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  • Three takeaways from No. 7 TCU’s baseball series finale against No. 1 UCLA

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    TCU head coach Kirk Saarloos sits in the back of the dugout during game two of the NCAA super regional between TCU and Indiana State at Lupton Stadium in Fort Worth, Texas, on Saturday June 10, 2023. Indiana State led 2-0 going into the fourth inning. The game was delayed two hours due to weather. TCU defeated Indians State 6-4 to move on to the College World Series in Omaha.

    TCU head coach Kirk Saarloos sits in the back of the dugout during game two of the NCAA super regional between TCU and Indiana State at Lupton Stadium in Fort Worth, Texas, on Saturday June 10, 2023. Indiana State led 2-0 going into the fourth inning. The game was delayed two hours due to weather. TCU defeated Indians State 6-4 to move on to the College World Series in Omaha.

    Special to the Star-Telegram

    The much anticipated top 10 matchup between No. 1 UCLA and No. 7 TCU was dominated by the Bruins through the first two games, and the Horned Frogs couldn’t buck that trend in a 15-5 loss to UCLA.

    It was a back-and-forth game for much of the day at Jackie Robinson Stadium in Los Angeles, but the Bruins broke the game open in the sixth with a four-run inning — three of those runs coming off Noah Franco in his first pitching appearance since the team’s second game against Arkansas — that gave them a 9-4 lead .

    TCU’s Sawyer Strosnider came into the game hitting 3 for 8 with and RBI, a run scored and a walk through the first two games with UCLA and had his best game of the series on Sunday going 2 for 2 with two RBIs and three runs scored with a home run, a triple and two walks.

    Strosnider helped spark an offense that scored more runs by the fifth inning of Sunday’s game (4) than they had in the previous two games combined (3).

    Horned Frogs chase Stump early

    Over the first two games of the series Bruins starting pitchers had been lights out, giving up a combined two runs off eight hits in 10 innings with 14 strikeouts.

    The Horned Frogs bucked that trend on Sunday chasing UCLA’s Landon Stump from the game before the third inning’s conclusion and having their most successful offensive game of the series.

    Stump gave up three runs off four hits with two walks in 2.1 innings of work. In Stump’s final inning Sawyer Strosnider got the scoring going with a triple that scored Cole Cramer. The next batter, Chase Brunson, would hit a single, scoring Strosnider — which would be Stump’s last batter faced of the day.

    This was the first multi-run inning in the series for the Horned Frogs offense.

    Uli Fernsler makes collegiate debut

    Freshman Uli Fernsler made his first start for the Horned Frogs, and similar to Stump it was a short stint.

    Fernsler gave up three runs off three hits with one strikeout in two innings of work, with the Bruins using the long ball to attack the young pitcher.

    The runs Fernsler gave up came when Will Gasparino, with a man on base, and Dominic Cadiz had back-to-back home runs in the second which put the Bruins up 3-1 when he exited the game.

    TCU bats wake up

    Sunday’s game was by far the liveliest of the series with the Horned Frogs and Bruins both taking leads and each side tying the game and the Horned Frogs offense having their best showing.

    TCU took the early lead after Strosnider and Nolan Traeger executed a double steal which caused the UCLA defender to fumble with the ball allowing the Horned Frogs to take the early lead in the first inning.

    TCU ended the game with seven hits and five runs scored and was a step in the right direction for an offense that had been scuttling over the past few games.

    TCU will be back in action against Loyola Marymount at 3 p.m. on Monday at Page Stadium.

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    Lawrence Dow is a digital sports reporter from Philadelphia. He graduated with a master’s degree in journalism from USC. He’s passionate about movies and is always looking for a great book. He covers the Texas Rangers and other sports.

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  • Three takeaways from No. 7 TCU baseball’s series opener against No. 1 UCLA

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    TCU entered Friday’s game against No. 1 UCLA looking to avoid a three-game losing streak after dropping back-to-back games against unranked opponents.

    The trend continued with their 10-2 loss to UCLA.

    TCU head coach Kirk Saarloos said — during the broadcast on FS1 — his team would need its veterans to step up to try and help the Horned Frogs get back on track.

    “We haven’t really got off to the start we wanted to. We started the first two days well, and haven’t played good since. So we’re going to need these veteran guys to kind of weather the storm a little bit here,” said Saarloos.

    Top Horned Frogs out of commission

    The Horned Frogs suffered a major blow when ace Tommy LaPour was sidelined for this series with elbow soreness and will be re-evaluated in a couple of weeks.

    LaPour was the preseason Big 12 Pitcher of the Year and got his season off to a strong start against Vanderbilt, giving up two runs off fives hits in five innings of work with five strikeouts.

    TCU was also missing the reigning Big 12 Pitcher of the Week, Noah Franco, who was out of the game against the Bruins with an oblique injury.

    Without LaPour, TCU turned to Mason Brassfield as their Friday night starter, how did he fare?

    Bruins bounce Brassfield in second inning

    Brassfield did not give up any runs in the first inning: He forced a pop-up to end the inning after allowing back-to-back singles.

    The next inning Brassfield would not be so lucky, after allowing a lead off double to Aiden Aguayo, Will Gasparino came up one batter later and hit his own double that scored the Bruins’ first run of the game.

    The Bruins inning continued with a single and a hit by pitch that loaded the bases for Roch Cholowsky, the presumptive No. 1 pick in the upcoming MLB Draft, Cholowsky broke the inning open with a grand slam that put the Bruins up 5-0.

    Brassfield allowed two more base runners before being pulled for Tyler Phenow.

    Pitching has been a problem for the Horned Frogs in their last three games, with the team giving up a total of 33 runs.

    Saarloos talked about the team’s struggles and injuries after a starting the season with back-to-back wins.

    “We got to keep playing. I mean, we haven’t last couple outings, last couple games, we’ve gotten off to really poor starts with our starting pitching, again tonight obviously, they end up getting seven in the first three [innings],but we got to keep playing. I mean, nobody’s going to feel sorry for injuries or stuff like that. We got to be able to overcome those things,” said Saarloos.

    Horned Frogs hitters stymied

    UCLA pitcher Logan Reddemann had a career day against TCU. He struck out ten Horned Frogs and gave up only one run off five hits in five innings of work.

    TCU’s first run of the game came off a Chase Brunson home run. TCU went hitless with runners in scoring position and went 2 for 16 with runners on base as the offense failed to get into rhythm against the nation’s top team.

    TCU will continue the three-game series at UCLA at 4 p.m. Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday. The Horned Frogs will then stay in Los Angeles and play their next game against Loyola Marymount at 3 p.m. Monday at Page Stadium.


    Game schedule dates, times, locations

    • Feb. 3 Boston 110, Mavericks 100
    • Feb. 5 San Antonio 135, Mavericks 123
    • Feb. 7 San Antonio 138, Mavericks 125
    • Feb. 10 Phoenix 120, Mavericks 111
    • Feb. 12 L.A. Lakers 124, Mavericks 104
    • Feb. 20 at Minnesota, 6:30 p.m., ESPN, KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 22 at Indiana, 4 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 24 at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 26 vs. Sacramento, 6:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 27 vs. Memphis, 7:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 1 Colorado 87, TCU 61
    • Feb. 7 TCU 84, Kansas State 82
    • Feb. 10 TCU 62, Iowa State 55
    • Feb. 14 TCU 95, Oklahoma State 92 (OT)
    • Feb. 17 Central Florida 82, TCU 71
    • Feb. 21 vs. West Virginia, 4 p.m., Peacock
    • Feb. 24 vs. Arizona State, 8 p.m., CBSSN
    • Feb. 28 at Kansas State, 5:30 p.m., ESPN2
    • March 3 at Texas Tech, 6 p.m., FS1
    • March 7 vs. Cincinnati, 1 p.m., TNT
    • Feb. 1 Texas Tech 62, TCU 60
    • Feb. 4 TCU 90, Houston 45
    • Feb. 8 Colorado 80, TCU 79
    • Feb. 12 TCU 83, Baylor 67
    • Feb. 15 TCU 59, West Virginia 50
    • Feb. 18 TCU 72, Houston 50
    • Feb. 22 vs. Iowa State, 3 p.m., ESPN
    • Feb. 25 at Cincinnati, 5:30 p.m., ESPN+
    • March 1 vs. Baylor, 3 p.m., ESPN
    • March 4-8 Big 12 tournament (at Kansas City, Mo.), TBA
    • Feb. 13 TCU 5, Vanderbilt 4
    • Feb. 14 TCU 5, Arkansas 4
    • Feb. 15 Oklahoma 12, TCU 2 (seven innings)
    • Feb. 17 UT Arlington 11, TCU 8
    • Feb. 20 at UCLA, 7 p.m., FS1
    • Feb. 21 at UCLA, 4 p.m., BigTen+
    • Feb. 22 at UCLA, 3 p.m., BigTen+
    • Feb. 23 at Loyola Marymount, 3 p.m., none
    • Feb. 27 vs. New Haven, 6 p.m., ESPN+
    • Feb. 28 vs. New Haven, 2 p.m., ESPN+
    • March 1 vs. New Haven, 1 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 27 Stars 4, St. Louis 3
    • Jan. 29 Stars 5, Vegas 4 (SO)
    • Jan. 31 Stars 3, Utah 2
    • Feb. 2 Stars 4, Winnipeg 3 (OT)
    • Feb. 4 Stars 5, St. Louis 4
    • Olympic break
    • Feb. 25 vs. Seattle, 7 p.m., Fox, Victory+
    • Feb. 28 vs. Nashville, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • March 2 at Vancouver, 9 p.m., Victory+
    • March 3 at Calgary, 8 p.m., Victory+
    • March 6 vs. Colorado, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • 2026 season
    • Aug. 29 vs. North Carolina (at Dublin), TBA
    • Sept. 12 vs. Grambling State, TBA
    • Sept. 19 vs. Arkansas State, TBA
    • Sept. 26 at Central Florida, TBA
    • Oct. 3 vs. BYU, TBA
    • Oct. 17 at Baylor, TBA
    • Oct. 24 vs. West Virginia, TBA
    • Oct. 31 vs. Kansas, TBA
    • Nov. 7 at Arizona, TBA
    • Nov. 14 vs. Kansas State, TBA
    • Nov. 21 vs. Utah, TBA
    • Nov. 28 at Texas Tech, TBA
    • 2026 season
    • TBA vs. TBA (at Rio de Janeiro), TBA
    • 2026 opponents (dates and times TBA; one home game will be in Rio)
    • vs. N.Y Giants
    • vs. Philadelphia
    • vs. Washington
    • vs. Arizona
    • vs. San Francisco
    • vs. Tampa Bay
    • vs. Jacksonville
    • vs. Tennessee
    • vs. Baltimore
    • at N.Y Giants
    • at Philadelphia
    • at Washington
    • at L.A. Rams
    • at Seattle
    • at Green Bay
    • at Houston
    • at Indianapolis
    • Feb. 21 Team Texas-David Starr’s Racing School
    • March 6-7 Goodguys: 16th LMC Truck Spring Lone Star Nationals
    • March 12-15 Steak Cookoff Association World Championships
    • March 14 NASCAR Racing Experience
    • March 20-21 POWRi Racing
    • March 28 Mopar Heaven
    • April 11 NASCAR Racing Experience
    • April 18 Team Texas-David Starr’s Racing School
    • April 18 Bubble Run
    • April 23-25 Pate Swap Meet
    • April 25 FuelFest
    • April 30-May 2 High Limit Racing Stockyard Stampede
    • May 1 NASCAR Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 250
    • May 2 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: Andy’s Frozen Custard 340
    • May 3 NASCAR Cup Series: Wurth 400

