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Tag: university of colorado sports

  • Colorado and Georgia Tech meet for the 1st time on the field since splitting the 1990 national title

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Even through a rough start to the 1990 season and the highly debated “fifth-down” controversy, there the Colorado Buffaloes were in the closing seconds of the Orange Bowl, one stop away from a potential national title.

    Defensive back Deon Figures intercepted a Notre Dame pass and ran around long enough for the clock to hit zero. His teammates piled on to celebrate, crushing his ribs with their weight. He could barely breathe and thought he might pass out.

    A fond memory for sure, he said, because it paved the way to the Buffaloes’ one and only national football title. Painful for a reason beyond his bruised ribs: They had to split that 1990 national title with Georgia Tech.

    “We wanted it all,” Figures recalled. “We wanted to sit at the top of the mountain — by ourselves.”

    Ray Fairall/AP

    FILE – Colorado coach Bill McCartney, left, is escorted off the field after the Buffaloes defeated Notre Dame in the Orange Bowl college football game on Jan. 1, 1991, in Miami. (AP Photo/Ray Fairall, File)

    On Friday night, the Yellow Jackets and Buffaloes will meet for the first time ever on the football field. It’s a chance for bragging rights nearly 35 years after the programs became forever linked in the days when split titles were possible, long before major college football shifted to a tournament.

    “It is exciting,” said Charles Johnson, a quarterback on that 1990 Colorado team. ”But it’s kind of like two great fighters in their prime and it was a great debate about who was the greatest and then years later, when they’re both kind of not in that spotlight, they finally match up. It’s like, ‘Oh, we finally get the great fight.’ The thrill of what that debate was 35 years ago, it’s hard to carry much of that over today.”

    Back then, there was no College Football Playoff. Instead, it came down to votes, with the Buffaloes (11-1-1) crowned as champions in The Associated Press poll and Yellow Jackets (11-0-1) winding up on top in the coaches’ poll.

    They’ve would’ve preferred to settle things on the field.

    “Hopefully the kids that are playing now will understand the ramifications behind (this game) a little bit more,” former Buffaloes receiver Mike Pritchard said. “Just have it have a degree of importance.”

    It’s there, all right.

    “We’re excited to go play Colorado. An opportunity to settle the 1990 national championship,” said Georgia Tech coach Brent Key, whose team is favored and was 12 at the time of that split title.

    The title

    Glance around Folsom Field and there it is between suite levels on the east side of the stadium, in bold lettering: “1990 National Champions.”

    “Wow,” tackle Jordan Seaton said of learning the Buffaloes split it with the Yellow Jackets. “I’m very eager to play them.”

    Before the CFP, co-champions happened, if rarely, with nearly a dozen since the early 1950s and the last coming in 2003 (LSU and USC). The split titles spurred arguments and eventually led to postseason changes in determining a true national champion. The College Football Playoff, which has expanded to a 12-team bracket, began with the 2014-15 season.

    The Buffaloes sure wish that format would’ve existed 35 years ago.

    “I guarantee you we would’ve whooped them,” said Figures, who was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as part of the 2024 class. “I would’ve bet the house on it.”

    The Buffaloes received 39 of 60 first place votes in the AP poll (the Yellow Jackets had 20). Georgia Tech topped the UPI/Coaches poll with 30 of 59 first-place votes (Colorado had 27), which ultimately gave the Yellow Jackets a 847-846 point advantage.

    Each squad beat coach Tom Osborne and the Nebraska Cornhuskers — the Buffaloes by a 27-12 score in Lincoln and the Yellow Jackets winning 45-21 in the Citrus Bowl on New Year’s Day.

    “Both Colorado and Georgia Tech had fine teams that year and we lost to both of them,” Osborne wrote in an email. “Georgia Tech beat us more soundly than Colorado, but both teams were talented. Colorado won a controversial game in which they were given 5 downs at the goal line.”

    After a liver transplant in 2023, Figures will be watching Friday night’s game on television. He will be thinking of his coach, too: Bill McCartney died in January at 84. McCartney assembled a star-studded group featuring names such as Darian Hagan, Johnson, Eric Bieniemy, Pritchard, Figures, Chad Brown, Alfred Williams and Kanavis McGhee.

