trip to Seattle – Buffs dominate
    • Oct 7 - Missouri – Buffs Taking Aim at No. 1
    • Oct 14 - Iowa State – Buffs roll up 662 yards of total offense
    • Oct 21 - Buffs take down Kansas – “Things Have Changed”
    • Oct 28 - Oklahoma – Getting a High Five in the Produce Aisle
    • Nov 4 - No. 3 Nebraska – “This is the greatest win I’ve been a part of”
    • Nov 11 - Oklahoma State – Buffs rally from 10-0 deficit to rout Cowboys
    • Nov 18 - Kansas State – Six weeks to History, the Buffs move up to No. 1
    • Video highlights from every game of the 1989 season
    • Jan 1 - No. 4 Notre Dame – Orange Bowl – “Opportunity Lost”
  • 1988 Season
    • Sep 1 - 1988 Preseason – New season; New goals
    • Sep 10 - Fresno State – Where is Everybody?
    • Sep 17 - No. 19 Iowa – Buffs’ first road win over a ranked team in nine years
    • Sep 24 - Oregon State – Bieniemy goes for 211 yards and three scores
    • Oct 1 - Colorado State – Cardiac Kids win in Ft. Collins
    • Oct 8 - No. 13 Oklahoma State – Watching Barry Sanders
    • Oct 15 - Kansas – Jayhawks a welcome tonic for Buffs
    • Oct 22 - No. 8 Oklahoma – First night game in Colorado history
    • Oct 29 - Iowa State – Buffs bounce back against Cyclones
    • Nov 5 - Missouri – “Buffs crack Top 20” – First ranking since 1978
    • Nov 12 - No. 7 Nebraska – 7-0 loss last shutout of the 20th century
    • Nov 19 - Kansas State – Freedom Bowl bound!
    • Dec 1 - Disneyland – Here I come!
    • Dec 28 - Colorado v. BYU – Freedom Bowl Blues
    • Dec 31 - Scalped in San Diego / Happy Endings
  • 1987 Season
    • Aug 25 - 1987 Preseason – “Breaking Away” – Buffs hope to build on 1986 success
    • Sep 12 - Oregon – Just when it was getting good …
    • Sep 19 - Stanford – Fred Casotti – Fun with initials
    • Sep 26 - Washington State – Sal Aunese makes an impression
    • Oct 3 - Colorado State – Buffs take down Rams in rare game in Ft. Collins
    • Oct 10 - No. 19 Okla. St. – Thurman Thomas and Barry Sanders run up the score on Buffs
    • Oct 17 - Kansas – Buffs pile up 546 yards on Jayhawks
    • Oct 24 - No. 1 Oklahoma – Buffs garner national respect
    • Oct 31 - Iowa State – Sal Aunese accounts for four scores in rout
    • Nov 7 - Missouri – Small victories: Buffs claim fourth in the Big Eight
    • Nov 21 - Kansas State – Schedule changes doom bowl hopes
    • Nov 28 - No. 5 Nebraska – Brad incites Cornhusker fans
  • 1986 Season
    • “Great Expectations” – Predictions for the 1986 season
    • Sep 6 - Colorado State – Off to a bad start
    • Sep 13 - Oregon – Words cannot describe …
    • Sep 20 - Ohio State – Golfing, but listening …
    • Sep 27 - No. 10 Arizona – No wins … No hope?
    • Oct 11 - Missouri – John Nairn saves the day
    • Oct 18 - Iowa State – 1-4 Buffs roll 4-1 Cyclones
    • Oct 25 - No. 3 Nebraska – The Signature Win of All Signature Wins
    • Nov 1 - Oklahoma State – Buffs rally from 14-3 deficit to rout Cowboys
    • Nov 8 - Kansas – Buff defense preserves early 17-0 lead
    • Nov 15 - No. 4 Oklahoma – Goaaalllposts … Goaaalllposts!
    • Nov 22 - Kansas State – Despite 6-1 Big 8 record, Buffs sweat out bowl bid
    • Dec 31 - No. 14 Baylor – Bluebonnet Bowl – “On the Road Again”
  • 1985 Season
    • Aug 28 - Shifting Gears For 1985 Season: Wishbone = Wishful Thinking
    • Sep 7 - Colorado State – Off on the right foot
    • Sep 14 - Oregon – “I think that could be a turning point for our program”
    • Sep 21 - No. 7 Ohio State – “We’re going to recover, I can tell you that”
    • Sep 28 - Arizona – Buffs back among “Others receiving votes”
    • Oct 12 - Missouri – Finally, payback for coach McCartney
    • Oct 19 - Iowa State – Buffs make it look easy
    • Oct 26 - No. 5 Nebraska – Road trip to Lincoln and Kansas City
    • Nov 2 - No. 12 Oklahoma State – Defense gives Buffs a chance
    • Nov 9 - Kansas – “CU on Independence Bowl list” – Dan McMillen sets two records
    • Nov 16 - No. 7 Oklahoma – Buffs run into nation’s No.1 defense
    • Nov 23 - Kansas State – Buffs “Bowled over” after shutout win
    • Dec 30 - Washington – Freedom Bowl – Fake punt!