    This story was originally published February 20, 2026 at 10:33 PM.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow is a digital sports reporter from Philadelphia. He graduated with a master’s degree in journalism from USC. He’s passionate about movies and is always looking for a great book. He covers the Texas Rangers and other sports.

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  • Three takeaways from TCU baseball’s mercy-rule game against Oklahoma

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    No. 10 TCU baseball started the season with back-to-back ranked wins in the Shriners Children’s College Showdown, but that momentum faltered in a 12-2 loss to unranked Oklahoma on Sunday night at Globe Life Field. The game ended after seven innings on the 10-run mercy rule.

    The Sooners’ offensive outburst against the Horned Frogs came as no surprise, as they dominated the tournament, scoring 20 runs in their first two games and winning by a combined margin of 16 runs (10-3 over Texas Tech on Friday and 10-1 over Oklahoma State on Saturday).

    TCU coach Kirk Saarloos didn’t mince words when talking about what went wrong for the Horned Frogs.

    “We were a step slow on everything, and the game will humble you really fast,” he said. “They played exactly the style of baseball that we like to play. And I thought we were a step slow, and it always starts with starting pitching, but I thought we were a step slow on defense, a step slow in the box.

    “We don’t play good defense, we don’t pitch the ball at all, and we didn’t really do anything offensively. So the game will kick you right in the crotch and let you know really fast if you don’t show up ready to play every single day.”

    Despite the loss, TCU still put together a solid opening weekend with a pair of 5-4 victories over No. 23 Vanderbilt on Friday and No. 7 Arkansas on Saturday.

    TCU (2-1) will next play UT Arlington (0-3) at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Globe Life Field.

    Here are three takeaways from Sunday’s loss:

    Lance Davis makes first career start

    Arkansas transfer Lance Davis had his first start of his college career and struggled, giving up fours runs on five hits with one strikeout in three innings of work.

    The right-hander’s troubles started after back-to-back walks in the first inning loaded the bases, which ultimately yielded two runs, though Davis avoided a disastrous inning by stranding runners on second and third with a groundout. Camden Johnson’s two-run homer in the second inning put the Sooners in front 4-1.

    The TCU bullpen didn’t fare much better, allowing seven runs in the fourth and fifth innings.

    TCU bats falter in finale

    Sooners starting pitcher Cord Rager gave the Horned Frogs fits, allowing one run off two hits with eight strikeouts in five innings.

    The Horned Frogs had few scoring chances against Rager. TCU only had four at-bats with runners in scoring position, but was unable to get any hits in those high-leverage situations.

    “They pounded us in,” Saarloos said. “They pounded our righties in. The lefties they threw in a little bit, too, and, you know, they got to give credit to them. They threw the ball really well. But overall, I think when you get down, whatever the score was, it makes things a little bit more difficult, not impossible. We didn’t do enough to get back in the game.”

    One of the Horned Frogs’ best chances came in the top of the fifth inning with runners on first and second with one out, but left fielder Cole Eaton lined out and second baseman Cole Cramer struck out swinging.

    Next great TCU freshman?

    Last season, utility player Noah Franco and outfielder Sawyer Strosnider were All-Big 12 selections in their first year in Fort Worth, and TCU might’ve found its next great freshman sensation in Lucas Franco.

    The shortstop from Katy was a highly touted recruit, No. 5 in the state of Texas according to Perfect Game, and played like it in his first two games as a Horned Frog, going 2-for-6 with a home run, an RBI and three runs.

    Franco went 0-for-2 with a walk and a run against the Sooners.

    Franco talked about setting an example for younger players after the win over Vanderbilt.

    “Just kind of keeping everybody even-keeled. We took a lot of importance on any distractions, just cutting them out and everybody staying in one lane, going the same direction,” Franco said. “So, everyone’s done a great job of that, and I kind of took it upon myself to show it to the freshmen, who kind of everybody’s going to get kind of in their head about preseason and rankings and all that stuff. I just kind of wanted to show them that — don’t worry about that stuff. Go play.”

    Saarloos said he wasn’t surprised by how Franco has played.

    “Played really good short,” Saarloos said. “I mean, sometimes it’s hard. Your first game you’re the shortstop, your emotions are going, but he’s kind of been that way in fall practice. Nothing’s really been too much for him. I thought he took really good at-bats.”


    Game schedule dates, times, locations

    • Feb. 3 Boston 110, Mavericks 100
    • Feb. 5 San Antonio 135, Mavericks 123
    • Feb. 7 San Antonio 138, Mavericks 125
    • Feb. 10 Phoenix 120, Mavericks 111
    • Feb. 12 L.A. Lakers 124, Mavericks 104
    • Feb. 20 at Minnesota, 6:30 p.m., ESPN, KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 22 at Indiana, 4 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 24 at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 26 vs. Sacramento, 6:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 27 vs. Memphis, 7:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Jan. 28 Houston 79, TCU 70
    • Feb. 1 Colorado 87, TCU 61
    • Feb. 7 TCU 84, Kansas State 82
    • Feb. 10 TCU 62, Iowa State 55
    • Feb. 14 TCU 95, Oklahoma State 92 (OT)
    • Feb. 17 at Central Florida, 6 p.m., ESPN+
    • Feb. 21 vs. West Virginia, 4 p.m., Peacock
    • Feb. 24 vs. Arizona State, 8 p.m., CBSSN
    • Feb. 28 at Kansas State, 5:30 p.m., ESPN2
    • March 3 at Texas Tech, 6 p.m., FS1
    • Jan. 29 TCU 79, Kansas 77
    • Feb. 1 Texas Tech 62, TCU 60
    • Feb. 4 TCU 90, Houston 45
    • Feb. 8 Colorado 80, TCU 79
    • Feb. 12 TCU 83, Baylor 67
    • Feb. 15 vs. West Virginia, 7 p.m., FS1
    • Feb. 18 at Houston, 6:30 p.m., ESPN+
    • Feb. 22 vs. Iowa State, 3 p.m., ESPN
    • Feb. 25 at Cincinnati, 5:30 p.m., ESPN+
    • March 1 vs. Baylor, 3 p.m., ESPN
    • Feb. 13 TCU 5, Vanderbilt 4
    • Feb. 14 TCU 5, Arkansas 4
    • Feb. 15 vs. Oklahoma (at Globe Life Field in Arlington), 6:30 p.m., FloSports.TV
    • Feb. 17 vs. UT Arlington (at Globe Life Field in Arlington), 7 p.m., none
    • Feb. 20 at UCLA, 7 p.m., FS1
    • Feb. 21 at UCLA, 4 p.m., BigTen+
    • Feb. 22 at UCLA, 3 p.m., BigTen+
    • Jan. 27 Stars 4, St. Louis 3
    • Jan. 29 Stars 5, Vegas 4 (SO)
    • Jan. 31 Stars 3, Utah 2
    • Feb. 2 Stars 4, Winnipeg 3 (OT)
    • Feb. 4 Stars 5, St. Louis 4
    • Olympic break
    • Feb. 25 vs. Seattle, 7 p.m., Fox, Victory+
    • Feb. 28 vs. Nashville, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • March 2 at Vancouver, 9 p.m., Victory+
    • March 3 at Calgary, 8 p.m., Victory+
    • March 6 vs. Colorado, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • 2026 season
    • Aug. 29 vs. North Carolina (at Dublin), TBA
    • Sept. 12 vs. Grambling State, TBA
    • Sept. 19 vs. Arkansas State, TBA
    • Sept. 26 at Central Florida, TBA
    • Oct. 3 vs. BYU, TBA
    • Oct. 17 at Baylor, TBA
    • Oct. 24 vs. West Virginia, TBA
    • Oct. 31 vs. Kansas, TBA
    • Nov. 7 at Arizona, TBA
    • Nov. 14 vs. Kansas State, TBA
    • Nov. 21 vs. Utah, TBA
    • Nov. 28 at Texas Tech, TBA
    • 2026 season
    • TBA vs. TBA (at Rio de Janeiro), TBA
    • 2026 opponents (dates and times TBA; one home game will be in Rio)
    • vs. N.Y Giants
    • vs. Philadelphia
    • vs. Washington
    • vs. Arizona
    • vs. San Francisco
    • vs. Tampa Bay
    • vs. Jacksonville
    • vs. Tennessee
    • vs. Baltimore
    • at N.Y Giants
    • at Philadelphia
    • at Washington
    • at L.A. Rams
    • at Seattle
    • at Green Bay
    • at Houston
    • at Indianapolis
    • Feb. 21 Team Texas-David Starr’s Racing School
    • March 6-7 Goodguys: 16th LMC Truck Spring Lone Star Nationals
    • March 12-15 Steak Cookoff Association World Championships
    • March 14 NASCAR Racing Experience
    • March 20-21 POWRi Racing
    • March 28 Mopar Heaven
    • April 11 NASCAR Racing Experience
    • April 18 Team Texas-David Starr’s Racing School
    • April 18 Bubble Run
    • April 23-25 Pate Swap Meet
    • April 25 FuelFest
    • April 30-May 2 High Limit Racing Stockyard Stampede
    • May 1 NASCAR Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 250
    • May 2 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: Andy’s Frozen Custard 340
    • May 3 NASCAR Cup Series: Wurth 400