    “Coach Mac would have loved this game,” Figures said. “I can hear him now with that rah-rah speech.”

    The Georgia Tech path

    The Yellow Jackets were coached by Bobby Ross and featured a group of players such as William Bell, Shawn Jones, Ken Swilling, Marco Coleman, Scott Sisson, Willie Clay, Greg Lester, Mike Mooney and Coleman Rudolph. Their only bump in the road was a tie at North Carolina. Two weeks later, they beat No. 1 Virginia on Sisson’s field goal with seconds remaining.

    “They believed in themselves; they believed in what they were doing,” Ross said in the fall 2021 issue of Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine. “They were just that type of team. They had confidence and a little bit of a swagger, and that was good.”

    The Colorado path

    It was a rocky start for the Buffaloes, who tied with Tennessee, beat Stanford and lost at Illinois. They dropped from preseason No. 5 to No. 20 in the AP poll. They would win out, including the controversial “fifth-down” victory at Missouri. There was an error when the chain crew didn’t flip the down marker. It set up an extra down and the Buffaloes capitalized as Johnson scored the winning TD on a keeper as time expired.

    “There’s so much back-story behind the down thing,” Pritchard said. “We obviously would have executed differently. We were going by what the officials were telling everybody.”

    College Sports

    Walker set to lead Colorado defense as Buffs open season vs. Georgia Tech

    The Buffaloes caught another fortunate break in the Orange Bowl when a clipping call negated a late punt return for a score by Notre Dame’s Raghib Ismail. The Buffaloes held on for a 10-9 win.

    “It was amazing how that season unfolded,” recalled Johnson, whose team lost to Notre Dame in the Orange Bowl the season before to finish 11-1. “I mean, just about every oddity or wrinkle that you could imagine would take place, took place.”

    The Buffaloes of the past are anxious for this week’s game..

    “I’m definitely going to be out there on that field in spirit,” Figures said.

    College Sports

    Buffs to open 2025 season with new-look roster in third year under Coach Prime

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    AP Sports Writer Charles Odum contributed.

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    The Associated Press

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  • Shedeur Sanders accounts for 3 touchdowns, Colorado shuts down Arizona 34-7

    Shedeur Sanders accounts for 3 touchdowns, Colorado shuts down Arizona 34-7

    TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Shedeur Sanders threw for 250 yards and accounted for three touchdowns, and Colorado’s defense shut down Arizona in a 34-7 win.

    The Buffaloes scored two early touchdowns and swarmed the Wildcats all afternoon to bounce back from last week’s 31-28 loss to Kansas State.

    Sanders threw for two touchdowns with two interceptions on 23-of-33 passing and ran for another score. Colorado converted 8 of 11 third downs while building a 21-point halftime lead and its defense held the Wildcats to 245 total yards.

    Arizona gave up seven sacks after allowing six combined the first six games.

    The Associated Press

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  • No. 18 Kansas State renews its conference rivalry against Colorado in the Big 12 this week

    No. 18 Kansas State renews its conference rivalry against Colorado in the Big 12 this week

    A light week in the Big 12 is highlighted by No. 18 Kansas State and Colorado renewing their rivalry. The teams were both members of the Big 12 until Colorado left for the Pac-12 in 2010. Now the Buffaloes are back in the Big 12 and both teams are near the top of the conference standings. Kansas State had a bye after beating up on Oklahoma State and Colorado is on a three-game winning streak. No. 16 Utah also plays at surprising Arizona State, with six teams having a bye.

    Denver 7+ Colorado News Latest Headlines | October 10, 6am

    The Associated Press

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  • Shedeur Sanders throws for 290 yards, 3 TDs to lead improved Colorado to 48-21 rout of UCF

    Shedeur Sanders throws for 290 yards, 3 TDs to lead improved Colorado to 48-21 rout of UCF

    ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Shedeur Sanders threw for 290 yards and three touchdowns to help Colorado match its victory total for all of last season with a 48-21 rout of UCF.

