Colorado
Deion Sanders Sends Reminder To Colorado Buffaloes Players, Staff Amid Memorial Day Weekend
Compared to most other Power Four college football programs, the Colorado Buffaloes haven’t had many players make headlines for negative off-field incidents since coach Deion Sanders took the helm in 2022. Still, a gentle reminder now and then can help keep it that way, especially as many attend social events over Memorial Day weekend.
On Sunday, “Coach Prime” posted a message on X encouraging his players and staff members to stay out of trouble. As Sanders noted, even one mistake can hurt one’s goal of playing football at the next level.
“All my PLAYERS & STAFF. I love u @ I miss u,” Sanders wrote. “Please be safe & don’t do anything to jeopardize your opportunity to be a Professional. Be careful out there because everyone around u ain’t really down for u and everybody else is just there.”
Sanders typically send out a daily piece of advice each morning on social media, and at least one Colorado player is taking Sunday’s message to heart. About 15 minutes after Sanders posted his plea to stay safe, freshman defensive end Brandon Davis-Swain commented “yes sir.” Davis-Swain totaled two tackles in two games last season but will likely take on a bigger role during his upcoming second season with the Buffs.
A few current Colorado players were in Tennessee on Saturday for Travis Hunter’s wedding, including linebacker Jeremiah Brown and cornerback DJ McKinney. Offensive analyst Rashad Davis was also in attendance, along with former Colorado wide receivers Jimmy Horn Jr. and Xavier Weaver.
Meanwhile, incoming freshman linebacker Mantrez Walker was in Georgia on Saturday for his Buford High School graduation. Walker enrolled early this past semester and played in Colorado’s spring football game last month. Fellow incoming freshman Julian “JuJu” Lewis, who’s competing with Liberty transfer Kaidon Salter for Colorado’s starting quarterback job, attended his own Georgia high school graduation earlier this month.
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While Colorado has been a disciplined team off the field over the past two-plus years, “Coach Prime” is looking for that to translate into game action next season.
“We’re so darn disciplined around here, I don’t know why we don’t take the disciplinary things on the field, so we’re going to fix that,” Sanders said after Colorado’s spring game. “We got to fix that. We have officials at practice, so we call it then, and they have disciplinary actions when they’re offsides or do something stupid to cause us a penalty. But we got to be better with that. We would not be the most penalized team in the Big 12 again this season. I’m putting my name on that.”
The Buffs will reconvene in Boulder later this summer for offseason workouts and preseason camp. They’ll begin the 2025 season at home against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets on Aug. 29.
Colorado
Colorado Springs officials provide details of recent closure, repair work on Uintah Street
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — Two weeks have passed since officials closed four blocks of Uintah Street to repair damage under a bridge over Shooks Run Creek, and we’re now learning specifics about the response.
Officials said that the city was the lead entity in the repair response, with Colorado Springs Utilities (CSU) providing a supporting role.
The closure began late in the afternoon of June 10 for what officials described as emergency bridge and utility repairs between Prospect and Institute streets, east of the Colorado College campus.
Officials said that on the previous day, a routine bridge inspection by the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) discovered a large “void,” or sinkhole, under the bridge that compromised a utility line.
But officials didn’t explain how the void developed or how they repaired it until earlier this week, when Richard Mulledy, the city’s public works director, elaborated on the situation.
“It was about a six-foot by eight-foot void,” he explained. “That void was really caused by an abandoned storm sewer line and then a leaking manhole. It’s something that we see from time to time, but really doesn’t happen often.”
Crews approached the problem from under and above the bridge, with workers excavating into the street to access the utility lines.
“The utility line being compromised was an active storm sewer line,” Mulledy said. “It was sort of hanging out in the open and was unsecured. The old storm sewer line had been abandoned for decades and was starting to fail.”
Crews removed the old stormwater pipe, repaired the manhole, and backfilled the void with a material called “flow.”
“Flow fills almost like a kind of liquid concrete,” Mulledy detailed. “And that’s a really great structural solution. So, we filled that entire thing up, made sure the void is closed, and made sure it’s structurally sound.”
He added that the bridge is around a century old, the same age as most bridges across the creek.
“This was identified and got fixed in 48 hours, rather than let something structural fail, and then we’d be in a big, giant construction project,” Mulledy said. “The structure itself, I don’t think, was ever really threatened.”
The closure ended on Saturday, June 13.
Colorado
Colorado man dies after dislodging rocks, getting crushed by 1,000 pound boulder
A Colorado man died on Tuesday when a boulder fell on him and crushed him. That’s according to the Chaffee County Sheriff’s Office, who identified the man as 59-year-old Paul Frasch.
Frasch is a resident of Silverthorne. The sheriff’s office says he was walking in an area along the Arkansas River in Buena Vista in the middle of the day with his coworker when rocks fell and hit him.
According to investigators, the boulder that landed on Frasch weighed at least 1,000 pounds.
The coworker received injuries to his arms after trying to help Frasch.
When first responders got to the scene, the boulder was still on top of Frasch. He was declared dead at the scene.
Colorado
Longmont declines to join Superior airport noise appeal before Colorado Supreme Court
The Longmont City Council voted unanimously Tuesday night to decline a request from the town of Superior to support its appeal to the Colorado Supreme Court in a long-running lawsuit over aircraft noise from Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport.
The decision comes about a week after the council met in a closed-door executive session to receive legal advice regarding Superior’s request that Longmont join an amicus brief supporting the appeal.
Councilmember Jake Marsing moved to adopt the city’s proposed response to Superior, and the motion passed 7-0 after a brief discussion.
Superior is seeking Colorado Supreme Court review of a Colorado Court of Appeals decision that found federal law prevents courts from ordering Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport to restrict aircraft operations because regulation of air traffic falls under the authority of the Federal Aviation Administration.
Superior and Boulder County sued the Jefferson County-owned airport in 2024, arguing that training flights create excessive noise and lead emissions for nearby communities. While a district court dismissed the lawsuit in 2025, the Court of Appeals this year revived part of the lead contamination claim while upholding the dismissal of the noise-related claims.
In the statement adopted Tuesday, Longmont acknowledged it has also heard complaints from residents about airplane noise and said the city takes those concerns seriously. However, the statement said, Longmont’s position differs from neighboring communities because it owns and operates Vance Brand Airport.
“The city believes that local control over airport operations is important and these rights should not be taken by the courts,” the adopted statement reads. The city also said it is continuing efforts to address noise concerns through voluntary measures, including updates to its voluntary noise abatement procedures and a voluntary saturated pattern policy that limits the number of aircraft in the traffic pattern.
Mayor Susie Hidalgo-Fahring also noted the city is continuing discussions about its long-term vision for airport operations.
The statement leaves the door open for future collaboration with regional partners and the FAA but concludes that Longmont will not file an amicus brief with the Colorado Supreme Court at this time.
Before the vote, Councilmember Matthew Popkin asked City Attorney Eugene Mei to clarify for residents who, exactly, had provided legal advice to the council during the executive session. Mei said Longmont’s outside aviation counsel did not advise the city because that firm is representing Jefferson County in the appeal and therefore has a conflict of interest. Instead, the council received advice solely from the city’s legal staff.
Longmont’s decision contrasts with those of neighboring Lafayette and Louisville, whose city councils have approved joining an amicus brief supporting Superior’s petition. Broomfield has also indicated support for the effort.
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