Colorado
Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders gives props to his much-maligned offensive line after big game
FORT COLLINS, Colo. — The Colorado offensive linemen gathered behind Shedeur Sanders at the postgame podium as his invited guests.
This, after serving as faithful bodyguards.
As a way of saying thanks — maybe even a mea culpa? — the Buffaloes quarterback had his contingent of linemen join him at his news conference following a 28-9 win over rival Colorado State on Saturday night. They only allowed Sanders to be sacked once — and that was in the fourth quarter of a game that was all but sealed.
It’s one of the better blocking jobs a retooled and revamped line has done in front of him since he arrived in Boulder. Sanders had time — connecting with fellow Heisman hopeful Travis Hunter for two scores — and passing lanes. Sanders threw for 310 yards and four touchdowns while completing 73.5% of his passes.
All this a week after Sanders was sacked five times against Nebraska and in a friendly way called out his blockers.
Whatever the message, it was received.
“We all got together and understood, like, we’ve got to do it,” Sanders said Saturday. “Whenever everybody try to push each other against each other, flip words, do everything like that, and together, we all stayed as a family. We’re all as one. So that’s just a good example of knowing the media, regardless of what they try to paint or anything, you can’t put us against each other.”
Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders turns to hand off the ball in the second half of an NCAA college football game against Colorado State, Saturday, Sept. 14, 2024, in Fort Collins, Colo. Credit: AP/David Zalubowski
A line that included a combination of Phillip Houston, Kahlil Benson, Hank Zilinskas, Tyler Brown, Justin Mayers and freshman Jordan Seaton kept Sanders upright. They also created holes, with Colorado’s 109 yards rushing the third-most since coach Deion Sanders arrived in Boulder.
“Offensive line was phenomenal,” the coach said. “You guys buried them last week after the game. You didn’t say anything tremendously positive when I think they almost went for 500 yards total offense and we won (against North Dakota State), right? Where was the praise and the love? But it was a lot of hate and disdain and, ‘Here we go again. Here we go again.’
“These are young men. They’re not old as I am … and have wisdom and understand how to handle the foolishness.”
Sanders used the transfer portal to overhaul his offensive line once again after his son was sacked 52 times last season and missed the final game with a fracture in his back.
Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders gestures to fans after throwing a touchdown pass to wide receiver Travis Hunter in the second half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Sept. 14, 2024, in Fort Collins, Colo. Credit: AP/David Zalubowski
This time, the thing they may need more than anything is time to develop and bond.
“We’re going to keep the ball rolling,” said Brown, whose team opens Big 12 play by hosting Baylor on Saturday. “Because we’re not satisfied. We’re going to continue to get better.”
On the field after the game, Shedeur Sanders rebuffed a handshake from Colorado State QB Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi. Sanders was perturbed by some comments coming out of Fort Collins from Fowler-Nicolosi and receiver Tory Horton leading into rivalry week.
The Rams felt the Buffaloes were fortunate to escape with a 43-35 double-overtime win at Folsom Field last season. Fowler-Nicolosi said in an earlier CBS Colorado interview, “We’ll see how far Instagram followers gets them.”
Sanders threw that back at Fowler-Nicolosi after the game in a video posted by “ Well Off Media,” which chronicles Sanders and the Buffaloes.
“A couple of their players took shots at the whole program and a few of our players,” Deion Sanders said after the contest. “We knew that coming into the game, it was going to be a bit personal and it was.
“We did what we needed to do to come out (of) here with a victory. We really wanted it to be decisive.”
The bond between Sanders and Hunter was on display with Hunter catching 13 passes for 100 yards and two touchdowns. Hunter also had an interception as he played more than 100 snaps on offense and defense. The only time he got tired was chasing down Avery Morrow to make a tackle after a 62-yard run in the fourth quarter.
“That’s probably the first time I did that,” Hunter cracked of asking to be subbed out.
Colorado
Colorado drivers struggle with chaining up along I-70 during winter storms, despite a new law meant to help
GENESEE, Colo. — Colorado lawmakers passed a bill into law earlier this year that could help drivers chain up along the Interstate 70 mountain corridor during the winter months.
The passage of Senate Bill 25-069 created a permit system for private companies to sell and install tire chains or other traction devices to motorists at designated roadside sites. The permits would be issued by the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT).
But there are still questions surrounding whether the program has been implemented or what the roll out looks like, leaving drivers struggling with tire chains on their own during Wednesday’s storm.
“Your hands get cold, they start cramping up, and everything like that… so not too much fun,” said Kane Hulseman, who Denver7 met in Genesee, putting on tire chains just off of I-70.
When asked about driving conditions on I-70 Wednesday afternoon, Hulseman described the interstate as “pretty slick.”
Denver7
Denver7 asked CDOT about the status of the program, but the agency did not provide information about whether any private companies have applied for permits.
Meanwhile, Denver7 met with Charlie Stubblefield of Mountain Recovery Towing, who emphasized the importance of tire chains for winter driving safety.
“Chains are just unbelievably important,” said Stubblefield. “I don’t think anybody realizes just how make or break of a deal that really is.”
Denver7 Traffic
New law aims to cut I-70 spinouts as rental cars cited as major cause of delays
While Stubblefield supports the concept of designated chain installation sites, he stressed the immediate need for them.