    Two-way star Travis Hunter had a TD catch and interception for the Buffaloes, who have won three straight games following a lopsided road loss to Nebraska. Hunter scored on a 23-yard reception in the first quarter, struck a Heisman pose after his second-half inteception, and finished with nine catches on nine targets for 89 yards.

    Sanders also had TD throws of 47 yards to Will Sheppard and 10 yards to LaJohntay Wester on the way to completing 28 of 35 passes with one interception.

    Colorado’s improved defense forced four turnovers.

    The Associated Press

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  • Nebraska rides dominating defensive performance to 28-10 win over old rival Colorado

    Nebraska rides dominating defensive performance to 28-10 win over old rival Colorado

    LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Dylan Raiola passed for 185 yards and a touchdown, Nebraska turned a dominating defensive performance into a big early lead, and the Cornhuskers went on to beat Colorado 28-10 in a game that turned into a slog in the second half.

    The Huskers sacked Shedeur Sanders five times and pressured him throughout while winning the final meeting of a four-game home-and-home series.

    The Buffs didn’t record a first down until their fifth possession, netted minus-2 yards in the first quarter and finished with 260. Tommie Hill had a pick-6 for Nebraska and Dante Dowdell ran for two TDs.

    Sanders was benched with three minutes to play after throwing for 244 yards, 1 touchdown and an interception that was returned for a score. His counterpart – Nebraska freshman Dylan Raiola – completed 23 of 30 passes for 185 yards, 1 touchdown and 0 interceptions.

    The Cornhuskers led 28-0 at halftime.

    The box score officially credits Nebraska with six sacks on the evening (one of Ryan Staub, who replaced Sanders at quarterback for Colorado at the end of the game) as Nebraska’s defensive front consistently found its way into the Colorado backfield. Sanders officially finished with eight carries for minus-30 yards.

    Colorado standout Travis Hunter caught 10 passes for 110 yards in an otherwise uninspiring offensive effort for the Buffs.

    The Associated Press

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  • Colorado’s Deion Sanders praises rival coach Matt Rhule ahead of Nebraska game

    Colorado’s Deion Sanders praises rival coach Matt Rhule ahead of Nebraska game

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Deion Sanders made the matchup with fellow coach Matt Rhule and Nebraska personal a year ago. This season, there’s nothing but praise.

    The Colorado coach commended his rival days before the Buffaloes travel to Lincoln, Nebraska, for the final meeting between the storied programs for the foreseeable future.

    Colorado and Nebraska were longtime rivals when both were in some version of the Big 12. The Cornhuskers moved to the Big Ten in 2011 and the Buffaloes to the Pac-12. But Colorado returned to the Big 12 this season.

    Both teams are coming off season-opening wins.

    Pat Graham, AP Sports Writer

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  • With college athletes on cusp of revenue-sharing, there are Title IX questions that must be answered

    With college athletes on cusp of revenue-sharing, there are Title IX questions that must be answered

    The looming athlete pay system that will upend the traditional college sports model and still-to-be-determined details about how millions of dollars will be distributed are certain to bring questions about gender equity.

    Of special interest will be whether schools must comply with Title IX, the federal law that prohibits sex discrimination in any school or education program that receives federal funds.

    There are many questions to be addressed should a $2.77 billion settlement of House vs. NCAA end up being approved by a federal judge in the months ahead after a key step forward by the NCAA and major conferences Thursday night. Among other things, the settlement is expected to allow the nation’s wealthiest schools to spend approximately $20 million each year on their own athletes, beginning as soon as next year.

    Michael LeRoy, a University of Illinois labor and sports law professor, and Iliana Konidaris, a New York civil rights attorney, said Title IX rules will apply if the schools are tasked with directing payments to athletes.

    Konidaris said it will be critical for the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights to provide guidance on how revenue sharing and name, image and likeness compensation should be paid to keep schools in Title IX compliance.

    “If the universities are going to end up exerting control over the revenue sharing,” Konidaris said, “you’re going to need to address pay equity very head-on.”

    Another New York civil rights attorney, Christina Stylianou, said her first instinct is that Title IX would not apply because athletes would be essentially selling their media rights to their school. That said, Stylianou expects the Title IX question to be heavily litigated.