    This story was originally published February 15, 2026 at 10:26 PM.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow is a digital sports reporter from Philadelphia. He graduated with a master’s degree in journalism from USC. He’s passionate about movies and is always looking for a great book. He covers the Texas Rangers and other sports.

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  • Three takeaways from TCU’s baseball game against Arkansas

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    After winning the season opener, No. 10 TCU was looking to continue its early-season success, and Chase Brunson got a quick start in the team’s 5-4 win over the No. 7 Arkansas Razorbacks on Saturday.

    The Horned Frogs have made a statement with two wins over ranked teams to start the season.

    Saturday night, pitcher/utility player Noah Franco talked about what the wins mean early on.

    “We knew we had the talent coming in. We were a good ball club, now we’re good ball brothers. We’re all coming together and playing like one. Yesterday, we’re getting punched in the face, and we’re coming right back,” Franco said. “There’s nothing really affecting us in the dugout, practice, any of that, we’re all in together.“

    Centerfielder Brunson went 2 for 4 with three RBIs and a run scored. But it wasn’t just him. The entire Horned Frogs offense got off to a hot start, scoring two runs in two of the first three innings, then one in the ensuing six to open the door for Arkansas.

    Brunson talked about the key to getting off to a fast start.

    “Just get going early and stay going. Our offense is dangerous, and we got a lot of talent on it, so once one guy gets hot, the rest of the lineup will continue to grow and continue to get on base,” said Brunson.

    Franco strong out of the bullpen

    Franco is hitless in eight at-bats to start the season, but the two-way player showed off his bona fides with his first stint out of the bullpen.

    Head coach Kirk Saarloos talked about Franco’s two-way impact.

    “Noah’s great like that, like last year, I remember a couple times he didn’t have the best outing, and then he would come back in, in the DH spot and hit a homer or two. So he doesn’t let one affect the other. He’s gonna get his hits, It’s just a matter of time,” said Saarloos, “He’s gonna get going offensively. We have no doubt in our mind about it.

    “When we came into the season, when we would DH him, we thought we’d use him [as a pitcher], I wasn’t planning on using him quite as long as I did, but after the eighth inning, he rolled back to the dugout and looked me in the eyes and said, ‘I’m not coming out.’”

    Franco explained why he wanted to stay in the game.

    “How competitive I am in that type of situation, I knew I’m not gonna just try to hand it off to the next person on there. I got called for a reason,” Franco said. “Because of the top talent on the field, and I knew I had capability.”

    Franco relieved Zack James, who gave up two earned runs in two innings pitched and was TCU’s best pitcher on the day. He gave up no runs or hits with four strikeouts in three innings of work, also earning the win.

    Wasted opportunities

    Mason Broomfield gave up two runs in four innings of work off three hits with six strikeouts.

    Broomfield’s final stats may belie how much he had to work throughout the game. He had four walks and struggled to consistently find the strike zone, but when it mattered most, he stymied the Razorbacks.

    One of Arkansas’ best chances came in the third inning with the bases loaded and only one out. The Razorbacks got a fielder’s choice to score a run, but a second fielder’s choice by Aloy Kuhio ended the inning without further damage.

    Another great opportunity came in the fourth inning after an overturned call put Ryder Helfrick up with the bases loaded. Broomfield forced Helfrick to hit a soft ground out and TCU escaped the inning.

    The Razorbacks went 0 for 5 with runners in scoring position and 0 for 9 with runners on base against Broomfield and didn’t fare much better versus the other Horned Frogs pitchers, with only one hit all game with runners on base or in scoring position.

    Saarloos talked about how his pitching staff avoided giving up a big inning.

    “I think it comes down to toughness, like we’ve been talking a bunch about that, [what] you’re going to come up with in situations where you got to be resilient and kind of put the past in the past and be able to move to the next pitch and be 100% behind that pitch.

    “And I think that’s that’s key when you have a good offensive club and a great club over there, you got to make pitches. And for the most part, I thought we made some pretty good pitches.”

    TCU will play Oklahoma at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at Globe Life Field.

    This story was originally published February 14, 2026 at 11:17 PM.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow is a digital sports reporter from Philadelphia. He graduated with a master’s degree in journalism from USC. He’s passionate about movies and is always looking for a great book. He covers the Texas Rangers and other sports.

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  • Houston still just a basketball school. Should Big 12 want do-over on expansion?

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    In the same season the University of Houston Cougars football team finished 10-3, beat LSU in the Texas Bowl and were No. 21 in the final College Football Playoff rankings, they were last in the Big 12 in home attendance, and 72nd nationally.

    And this is in a nice, pretty on-campus facility, not the old, dumpy Astrodome (although the Astrodome is still up, which is another story).

    Houston is one of the more perplexing examples of college sports’ conference expansion, and the impossibility of determining “value.” Since it was left out of the formation of the original Big 12 in 1996, the school spent feverishly to rejoin the world of major college athletics, and now that the Cougars are here, it has an ‘80s feel.

    The Cougars are still a “basketball school.”

    This year marks the five-year anniversary of the Big 12’s invitation to BYU, Houston, Cincinnati and Central Florida to join the league, a decision that was made two months after Texas and Oklahoma announced plans to leave for the SEC.

    This is one of the those, “Knowing what you know now,” would league commissioner Brett Yormark want a do-over on adding these four schools when two years later the league would invite Utah, Colorado, Arizona State and Arizona?

    The answer is a concrete Y-E-S. And equally definitive N-O.

    On Wednesday night, Houston’s 10th-ranked men’s basketball team will play at TCU. Of the eight schools the Big 12 has added since UT and OU planned to leave, Houston remains a good, not great, property.

    Houston in the Big 12

    The man that Indiana fired has turned Houston into one of the best basketball teams in the nation. Hired in 2014, coach Kelvin Sampson’s Cougars are on a run that is one of the best in the history of the state.

    HOUSTON, TEXAS - JANUARY 06: Head coach Kelvin Sampson of the Houston Cougars reacts during the game against the Texas Tech Red Raiders at Fertitta Center on January 06, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images)
    Houston men’s basketball coach Kelvin Sampson has led the Cougars to five straight Sweet 16s and two Final Fours. Kenneth Richmond Getty Images

    Houston has used its affiliation with the Big 12 to elevate its team to become a national name, and the relationship is a win-win. Since 2021, the Cougars have reached two Finals Fours and five straight Sweet 16s. They narrowly lost in the national title game last season to Florida.

    These are not Guy Lewis’ Phi Slama Jama Cougars of Hakeem Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler. Sampson’s Cougars are more apt to choke the opposition rather than high-fly their way to 30 wins.

    Overall, the athletic department remains defined by its ambition to win in football, and its proven success in men’s basketball. Just like the ‘80s. In the latest rankings of the Learfield Director’s Cup, a system based on the success of a school’s athletic teams in NCAA Division I, UH ranks 113th nationally, and 14th in the Big 12.