  • 1984 Season
    • 1984 National and Big Eight Recap / One L
    • 1984 Preseason – Cautious Optimism / Recruiting Watch
    • Sep 8 - Michigan State – “Home Games”
    • Sep 15 - Oregon – The Ed Reinhardt Game
    • Sep 22 - Notre Dame – Golden Dome rout
    • Sep 29 - UCLA – “Coach Whitehair” gets re-acquainted with Coach Bill
    • Oct 6 - Missouri – Coach Mac falls to 0-3 against his alma mater
    • Oct 13 - Iowa State – Buffs ploy on fourth-and-one preserves victory
    • Oct 20 - No. 5 Nebraska – “You tell ’em, Bill!”
    • Oct 27 - No. 10 Oklahoma State – Denver Post: “Close, but …”
    • Nov 3 - Kansas – Craig Keenan passes for 349 yards
    • Nov 10 - No. 9 Oklahoma – Brian Bosworth comes to Boulder
    • Nov 17 - K-State – Coach Mac receives a contract extension: “Belief without evidence”
  • 1983 Season
    • Sep 1 - National and Big Eight Recap – “Salesman Bill” McCartney
    • Sep 2 - Preseason Outlook – Mac’s first Recruiting Class
    • Sep 10 - Michigan State – Coach Mac returns to his home state
    • Sep 17 - Colorado State – Rivalry? What Rivalry?
    • Sep 24 - Oregon State – “Here we go CU, Here we go!”
    • Oct 1 - Notre Dame – Taking the LSAT
    • Oct 8 - Missouri – “I thought we’d bounce back …”
    • Oct 15 - Iowa State – Third straight loss to the Cyclones
    • Oct 22 - No. 1 Nebraska – Record quarter dooms CU’s upset bid
    • Oct 29 - Oklahoma State – Vogel: 0-for-7; three interceptions
    • Nov 5 - Kansas – Marshall and McLemore lead Buffs to victory
    • Nov 12 - Oklahoma – Buffs 28-7 rally not enough to take down Sooners
    • Nov 19 - Kansas State – Victor Scott and the “Survivors” go out winners
  • 1982 Season
    • Jun 9 - The Hiring of Bill McCartney – The Unlikely Choice
    • Sep 11 - California – Bill McCartney’s debut not as successful as hoped
    • Sep 18 - Washington State – “Did you hear?” – Coach Mac’s first win
    • Sep 25 - Wyoming – Second loss ever to the Cowboys
    • Oct 2 - No. 9 UCLA – “Hey – Don’t I know you from somewhere?”
    • Oct 9 - No. 7 Nebraska – In Search of a Rival – Meeting coach Bill McCartney
    • Oct 16 - Oklahoma State – It Must have been the Tie
    • Oct 23 - Iowa State – Ineffective offense dooms Buffs to inevitable loss
    • Oct 30 - No. 17 Oklahoma – Progress in small doses
    • Nov 6 - Missouri – Homecoming for Coach Mac not pretty
    • Nov 13 - Kansas – The goalposts come down at Folsom
    • Nov 20 - Kansas State – Wildcats earn first-ever bowl bid
    • Jan 1 - National and Big Eight recap – 1982 Season (Cal/Stanford band game)
  • 1981 Season
    • Sep 5 - Nowhere to go but up / Blue and gold uniforms
    • Sep 12 - Texas Tech – Walter Stanley – Hope Springs Eternal
    • Sep 19 - Washington State – “You’ve got to be kidding me”
    • Sep 26 - No. 11 BYU – Pick your poison – McMahon replaced by Young
    • Oct 3 - No. 16 UCLA – Bruins stuff Buffs
    • Oct 10 - Nebraska – Turner Gill makes his debut
    • Oct 17 - Oklahoma State – Steve Vogel leads improbable comeback
    • Oct 24 - No. 14 Iowa State – Buffs face a ranked Cyclone team
    • Oct 31 - No. 19 Oklahoma – Buffs hold Sooners without a completed pass
    • Nov 7 - Missouri – Essington back as starter (not a good move)
    • Nov 14 - Kansas – Rocky Mountain News: Colorado “A sorry state”
    • Nov 21 - Kansas State – Fairbanks goes out a winner
    • May, 1982 – Fair Weather Fairbanks – “The End of an Error”
  • 1980 Season
    • “Fanaticism” – 1970’s overview – Chuck Fairbanks
    • Sep 1 - The Book Which Became a Website – An Introduction to CU at the Game
    • Sep 13 - UCLA – Buffs down 56-0 … at halftime!
    • Sep 20 - LSU – “Buffs Gain Pride But Not Win”
    • Sep 27 - Indiana – My first home game / Sports Illustrated & Chuck Fairbanks’ desk
    • Oct 4 - No. 12 Oklahoma – 82-42 – Open up the record books
    • Oct 11 - Drake … Beneath Nadir, or, “Who the Hell is Drake?”
    • Oct 18 - No. 16 Missouri – The Origins of Homecoming
    • Oct 25 - No. 9 Nebraska – What are our school colors again?
    • Nov 1 - Iowa State – First win (only win) of a record-setting season
    • Nov 8 - Oklahoma State – Buffs “Healers to the Sick”
    • Nov 15 - Kansas – “We’re just a very poor football team right now”
    • Nov 21 - Kansas State – 17,750 on hand for battle for last place
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