    WHAT IS TITLE IX?
    The landmark 1972 law is intended to ensure equity between men and women in education. It applies to the classroom, sexual assault and violence on campus, employment, discrimination, admissions, financial assistance with tuition and of course athletics.

    Women’s and men’s teams are to be treated equally under the law, though that doesn’t necessarily mean that each sport will have exactly the same budget for equipment, facilities, travel or meals. Athletic departments work under what is known as “equal in effect,” meaning a benefit for a men’s or women’s team in one area can be offset in another area as long as “the overall effects of any differences is negligible.”

    LeRoy said he understands the rationale for arguing that football and men’s basketball players should receive larger portions of the upcoming revenue because their sports account for nearly all the conference and NCAA broadcast rights fees.

    If market value is heavily weighed when determining pay, he said, it would be a stretch to believe there would be a 50-50 split between male and female athletes. But, he said, there need to be provisions for women.

    “I’m not making the argument it should be divided up equally,” LeRoy said. “By bringing it inside the athletic department, I don’t expect the distribution to be equal. But there is an inherent contradiction or problem if women get short-changed.”

    US WOMEN’S SOCCER PRECEDENT
    LeRoy said the situation is reminiscent of the legal action taken by the U.S. women’s soccer national team for unequal pay compared with the U.S. men’s team. The women’s team prevailed in a settlement after initially claiming the U.S. Soccer Federation violated the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Title VII, which prohibits employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex and national origin.

    Though college athletes are not yet considered employees, LeRoy and Konidaris said a legal argument could be made that direct school-to-athlete payments push athletes to the brink of being employees and that Title VII could apply.

    “They’re going to have in the settlement the idea (that) this isn’t employment,” LeRoy said. “Then what you’re doing is saying a multibillion-dollar industry called NCAA Athletics is going to be treated differently than any other business in America. You cannot have separate pay.”

    If the schools opt to not handle payments in-house and leave athlete compensation to booster-backed collectives eager to connect athletes and sponsorship money, that could be a way to get around Title IX regulations.

    OPPORTUNITY FOR WOMEN

    Hours after the NCAA settlement was announced, Oklahoma softball player Tiare Jennings was asked about the importance of the step. She pointed to post-college security for athletes.“I think what they get when they leave college, just to have a foundation, have something for their future families, for themselves, just to have some security blanket when you leave college,” she said. “Knowing that you can go invest or start a business, stuff like that, to just kickstart your life.”

    Konidaris said schools that take care of their female athletes monetarily could develop stronger women’s sports programs.

    “The universities that really double down on equity in college sports will be rewarded by better programs for female athletes that I think in the coming 10 years are going to be revenue generating, just based on public interest and momentum for women’s sport,” Konidaris said.

    The recent surge in women’s sports popularity, spawned by the star power of basketball players such as Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese and others, could not have been better timed, Kondaris said. Female athletes, she said, should view the moment as “an opportunity to be aggressive, to negotiate as hard as they possibly can to litigate and go after fairness and equity in pay.”

    LeRoy agreed it is a pivotal moment for women’s sports.

    “The question,” he said, “is whether they’re going to be stuck with a compensation model for the next 10 years that reflects the past, not the future?”

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    AP Sports Writer Cliff Brunt contributed.

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    AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

    Denver 7+ Colorado News Latest Headlines | May 24, 6am

    The Associated Press

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  • Deion Sanders, son respond to social media criticisms over how coach handled transfers at Colorado

    Deion Sanders, son respond to social media criticisms over how coach handled transfers at Colorado

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Colorado football coach Deion Sanders and his quarterback son, Shedeur, have taken to social media in response to a transfer being critical of how players were treated at the school.

    Former Colorado defensive back Xavier Smith said in a recent article published in the Athletic that Deion Sanders “never even tried to get to know me,” and that he “was destroying guys’ confidence and belief in themselves.” Shedeur Sanders responded on X by saying he didn’t remember Smith.

    Smith was hampered by injuries for the Buffaloes. He earned freshman All-America honors at FCS Austin Peay in 2023 and has since followed coach Scotty Walden to UTEP.