    The football team, in its third season in the Big 12, had a solid year under second-year coach Willie Fritz. The challenge in 2026 is the same as it was in 1986: UH too often remains buried in its own city by the Rockets, Astros, Texans, Texas and Texas A&M. Throw in the Dallas Cowboys, too.

    The Big 12’s ‘Do-Over’

    Of the eight schools that the Big 12 added, BYU has been by far its greatest value. For years, BYU had been regarded as a Notre Dame lite; the concern among potential conference suitors was always juggling the needs of the school’s schedule, as often outlined by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

    Once that hurdle was handled, the Big 12 approving BYU has been a win. Between attendance and on-the-field/court success, the Cougars have added everything to the Big 12. They rank fourth nationally in the latest Learfield Director’s Cup standings.

    They have money, spend it, and have added to the top of the Big 12.

    The other seven …

    2. Arizona State: An OT loss against Texas in the 2024 CFP gave the Big 12 a boost; coach Kenny Dillingham makes the Sun Devils nationally relevant. The basketball team under Bobby Hurley continues to struggle.

    3. Houston: Outstanding in basketball; the lack of home support is glaring.

    4. Arizona: Remains one of the top basketball programs in the country; its football team has been ranked in the final Top 25 in two of the past three years.

    5. Utah: The departure of coach Kyle Whittingham hurts a football program that has been consistently good for a decade. The basketball team has been bad for a decade.

    6. Colorado: The only reason the Buffs rank this high is football coach Deion Sanders, whose media presence is unmatched in major college football. That value is fading fast, as he’s had one winning record in three seasons. The basketball program remains mostly barely average.

    7. Cincinnati: Bust. No men’s basketball NCAA Tournament appearances, and one loss in a lower-tier bowl game.

    8. Central Florida: Three straight losing years in football, one bowl appearance. No NCAA tourney appearances.

    Mac Engel

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Mac Engel is an award-winning columnist who has covered sports since the dawn of man; Cowboys, TCU, Stars, Rangers, Mavericks, etc. Olympics. Movies. Concerts. Books. He combines dry wit with 1st-person reporting to complement an annoying personality.
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    Mac Engel

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  • Three takeaways from TCU men’s basketball game at rival Baylor

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    TCU men’s basketball overcame icy conditions and the absence of its best player to defeat rival Baylor 97-90 Saturday in Waco.

    It was the first time since 2018 that the Horned Frogs (13-7, 3-4) swept the season series with the Bears (11-8, 1-6). TCU also defeated Baylor 69-63 on Jan. 3 in its Big 12 opener.

    The Horned Frogs were without sophomore forward David Punch, and it was a tightly contested game in the first 25 minutes as TCU held onto a 51-49 lead with 14 minutes, 57 seconds remaining in the game.

    That’s when TCU began to assert itself behind Jayden Pierre. The Horned Frogs went on a 17-4 run in taking a 68-53 lead as Pierre had one stretch where he scored eight straight points.

    Taking the big lead allowed the Horned Frogs to show what they’ve learned since blowing a 15-point lead against Kansas on Jan. 6. After the Bears cut it to 68-58, the Horned Frogs didn’t panic like they did in Lawrence.

    Instead, TCU responded with a 7-0 run to increase the lead to 75-58 with 5:52 remaining as Xavier Edmonds bullied Baylor inside during the run and Liautarus Lelevicius knocked down an important jumper.

    The Bears made the Horned Frogs sweat in the final minute. Baylor’s Will Kuykendall knocked down a 3-pointer and then TCU turned it over on the inbounds pass. Baylor capitalized off the turnover with a dunk by Caden Powell that cut TCU’s lead to 94-90 with 16 seconds remaining.

    With the pressure mounting, Edmonds stepped up and made two clutch free throws with 14 seconds remaining to help TCU avoid another last minute collapse. The Horned Frogs made nine of their final 10 free throws in the final 55 seconds.

    TCU entered Saturday’s game firmly on the bubble for the NCAA Tournament, but even though the Bears aren’t as elite as the have been in past years, the win in Waco was still a valuable Quadrant 1 win for the Horned Frogs’ tournament resume.

    The Horned Frogs are set to face No. 6 Houston at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Fort Worth.

    Playing without Punch

    The Horned Frogs had to overcome the hostile road environment and the absence of their best player. David Punch, the sophomore forward who leads TCU in scoring, rebounding and blocks, missed Saturday’s game due to an illness. Sophomore forward Micah Robinson replaced Punch for his first start of the season. Robinson scored six points and fouled out after playing 35 minutes.

    Punch’s absence also allowed for reserve center Vianney Salatchoum to also get on the first time in over a month. Salatchoum hadn’t gotten on the court since TCU’s win vs. North Texas on Dec. 7 and missed multiple games earlier this month taking time away from the team.

    Salatchoum gave TCU some valuable minutes in the first half on Saturday. He scored four points, including a dunk off a nice pass from Robinson. Edmonds carried most of the load with his second straight double-double with 23 points and 10 rebounds. Edmonds continues to be one of the most pleasant surprises for TCU this season as he’s improved dramatically during Big 12 play.

    Edmonds is averaging 17 points and 8.5 rebounds in TCU’s last four games.

    Pierre leads the way

    Without Punch’s scoring, TCU needed someone else to step up and carry the offense, and it was senior guard Jayden Pierre that led the Horned Frogs on offense. Pierre had gone three straight games without scoring 10 points, but broke out for a season-high 25 points against the Bears. It was the most points he scored since TCU played Notre Dame on Dec. 5.

    Pierre scored 11 in the first half to help TCU tie it at 38-38. He continued to be productive in the second half as TCU began to take control of the game. Pierre capped a 15-2 run with a 3-pointer that gave TCU a 57-49 lead with 12:36 remaining.

    Pierre accounted for half of TCU’s made 3-pointers with three, and he also made a pivotal play late when he knocked down two free throws that made it 85-76 with 1:34 remaining.

    Baylor’s challenging backcourt

    Led by two potential first-round picks in the NBA Draft, Baylor’s talented group of guards pushed TCU until the end. Cameron Carr and Tounde Yessoufou are the two household names that have NBA teams salivating over their talent, but the Bears also got a boost from Obi Agbim.

    But as the Horned Frogs began to take over, Yessoufou was the one that kept Baylor in the game. The 6-foot-5 freshman scored 17 of his 21 points in the second half, including seven straight points in the final 3 minutes. Yessoufou converted a three-point play that cut TCU’s lead to 81-72 with 1:54 remaining.

    After Yessoufou fouled out, Carr came alive. Carr scored six straight points to give Baylor a chance to pull off the comeback late. Carr finished with 20 points, six rebounds and six assists as both of the Bears’ dynamic guards put pressure on the Horned Frogs’ defense.

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  • Keeler: CU Buffs transfers wonder what 2025 under Deion Sanders would’ve looked like if they stayed: ‘They missed out’

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    Noah Fenske had his luggage with him Saturday. It wasn’t Louis.

    “Just Under Armour,” the former CU Buffs offensive lineman texted me from his vacation in Nashville.

    While on the road with his fiancée, Fenske’s also been keeping an eye on an old CU teammate, Alex Harkey. Oregon’s starting right tackle? Yeah, he used to be a Buff.

    Harkey, a 6-foot-6, 327-pound redshirt senior, is prepping for a Friday night showdown with Indiana — and another former CU player, the Hoosiers’ Kahlil Benson — in one College Football Playoff semifinal. The Ducks’ bruiser helped Oregon put up 245 passing yards and convert four fourth-down conversions on The Best Defense Money Can Buy, blanking Texas Tech 23-0 in the Orange Bowl.

    He’d transferred into CU as a 305-pounder out of Tyler (Texas) Junior College, a 3-star who was weighing offers from Middle Tennessee and Old Dominion. After appearing in 12 games, largely as a reserve guard, Harkey was one of the kids from CU’s 2022 recruiting class swept out in the great Deion Sanders roster purge during the spring of 2023.

    Fenske, who played in seven games with the Buffs in ’22, was Harkey’s roommate at CU. He got swept away, too. Under Armour was out, Louis Vuitton luggage was in.

    “(Harkey has) done incredible, man,” Fenske gushed. “Because when he first came in (to CU), he wasn’t what he is now. And just seeing his transformation from being a (backup) guard on a 1-11 team to being a first-round or second-round (NFL) draft pick …”

    Big Alex could play. So could wideout Jordyn Tyson (Arizona State). And cornerback Simeon Harris (Fresno State). And quarterback Owen McCown, once he’d had some more brisket. McCown, who played as a wafer-thin true freshman at CU in ’22, threw for 30 touchdowns at UTSA this past fall — including three in a 57-20 win over Florida International in the First Responder Bowl.

    “We just stay connected, support each other’s success,” Harris, who still belongs to a group chat of former Buffs, told me over the weekend. “You’ve got to expect the unexpected. That (purge) hit us all in the mouth.”

    CU fans talk a lot — a lot — about 1-11 in 2022. About rock bottom. About Coach Prime lighting the candle for the climb out of obscurity.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Keeler: Deion Sanders isn’t enough. CU Buffs football needs a sugar daddy for Christmas.

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    Omarion Miller finished Julian Lewis’ passes the way Meg Ryan finished Billy Crystal’s sentences in “When Harry Met Sally.”

    Alas, there won’t be a happy ending. Or a sequel.

    Miller — the CU Buffs’ leading receiver in 2025 — announced Wednesday that he was entering the transfer portal. And apparently Tawfiq Byard will have whatever Miller’s having. The Buffs safety, CU’s best defensive player this past fall despite playing much of it with just one working hand, also plans to transfer out of BoCo next month.

    Pain is a process. The gut says, “If we can go 3-9 with you, we can go 3-9 without you, dude.”

    The head says something else. Something along the lines of, “Man, Deion Sanders could really, really use a sugar daddy this Christmas.”

    Remember when the Buffs hired Coach Prime and finally got out ahead of the college football curve?

    That lasted about 16 to 18 months.

    Celebrity coaches are out.

    Celebrity investors are in.

    Texas Tech, per YahooSports.com, raised about $49 million for student-athletes from July 2024 to July 2025. A new Red Raiders donor group, called the Athletic Donor Circle, had already pledged roughly $35 million as of early November.

    Last week, Utah became the first Power 4 athletic department to formally partner with a private equity firm. ESPN.com reports that Otro Capital out of New York is ready to pump $400 million into the Utes.

    Texas Tech bought the best team on the planet, went 12-1, won the Big 12 title and earned a bye in the College Football Playoff. Utah posted a 10-2 record and beat the Buffs 53-7 in late October.

    CU athletics, meanwhile, is reportedly staring at a potential $27 million deficit for the 2025-2026 fiscal year, according to multiple outlets. Thank players and Prime, primarily.

    Sanders’ salary went up by nearly $5 million for 2025 after his new extension kicked in. The House vs. NCAA settlement required CU to share revenues with student-athletes starting this past July 1, with a cap of $20.5 million for this fiscal cycle. Yet it’s hard to imagine good players such as Miller and Byard taking pay cuts at their next ports of call, isn’t it?

    Buffs officials saw the train coming years ago, even as the bills keep piling up. Which is why the indoor practice facility is now sponsored by Mountain States Ford Stores. And why artificial turf was installed at Folsom Field — so the stadium could be utilized more often as a host to revenue-driving events outside the athletic calendar.

    Concerts and uniform sponsorships — UNLV will reportedly collect about $2.2 million annually over the next five years from Acesso Biologics, its new “Official Jersey Patch Partner” — will only cover so much. The student-athlete revenue sharing pool is expected to increase by 4% next year. Sanders is slated to make $11 million in 2027, $11 million in 2028 and $12 million in 2029.

    The Buffs can’t play at the same poker tables as the Red Raiders and Utes — or retain star players — without a serious influx of cash. Utah is pointing the way now. Not CU.

    College football is so broken. The system? The system — and by that, we mean greedy college presidents and the corporate suits they propped up as conference commissioners — for too long took advantage of student-athletes as a pool of indentured labor, as entertainment contractors on the cheap. A free market for talent was overdue. But the pendulum has swung so hard the other way that roster retention is the stuff of satire now.

    Bowls? Bowls are nothing more than three-hour infomercials for some random chamber of commerce or provincial company you’ve never heard of; exhibitions propped up by Disney stiffs to eat up programming blocks over the holidays. When Iowa State and Kansas State would sooner eat a million bucks in league fines than join in, that ship’s sailed. (Not you, Pop-Tarts Bowl. You’re weirdly perfect. And perfectly weird.)

    Fans? Fans are caught in the crossfire, casualties in the battle of dollars over sense. Ticket prices and point-of-entry fees will skyrocket. Pay-per-view will become more the norm than the exception. Universities will pass the cost to the consumer.

    The Buffs vow that they won’t cut sports — and with only 13 non-football options offered, they don’t have much room on that front to cut, anyway. They’ve vowed that they won’t lop student-athlete services, although outgoing athletic director Rick George laid off two track coaches last spring.

    Something’s gotta give. Of course, if Coach Prime wanted to help retain student-athletes, he could donate half of his $10 million salary to the revenue-sharing pool. That’s not happening.

    In an effort to slow the chaos, FBS scholarships could require a minimum of two years of service at your initial college of choice coming out of high school. But that’s not happening, either.

    As of early Friday morning, at least 11 CU players had expressed interest in transferring out. Among the Big 12 programs that didn’t change coaches (Kansas State, Iowa State, Oklahoma State), only West Virginia had seen more defections (19) as of mid-December than the Buffs.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • TCU caught in the middle of college football’s ‘everything must go!’ madness

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    Year 1 of the most important two years of TCU’s football program can be called a bust.

    A bust because the team will not meet the expectations set by athletic director Mike Buddie. There will be no appearance in the Big 12 title game, or the playoff.

    TCU’s 44-13 defeat Saturday night at No. 12 BYU was a nail gun to the needs of the program, and university. Barring a season-ending three-game winning streak, the finale being the Stale Milk Bowl, TCU will not equal its win total from 2024. It will also not finish in the Top 25 for the third straight year, during which it has been a ranked program for two weeks.

    Year 4 of the Sonny Dykes era at TCU is supposed to be better than this.

    The momentum created by TCU’s run to the national title game in 2022 has evaporated, and is overwhelmed by a current madness of firing coaches while worshiping the SEC, Big Ten and Notre Dame.

    The development has put TCU in a difficult spot with coach Sonny Dykes. After starting the season with a 4-1 record, the weaknesses of the team have been fleshed out in defeats to Kansas State, Iowa State and BYU.

    TCU is a decent team that has no margin for error, or mistakes. And the team doesn’t belong on the same field as BYU or Texas Tech, the top programs in the Big 12.

    The reality for Dykes is that the program has not developed the type of talent that carried this team to the national title game; there has not been a new set of quality offensive linemen to the level of Steve Avila, Brandon Coleman and Andrew Coker.

    There have been no new players to create the type of production on the defensive side, such as linebacker Dee Winters, defensive end Dylan Horton, or cornerbacks Tre Hodges-Tomlinson and Josh Newton.

    (The easy shot here is that those players were recruited by Gary Patterson. Other than Newton, this is true. Also true, that group of talent was not winning games.)

    Most damning of all for Dykes and offensive coordinator Kendal Briles is their high-priced quarterback, Josh Hoover, has regressed in a season where in the first month he deserved to be in the discussion for the Heisman Trophy.

    Too much is asked of Hoover, who needs help that he hasn’t received.

    The state of the team has left angry fans to parcel together a slate of unflattering statistics that make Dykes look like a terrible coach who should be fired today. Stats that begin with the sentence, “Starting with the 65-7 loss to Georgia in the 2022 national title game … TCU is 0-7 against coaches who own Cockapoos, and are out-scored by an average margin of 24.5 points in games that start at 9:05 p.m. Hawaiian time.”

    This is not a good place to be for a head coach, and worse for his school. A place where fans and alums want their team to lose, just accelerate the firing process. Once the momentum starts in this direction, it’s hard to convince the masses to be patient.

    They have been able to do it at Oklahoma. And USC.

    They couldn’t at Penn State. Or LSU. Auburn. Florida. The list grows by the week of coaches who are fired, despite their achievements, or the size of their buyouts.

    Dykes was never the most popular hire to replace Patterson. There are circles and pockets of TCU supporters that regard any positive achievement by Dykes as dumb luck, while every defeat is the true indicator of his coaching acumen.

    All of this is compounded exponentially by a culture that remembers nothing, whose impatience is satiated by a phone that says life is better elsewhere. If you’re not winning, and the game isn’t “big,” they’re not coming.

    This puts TCU in a hard spot. Because it’s not in TheBIGSEC10, most schools in the ACC and Big 12 operate with the fear that those conferences will soon grab a few more schools, which will in effect turn the remainders of the lesser two leagues into glorified Group of Five universities.

    This may not be an actual reality, but the prospect of it strikes the fear of 5,000 Greek Gods into schools. Without a winning football team that’s in the conversation of the playoff, their chance at national relevance, and leverage, is nearly disabled.

    It’s why winning coaches are easily fired, and millions of dollars in buyout cash falls from the sky in states that are broke.

    TCU is not apt to join the national trend of firing its coach this season, but more likely to “encourage” Dykes to make staff changes in hopes of improvement, because Year 1 of the most important time in the history of its football program has gone bust.

    This story was originally published November 16, 2025 at 3:21 PM.

    Mac Engel

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Mac Engel is an award-winning columnist who has covered sports since the dawn of man; Cowboys, TCU, Stars, Rangers, Mavericks, etc. Olympics. Movies. Concerts. Books. He combines dry wit with 1st-person reporting to complement an annoying personality.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Mac Engel

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  • Keeler: CU Buffs QB Julian Lewis brought Shedeur Sanders’ juice, deep ball back to Coach Prime’s attack

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    MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — If Saturday in Morgantown was an audition, Julian Lewis passed.

    And passed.

    And passed.

    Ju Ju looked past open receivers. He looked ready to turtle whenever West Virginia sent the house. But he also looked like Shedeur Sanders out there at times, didn’t he?

    Especially when dropping ball after ball in the bucket for CU wide receiver Omarion Miller.

    The Buffs dropped their third game in a row at Milan Puskar Stadium, falling 29-22 against the Mountaineers and slipping to 3-7 on a lost season.

    Yet it was the most fun the Buffs have been in what, a month? For the first time in what feels like forever, we saw snippets of last fall’s passing game. We saw the deep ball and the vertical passing game that scared the Big 12 half to death.