    The Associated Press

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  • Shedeur Sanders shines, new transfers step up in Colorado’s spring game on rainy and cool day

    Shedeur Sanders shines, new transfers step up in Colorado’s spring game on rainy and cool day

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — The rain and the cold couldn’t dampen the demeanor of Deion Sanders. The cowboy hat-wearing coach of the Colorado Buffaloes was in a feel-good after the spring game Saturday at Folsom Field. Before the game, he awarded a scholarship to a hard-working running back. Before kickoff, he pledged a bowl game to a 99-year-old super-fan in the stands. And before the rain subsided, he watched some new transfer-portal additions step up and saw a receiver-cornerback-turned-tailback shine. On top of it all, his QB son, Shedeur, looked sharp in front of a respectable crowd given the weather.

    Denver 7+ Colorado News Latest Headlines | April 29, 6am

    The Associated Press

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  • Colorado brings in Hall of Fame defensive lineman Warren Sapp as grad assistant to work with Buffs

    Colorado brings in Hall of Fame defensive lineman Warren Sapp as grad assistant to work with Buffs

    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Deion Sanders has brought in Hall of Fame defensive lineman Warren Sapp as a graduate assistant to work with the Colorado Buffaloes.

    The grad assistant position paves the way for the 51-year-old Sapp to work more closely on the field with the team.

    Sapp introduced himself to the team as the senior quality control analyst, but that role would limit his involvement on the field.

    The University of Miami standout spent 13 seasons in the NFL with Tampa Bay and the Oakland Raiders. Sapp was the 1999 AP defensive player of the year. He won a Super Bowl title with the Buccaneers following the 2002 season.

    Pat Graham, AP Sports Writer

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  • DU Pioneers to take on Boston University in 19th NCAA Frozen Four

    DU Pioneers to take on Boston University in 19th NCAA Frozen Four

    DENVER — For the nineteenth time, the University of Denver hockey team advanced to the NCAA Frozen Four after defeating No. 3-seed Cornell Big Red in the Northeast Regional Final on Saturday.

    No. 1-seed Denver beat Cornell 2-1 at MassMutual Center in Massachusetts.

    While Cornell was relentless, Denver Goaltender Matt Davis made 24 saves for a personal winning streak of 7 games, said the team.Davis also stopped Cornell’s final 20 shots of the game.

    Denver’s points were scored by freshmen Forward Miko Matikka and Sam Harris.

    “We’ll play anybody anywhere anytime, we had the most adversity with our travel, shortest turnaround and our guys never once talked about it,” said DU Hockey Head Coach David Carle “We came up here ready to battle, and we did that. I’m really proud of them for it.”

    The Pioneers head off to the national semifinals in St. Paul to take on Boston University on April 11.

    Jeff Anastasio

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  • Colorado takes of 3rd in Pac-12, tops Oregon 79-75

    Colorado takes of 3rd in Pac-12, tops Oregon 79-75

    Amanda Loman/AP

    Colorado forward Tristan da Silva, center, is fouled by Oregon guard Jermaine Couisnard, right, as he and Oregon guard Jackson Shelstad, left, defend during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Thursday, March 7, 2024, in Eugene, Ore. Colorado won 79-75. (AP Photo/Amanda Loman)

    The Associated Press

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  • No. 4 Colorado records season-high 32 assists in cruising to 90-57 win over Oregon

    No. 4 Colorado records season-high 32 assists in cruising to 90-57 win over Oregon


    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Maddie Nolan scored 14 of her 19 points in the second quarter, Kindyll Wetta dished out seven of Colorado’s season-high 32 assists and the fourth-ranked Buffaloes cruised to a 90-57 win over Oregon.

    Nolan finished 6 of 11 from the floor, including a spurt just before halftime where she scored 11 straight points to help Colorado pull away.

    The Buffaloes trailed for only 42 seconds and led by as many as 34 points in winning their fourth straight over the Ducks. Colorado beat Oregon 61-48 in Eugene nearly two weeks ago.

    Grace VanSlooten scored 16 points to lead the Ducks.





    Pat Graham, AP Sports Writer

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