    2024: Shedeur to Travis Hunter.

    2025: Ju Ju to Omarion.

    Sanders said earlier this week that his decision to start Lewis, a true freshman, at quarterback was guided by “common sense.”

    Hindsight is 20/20, especially when a year goes off the rails. But what took so long?

    Coach Prime should’ve listened to his common sense sooner.

    While senior Kaidon Salter offered zero juice and minimal downfield threat at QB1, Lewis walked into coal country and looked the part. The Mountaineers blitzed from the left. They blitzed from the right. At one point, they even pulled out a piece of Ju Ju’s hair. Kid hung tough: 22 completions on 35 attempts for 299 yards and two touchdowns.

    Lewis to Miler was the combo CU has been waiting for all year. The chemistry was undeniable. The combo was almost unguardable: Miller finished with six catches for 131 receiving yards and a score.

    Ju Ju was at his strongest rolling and throwing to his left, hitting Miller for a 43-yard rainbow early, then Sincere Brown (19 yards) and Joseph Williams (13 yards) on CU’s second drive of the second quarter.

    And yes, some context applies here, too. West Virginia’s defense going into the weekend ranked last in the Big 12 in opponent passer rating (160.25) and 14th in the league in passing yards allowed per game (270.8). It was not unlike debuting a rookie hitter against the 2025 Rockies at Coors Field — a soft landing, a chance to build numbers and confidence.

    Still, you could see that confidence growing in real time. On the CU drive that ended the third quarter and opened the fourth, the freshman faced second-and-7 from the West Virginia 20. He scanned quickly, feeling the pocket constricting to his left and his right. It was the kind of bang-bang play that would’ve been a sure-fire sack earlier in the game, never mind earlier in the season. Lewis stepped up in the pocket and took off for a 3-yard gain, giving CU a third-and-4 at the home 17. CU eventually got a 35-yard field goal from Alejandro Mata to pull the Buffs to within 22-19 with 14:51 left to play in the tilt.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Freshman Julian Lewis to get start at QB for Colorado Buffaloes

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    Five-star freshman quarterback Julian “JuJu” Lewis has been handed the reins to the Colorado offense.

    On Tuesday, CU head coach Deion Sanders confirmed that Lewis will make his first career start when the Buffs play at West Virginia on Saturday (10 a.m. MT, TNT).

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    Brian Howell

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  • Renck: With his salary, CU’s Deion Sanders doesn’t have luxury of rebuilding. This mess is his to fix

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    BOULDER — Leave it to Deion Sanders to refer to a Brazilian butt lift when trying to explain how his team got its (bleep) kicked last weekend.

    He was citing society’s obsession with instant gratification — pizza with a phone call, dinner dashed to our doorstep. You know, how nobody has patience anymore.

    It is fair after watching what unfolded Saturday night if that patience is starting to wear thin with Coach Prime.

    He was the most celebrated hire in school history. He made CU relevant, attracting TV networks to the games, NFL Hall of Famers to the sidelines.

    Three years into this experiment, the reality no longer matches the hype. The Buffs are a laughingstock again.

    And let’s be honest, in the current college landscape, coaches making $10.8 million per year don’t get the luxury of rebuilding seasons or failing to qualify for a bowl — even a bad one. CU requires victories in its final three games at West Virginia, against Arizona State and on the road versus Kansas State to be eligible for the postseason.

    Good luck.

    Arizona mauled the Buffs, 52-17, on a chilly night before 48,223 fans at Folsom Field. The first smattering of boos cascaded down after CU’s second offensive play. Half of those in attendance never wandered back to their seats after halftime.

    It is getting harder to see the whippings as an aberration. When a team gets outscored 81-7 in the first half in back-to-back weeks, it seems like what is happening on the field is a symptom of larger dysfunction. The Buffs have one conference win. Only Oklahoma State, which canned legendary coach Mike Gundy in September, is worse.

    Coach Prime handpicked this coaching staff and this overhauled roster. And the Buffs have done nothing well over the past two games. They fall behind, they miss tackles, they turn the ball over, and they lack discipline, which spawns visible anger and on-field arguments.

    “Don’t attack the players, come at me. Don’t attack the coordinators, come at me,” Sanders said, opening his news conference with a directive and announcing no players would be made available to talk.

    OK? So what went wrong?

    “I have no idea,” Sanders said, before hinting he was holding back his thoughts. “If I knew where the disconnect was, I would tell you.”

    At halftime, CU trailed by 31 and had more penalties (nine) than points (seven).

    A loss like this, it goes looking for people to blame, and it does not go wanting. The only hard part is where to start. A sequence in the second quarter captured problems that go far beyond the personnel to the leadership of the program.

    Quarterback Kaidon Salter, who was mercifully benched, delivered a 75-yard scoring strike to Sincere Brown when CU still had hope. The touchdown, and assumed point after, would have cut the deficit to 24-14. But a scan of the field showed as much yellow as black and gold.
    Omarion Miller was ruled an ineligible receiver downfield, suggesting he lined up wrong since, well, he is a receiver. How does that happen?

    Worse, the Buffs were pushed back another 15 yards for offensive lineman Yahya Attia “brandishing a weapon” while taunting an Arizona player. Finger guns? Really?

    Arizona wide receiver Tre Spivey runs for a touchdown after catching a pass as Colorado defensive end Arden Walker pursues in the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, in Boulder, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

    The offense was terrible, collecting 117 yards in the first half while receiving a Bronx cheer when it made its initial first down.

    Coordinator Pat Shurmur has been something less than competent for years, so we really should not start the finger-pointing there.

    What about Salter? He has been a disappointment since the season opener and stayed true to form. As did backup Ryan Staub, whose first two passes were interceptions.

    Those who stuck around in the second half witnessed five-star prospect Julian Lewis connect on a 59-yard strike to Miller for the first touchdown of his career. But, even that created questions — namely, is he going to play the final three games and burn his redshirt season? If so, why?

    “Common sense,” Sanders said. “I don’t know his thought process or his parents’. I just can control what we can control. I am for the kids. If (a redshirt) is what he wants, that is what he will get.”

    Defensive boss Robert Livingston must be held accountable for his unit’s shortcomings. He lacks beef up front, a trademark of all of the teams under Coach Prime, leaving CU susceptible to any team that likes to run the ball. But the poor tackling, the lack of physicality, the bad angles, the blown assignments, remain jarring.

    All of the improvement Livingston fostered last season seemed like a long time ago when Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita stepped up into a pressure-free pocket and found Javin Whatley streaking wide open for a touchdown with 21 seconds left in the half. The referee on the goal line shrugged and slowly raised his arms in the air, unsure if he was inbounds. It is always best to assume the worst against this defense.

    No, this loss wasn’t the fault of Shurmur, Livingston, Salter, Staub, or any forgettable defender. It is on the man who hired them, recruited them and coaches them.

    Sanders talks about practice more than Allen Iverson. He promised things would change after getting walloped 53-7 by Utah. He was right. The Buffs got worse.

    Sanders brought in the latest gold jacket to campus this week with Ray Lewis questioning the players — “If you guys don’t believe in each other, how do you win?” — and pleading for them to improve communication and take their preparation seriously.

    Lewis was not wrong. But eventually, the message is just background noise in a lost season.

    Colorado safety John Slaughter, left, upends Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita after a short gain in the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, in Boulder, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
    Colorado safety John Slaughter, left, upends Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita after a short gain in the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, in Boulder, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

    The sobering truth is that these are not the good old days — like 2024, when Coach Prime could stack the roster with skill players, notably his son Shedeur and Heisman Trophy-winner Travis Hunter, and deliver a winning record.

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    Troy Renck

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  • Keeler: CU Buffs coach Deion Sanders hasn’t hesitated to play freshmen. So why is he hesitating to play 5-star QB Julian Lewis?

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    BOULDER — There will be another Ju Ju.

    Lots of them, actually. If we’ve learned anything about CU recruiting in the Deion Sanders Era, it’s that if Coach Prime wants someone — like, really, really, really wants them — he gets them.

    Left tackle Jordan Seaton? Got him.

    Cornerback Cormani McClain? Got him. (Best not look at the young man’s Florida Gators numbers right now if you’re a Buffs fan. Seriously. Don’t.)

    Quarterback Julian Lewis? Got him, too.

    Keeping him? Well …

    At 2-4, 0-3 in Big 12 play, CU football is staring at a crisis/inflection point right now. No. 22 Iowa State (5-1) rolls into town for a Saturday matinee, and a trip to Utah (4-1), which is back to running the ball at will again, looms after that.

    Meanwhile, Coach Prime’s health concerns are mounting. And the Buffs have played three QBs in six games because, as the old adage goes, they don’t really have one. Not one who can sling it consistently at a Big 12 level, at any rate.

    After Kaidon Salter just tossed three interceptions at TCU, Ju Ju is the people’s choice again.

    Build for the future!

    The season’s already lost!

    What’s the difference between 4-8 and 2-10?

    If we don’t play Ju Ju this fall, we’ll lose him to the transfer portal! And that would be a tragedy!

    Would it, though?

    I mean, in terms of Lewis’ value in the open market, you’re absolutely right. Big Ten and SEC football programs, even bad ones, have more money right now than they know what to do with. The Buffs, as with many of their Big 12 peers, have to pick and choose their bidding wars.

    Although CU also, at the moment, has 24 offers out to quarterbacks in the Class of ’26, according to the 247Sports database. They’ve got five out to signal-callers in the Class of ’27, and four in the Class of ’28.

    Recruiting, at its core, is about salesmanship. Nobody sells — themselves, their school, a product, the future — the way Coach Prime sells. Charmers are charmers for life.

    Ask yourself this, too: If Lewis is that hot, why hasn’t he beaten out the two guys who’ve been driving you crazy?

    You’ve watched Salter for five games. You’ve watched backup Ryan Staub for two.

    As Coach Prime points out, he sees what you saw.

    Yet when asked about Ju Ju’s progress on Tuesday, Sanders said this, and bluntly:

    “He’s coming around the mountain when he comes.”

    Will he be driving six white horses?

    We kid, we kid. But the hesitation, given precedent, is more than curious, isn’t it?

    After all, Coach Prime has made a point of playing freshmen who earned his trust early. Seaton. Micah Welch. Omarion Miller. Dre’Lon Miller.

    Lewis, though?

    Not so much. Not yet, anyway.

    “I mean, he’s young, and you can’t throw everything at him,” Sanders explained after playing Lewis for two rocky series vs. Delaware last month. “So you don’t want to do that. You don’t want him to feel like he failed.

    “So you’ve got to proceed with — some guys want you to just throw him in there, and I’m too protective. I mean, I love the kid and I want the kid to be successful, so we’re very protective on what we do with him and what we can do with him and really how we call things with him. We want him to be in a situation to excel.”

    Again, he sees what you see. He sees a young man who only turned 18 two-and-a-half weeks ago. And it doesn’t take much reading between the lines to see a QB who isn’t quite ready yet.

    Although …

    “I’ve never sat on the bench and said, ‘Whoa, I learned a lot today.’”

    That quote also came from Sanders, when he was a guest on the Kelce Brothers’ “New Heights” podcast a fortnight ago. He’d said that while explaining why son Shedeur didn’t want to be drafted by Baltimore and become All-Pro QB Lamar Jackson’s understudy

    “Who learns sitting on the bench?” Coach Prime continued. “Who does that?”

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Head coach Deion Sanders wants more intensity, passion from CU Buffs

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    At a team meeting on Tuesday morning, Colorado head football coach Deion Sanders had a simple question for his players.

    “Are you underachieving or overachieving?” Sanders asked his players.

    “There’s only one answer or the other,” he said.

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    Brian Howell

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  • Keeler: Coach Prime shouldn’t dream of starting any other CU Buffs QB at Houston than Ryan Staub

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    BOULDER — Julian Lewis couldn’t cross the Delaware.

    Not the Delaware 35-yard line, at any rate.

    Kaidon Salter couldn’t throw on the run.

    Or past the sticks.

    CU’s Big 12 opener is Friday night. Dink and dunk in Houston, under the lights, and the Cougars will have you for brisket.

    Which means the best option head coach Deion Sanders has at QB1, right now, is the guy nobody had on their bingo cards on Saturday morning.

    Welcome to the party, Ryan Staub.

    Sorry.

    “Martin Luther Staub,” Coach Prime called him during a postgame chat with FOX Sports after the sophomore powered CU to a 31-7 rout of Delaware at Folsom Field.

    Staub is one of those O.B.s — “Original Buffs,” Karl Dorrell holdovers who stuck it out while Deion portaled in people to push them off the roster.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Keeler: Yo, CU Buffs! Pat Shurmur without Shedeur Sanders was painful to watch

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    BOULDER — Is that Byron Leftwich warming up on the sideline?

    Ralphie, you didn’t miss much. Take away Shedeur Sanders from a Pat Shurmur offense, and you’re left with a CU attack that, at times, looked like a pencil with no lead.

    Friday night’s opener against Georgia Tech had a Baylor 2024 feel. Minus the Baylor ending. After two CU Hail Marys fell incomplete, the Yellow Jackets escaped with a 27-20 win inside a packed Folsom Field.

    New Buffs starting quarterback Kaidon Salter will take some flak, but this wasn’t all his burden. No. 3 was as advertised, at least, in that he isn’t Shedeur. Down 20-13 with 9:23 left in the tilt, the Buffs’ transfer QB stepped up in the pocket to elude pressure (which was good), spotted a wide-open Simeon Price near the front right pylon (also good) … and overthrew him by a yard-and-a-half.

    Yet he can do this, too. As the pocket collapsed again, forcing another step-up, Salter spotted a lane, tucked the rock, and pinballed his way 7 yards into the end zone to pull the hosts to within an extra point.

    As Buffs QB debuts go, No. 3’s was fine, if rough around the edges. Salter sometimes sprinted into danger as often as he ran away from it. Stretching out a play from east to west may buy time against Conference USA defenses. The ones he’s going to see in the Big 12 close too quickly. Pick a lane and get north.

    And to the social media peanut gallery calling for 5-star super freshman Julian Lewis, ask yourself this: How many times did Salter have to create an escape route all by himself?

    Lewis can move, sure. Not like that. Even if “Ju Ju” has taken steps forward this month, it remains to be seen whether this offensive line’s ready to keep him upright for 60 minutes. Delaware awaits on Sept. 6. If we haven’t seen Lewis on the field by Week 3, fire up the flares.

    At the moment, the Buffs have bigger problems. Unfortunately, CU’s run defense was less what was advertised and more what was feared. The elephant in the room still struggles to stop anybody between the hashmarks.

    Yes, the Buffs tightened up late, and thank goodness. Yes, Tech is the Waffle House version of Iowa, a Southern sledgehammer. Yet Georgia Tech also converted on third-and-3-or-less five times in the first three quarters. They converted four of those on the ground, and the other one was a willing surrender on a spiked Haynes King pass to stop the clock.

    If Tech wasn’t busy Nebrasking the heck outta that first half with three consecutive turnovers, the Buffs would’ve been hurting deep.

    The Jackets were outrushing CU two minutes into the second quarter by a count of 112-33. Tech was getting 6.3 yards per pop on its first 18 carries.

    And yet … the hosts somehow still led 7-3, spitting in the face of the football gods and the pop-up showers.

    In hindsight, the Buffs couldn’t have scripted the first five minutes any better, could they? Tech’s Malik Rutherford got loose for a 13-yard gain on the first play of the evening. On the second, King butterfingered the ball to CU linebacker Martavious French at the Buffs’ 38. Five plays and three Micah Welch runs later, Salter found DeKalon Taylor in the end zone for an 8-yard score and a 6-0 CU lead.

    Funny thing? Those two plays were pretty much a harbinger for the rest of the Jackets’ first half. The Ramblin’ Wreck alternated between gashing the Buffs on the ground or putting the ball on the turf.

    Tech drove past midfield on five of its first six cracks on offense. Tries No. 2 and 3 ended on a fumble recovery by French at the Buffs’ 48 and a pick by D.J. McKinney at the CU 34, respectively. The Jackets turned their last three possessions into 13 points, with kicker Aidan Birr’s 32-yard field goal putting the visitors up 13-10 as the dying seconds of the second quarter expired.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Week 1 picks against the spread: Texas, Clemson, Notre Dame look enticing as West Coast schedule carries limited intrigue

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    Week 1 features a series of marquee matchups, all of them in the eastern half of the country. On the West Coast, the intrigue level is low.

    Subscribe to continue reading this article.

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    Originally Published:

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    Jon Wilner

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  • Keeler: CU Buffs’ Travis Hunter is an NFL wideout playing cornerback, scouts say. “Receiver is where he can make the biggest impact”

    Keeler: CU Buffs’ Travis Hunter is an NFL wideout playing cornerback, scouts say. “Receiver is where he can make the biggest impact”

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    BOULDER — Jon Cooper figured he was out of the unicorn hunting game when Travis Hunter picked off his heart and ran it all the way back to 1981.

    “Roy Green was an outstanding nickel safety for the Cardinals,” Cooper, the longtime pro scout, associate GM and senior draft analyst with Ourlads.com, told me recently. “And went both ways before they decided he was too valuable as a receiver to do anything but (play offense).”

    Cooper was at a St. Louis Cardinals game 43 years ago when Green, a speedy return ace who’d recently been turned into a two-way threat at wideout and defensive back, became the first NFL player since 1957 to intercept a pass and catch another in the same game.

    “(Green) wasn’t as big as (CU football coach) Deion (Sanders) or Hunter,” the scout sighed. “He only did it for a season, or a season-and-a-half.”

    With an old Jim Hart and a young Neil Lomax at quarterback, then-Cards coach Jim Hanifan didn’t mess around when it came to what side of the ball mattered more. Once the coaching staff saw Green, a former track star, rack up 708 receiving yards and lead the Redbirds in touchdown catches (four) while re-learning the position on the fly in 1981, his days as an NFL defensive back were numbered.

    The whole experiment worked so well, Roy moved to offense full-time starting in 1982, eventually leading the NFL in touchdown catches in ’83 and in receiving yards in ’84, notching Pro Bowl berths in both seasons.

    “There are certain guys you want to throw to, guys you know will hang on to the ball,” Hart told Sports Illustrated in December 1981. “Roy’s one of those guys.”

    Hart might as well be describing No. 12, whose superhuman combination of hand-eye coordination, ball skills, agility and IQ have Buffs alums already calling him the best football player to ever don CU black and gold.

    “He’s got a great head on his shoulder as well. He’s tough. He’s smart,” Dave Syvertsen, Ourlads’ senior draft analyst and scout, said of Hunter, the cornerback/wide receiver whose 5-2 Buffs host 5-2 Cincinnati on Saturday night at Folsom Field. “I think he’s got great contest-catch numbers, too.

    “Great possession and ball skills. He has superstar potential.”

    Syvertsen grades the junior out as a first-rounder at both wideout and cornerback in the ’25 NFL draft. But like Cooper, he has a feeling front offices will look to pigeonhole Hunter into one side of the ball in order to preserve his long-term health.

    And like Roy Green two generations ago, they expect that side to be offense — with a sprinkling of defensive appearances, primarily as a nickel back or a slot corner, peppered in.

    “I think he could be a great corner,” Cooper said. “(But) there’s something to be said for guys playing some slot corner and also playing on offense. Deion did it himself.

    “I think it’s going to depend on the team. I could see him playing in sub packages on defense, because he’s so skilled … eventually, I think, he will be one or the other. I think receiver is probably where he can make the biggest impact long-term. The jury might be out as to whether he can go two ways initially or one way all the time. Unique, unique player.”

    The afternoon after CU hosts the Bearcats, the Carolina Panthers, 1-6 and going nowhere fast, visit the Broncos (4-3) at Empower Field. Tankathon.com’s 2025 NFL mock draft as of Tuesday afternoon pegged Hunter going to the Patriots with the No. 1 overall pick and Buffs quarterback Shedeur Sanders being taken by Carolina with the second selection. Longtime ESPN draftnik Mel Kiper recently ranked Hunter as the No. 1 overall pick on his big board.

    For a team that needs everything, including marketable, charismatic stars, Hunter ticks every box. That said, even Buffs icons such as Michael Westbrook, the greatest wideout in CU history, would suggest to Hunter that he lean on offense primarily at the next level.

    “I would use him as a wide receiver,” Westbrook told me, echoing the scouts’ sentiments. “I would sparingly put him in (with) nickel packages, dime packages. Anytime they’ve got four wideouts on the field, Travis goes in.”

    Defense may win championships, but touchdowns pay the bills. Unlike in Green’s era, limitation on contact with receivers, combined with rules that discourage quarterback hits, have made the NFL more of a passing league than ever.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • CU Buffs-Arizona quick hits: Take a breather, Travis Hunter. Shedeur Sanders, LaJohntay Wester, CU pass rush got this

    CU Buffs-Arizona quick hits: Take a breather, Travis Hunter. Shedeur Sanders, LaJohntay Wester, CU pass rush got this

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    Initial observations from the CU Buffs’ 34-7 win over the Arizona Wildcats in Big 12 play at Arizona Stadium.

    Paging Sean Payton: An onside kick attempt to start the game? Did Arizona head coach Brent Brennan consult the Broncos’ Sean Payton earlier this week? Bold move, to say the least — if not a very bright one. It was almost as if Brennan knew exactly what was coming down the pike. There was no way the Wildcats’ leaky secondary was coming up with enough stops to win this game … unless special teams could steal an extra possession or two. A weird message to send your team before a ball is even snapped. But at least Brennan is a realist.

    Weapons to spare: Who needs a run game when you have Shedeur Sanders and an endless stream of pass-catchers? Certainly not CU against a defense like Arizona’s. Can’t rush the passer? Have problems covering receivers one-on-one or tackling in space? Shedeur and the Buffs will eat you alive, whether it’s third-and-long, third-and-short, or, in the case of the QB’s 14-yard strike to Travis Hunter in the first half, fourth-and-10. So even if the Buffs average 2.3 yards on 22 attempts, as they did in the first half, it’s plenty. They still converted 8 of 11 third downs and put 28 points on the board. By the time everything was said and done, LaJohntay Wester had eight catches for 127 yards. And he’s, what, CU’s third- or fourth-best receiver? Yikes!

    Livingston’s stock on rise: Stats may not be kind to the Buffs defense — CU entered Saturday 94th in FBS in yards allowed and 73rd in points allowed — but the eye test says Robert Livingston’s unit is trending up. And it’s happening at the line of scrimmage — an area that was a notable issue last season. In two of the last three games, CU has bottled up one of the nation’s top rushing attacks (UCF, 177 yards) and harassed one of its most productive passers (Arizona’s Noah Fifita) to the tune of seven sacks, CU’s most since posting eight against Iowa State in 2010. The Buffs now have 16 sacks in their last three games.

    Heisman watch: This was not a day to worry about Travis Hunter’s Heisman Trophy campaign. With CU’s two-way star clearly not 100% after getting dinged in the Kansas State loss last week, Coach Prime did the smart thing, holding Hunter out over the final two quarters as “preventative measures.” CU already had a 28-7 lead, and Hunter’s mortal stat line (54 snaps, two receptions for 15 yards, one tackle) will soon be a mere footnote as long as he delivers a few more superhuman performances down the stretch. (Spoiler alert: He probably will.)

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    Matt Schubert

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  • CU Buffs vs. Kansas State quick hits: With Travis Hunter and Jimmy Horn lost to injury, Buffs fall short vs. Wildcats

    CU Buffs vs. Kansas State quick hits: With Travis Hunter and Jimmy Horn lost to injury, Buffs fall short vs. Wildcats

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    Initial observations from Colorado’s 31-28 loss to the Kansas State Wildcats in a Big 12 showdown in Boulder.

    Wildcats gashing: Kansas State’s primary key to victory was running the rock. In the first half alone, junior DJ Giddens trampled the Buffs for 127 yards on 12 carries, good for 10.6 yards a pop. Ex-Buff Dylan Edwards added 17 yards and a TD. Giddens was untacklable at times, and the CU linebackers and secondary had an especially hard time wrapping up in the second and third levels. KSU continued to pound the football and bleed the clock in the second half, starting with nearly an eight-minute TD drive in the third. A Colorado local, Durango graduate and starting right tackle Carver Willis, helped pave the way for an 182-yard rushing night for Giddens.

    Hunter, Horn hurt: CU star wideout/cornerback and Heisman Trophy candidate Travis Hunter, who has been central in the Buffs’ 4-1 start coming into Saturday, left the game midway through the second quarter with what ESPN reported as a shoulder injury. Hunter caught a 14-yard pass, but was crunched by KSU safety Daniel Cobbs, and immediately left the game. He didn’t return, and sophomore Colton Hood came on in Hunter’s place on defense (and later picked off K-State). On offense, CU also lost wideout Jimmy Horn Jr. to injury in the first half and Horn didn’t return, either. The absence of those two playmakers, especially Hunter, took some explosiveness out of CU’s offense, even if the Buffs managed to put 28 on the board.

    Hood in clutch: No Hunter to play lock-down corner in crunch time? No problem, at least for a moment. Hood came up clutch late in the fourth quarter with an interception and runback that set up CU’s go-ahead touchdown with 3:20 left. On fourth-and-6 at the CU 31-yard line, Avery Johnson’s pass was tipped by Preston Hodge and then corralled by Hood. He ran it back to the KSU 17-yard line, tripping himself up on the grass to come up just short of the pick-six. However, the next drive, Jayce Brown burned Hodge for a 50-yard TD catch.

    Shedeur shines: Once again, the CU QB looked like a top draft pick, despite playing without his two top targets in Hunter and Horn. No. 2 completed 16 straight passes across the second and third quarters — a CU record streak — and willed the Buffs back in the game with his arm despite taking some big hits. His lone blemish was an interception on an overthrow, and his final stat line was videogame-esque: 34 of 40 for 338 yards, three touchdowns and a 186.2 rating.

    Big sacks: Both team’s defensive lines made noise in the first half, as the Wildcats tallied four sacks for minus-49 yards, while CU’s defense had three sacks for minus-29 yards. Kansas State’s pressure also forced an intentional grounding on CU’s last possession of the half that effectively killed the drive. In the second half, the Wildcats continued to bring the heat, especially as the Buffs all but abandoned the run. KSU had two sacks for minus-25 yards over the final two quarters, finishing with six sacks overall. On a third-quarter sack, KSU defensive end Ryan Davis celebrated with Shedeur Sanders’ signature wristwatch move, holding the pose for a few seconds toward the CU crowd.

    KSU QB hurt, returns: The Wildcats also had an injury of their own to dual-threat quarterback, but Johnson’s absence was brief. The sophomore suffered what looked like a side injury on KSU’s opening possession of the second half, following an impressive threaded pass that went for 33 yards to Brown. Senior Ta’Quan Roberson spelled Johnson, who returned to the field later in the drive to throw a one-yard TD pass to Brown that made it a two-score lead. That 16-play, 81-yard drive chewed up more than half the third quarter.

    Who’s who: As has become the norm with Buffs games under Coach Prime, an array of stars were on the CU sidelines on Saturday night at Folsom Field. That list included current Nugget Russell Westbrook, retired former Nugget Carmelo Anthony (who rocked a Peter Forsberg Avs jersey), former Wizards star John Wall, current NBA stars Kevin Durant and John Wall, and rapper Cam’ron. Plus, former CU football stars and current NFL receivers Laviska Shenault and Juwann Winfree were also on hand.

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    Kyle Newman

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