“We can’t have enough people out there getting trucks chained up and all that kind of stuff, and manning those chain stations, he said.
Similar programs already exist in California, Washington and Oregon.

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Colorado
New Colorado law for winter driving means requirements for car rentals
A law put in place in Colorado earlier this year is about to get one of its first winter weather tests as a strong storm gears up to hit parts of the I-70 corridor hard. It puts the onus on rental car customers to ensure that the cars they are renting are capable of handling mountain snow and ice conditions. It means two-wheel drive rentals in the high country just won’t cut it.
“Just like skiing, you’ve got to be familiar with the terrain,” said Matt Lovato, who lives in Dumont and partners in the running of a ski rental shop in Idaho Springs. “It’s a hard thing. Don’t go on black (ski runs) if you’re not ready, you know?”
It means car rental agencies have to inform people.
“The rental agency is required to tell you whether or not that car complies with the new law. And compliance is pretty simple. All passenger vehicles need to be all-wheel drive or four-wheel drive if they’re going to traverse I-70 between the Dotsero and Morrison exits between September and May,” said AAA’s regional director of public affairs Skyler McKinley.
On Tuesday, CDOT and the Colorado State Patrol together held a news conference in Georgetown to talk about new winter driving requirements.
“Even if you have a four wheel drive vehicle you’ve got to have the required type of tire and the proper tread depth, or you got to have chains to go along with that,” said State Patrol Lt. Colonel Josh Downing.
“If they’re not four-wheel drive or all wheel drive then they have to carry chains or alternate traction devices,” said McKinley. “And the driver has to put those on when it’s called for on that corridor.”
That messaging must come in writing or verbally to clearly let the renter know what’s expected, but once informed, it’s up to the renter to ensure the vehicle is properly equipped.
“I think there’s going to be some frustration in the system, but it’s just going to be a question of where and how and how we resolve it,” said McKinley.
In time, he believes rental car companies will come under pressure to make sure that the right vehicles are available.
“I suspect the market pressures will weigh on the rental cars, rental fleets keeping specific fleets in Colorado that are right for Colorado,” he said.
Inquiries with several car rental companies Tuesday evening did not bring replies.
But for renters, it will mean knowing what’s expected.
“Not everybody reads the laws when you come up to vacation somewhere, you know,” said Matt Lovato.
But violations could come with fines.
Colorado
Colorado forecasts $27 million deficit after Deion Sanders pay raise, NIL payments
What does Deion Sanders’ raise mean for him and Colorado?
Deion Sanders’ $10M salary signals major investment from Colorado—but how will the school fund rising athletic costs?
The University of Colorado’s athletic department is projecting that it will run a $27 million deficit during the current fiscal year ending in June 2026, in addition to needing $11.9 million in institutional support from the university and $2.2 million from student fees, according to budget figures obtained by USA TODAY Sports.
Those numbers are not final. The athletic department is hoping to bring that deficit down by the end of June with revenue from donations, sponsorships and concerts at Folsom Field. But it has never reported a deficit that big before, which could potentially leave the athletic department in need of more than $41 million in subsidies from the university, including the institutional support and student fees.
It also comes at a critical time:
- Athletic director Rick George announced recently he’s stepping down at the end of the fiscal year in June.
- Colorado nearly doubled the pay of football coach Deion Sanders in March, giving him a new five-year contract worth more than $10 million annually. His team just finished 3-9 in 2025 as attendance started to wane after selling out his first season in 2023.
- Like other major college sports programs, Colorado is committed to providing players with up to $20.5 million in annual benefits and direct payments under terms of the NCAA-House legal settlement. That cost is new this year, with the $20.5 million cap going up by 4% next year and the year after.
The latter two costs are the biggest reasons for the projected deficit — the $20.5 million for players and the $10 million per year for Sanders. Colorado previously told USA TODAY Sports in September it was “to be determined” how it would come up with the money to pay for those two big new costs.
Colorado says it won’t cut sports
The projected answer now is that it will run a deficit with the university as the potential backstop for funding. Asked who would be paying for these expenses if not the university, spokesman Steve Hurlbert said, “The mechanics of that are still to be determined.”
The school said it will “not cut sports nor cut any resources for student-athletes” but will look to cut expenses.
Hurlbert also stressed tuition money and state funds will not be used to address the deficit.
However, some observers who are familiar with Colorado’s budget expressed skepticism about that claim because money is fungible. The money the university provides to athletics also is discretionary.
“This notion that they’re spending resources that otherwise couldn’t be spent on putting more kids through college or funding cancer research is just absurd,” said Jack Kroll, a former member of the university’s Board of Regents. “There’s no truth to that whatsoever.”
‘The university will have to fill the gap’
The projected revenue for fiscal year 2026 is $136.7 million with $163.7 million in expenses. The biggest expense is football at $60.4 million. The department is still finalizing its numbers for fiscal year 2025, which ended in June 2025, but said it expects a “balanced” budget of $141 million in revenues and expenses for that year, including $24 million in institutional support revenue from the Boulder campus and the university’s president’s office.
Colorado isn’t the only school facing these challenges. In fiscal 2024, at least 33 athletic departments received at least $30 million in university support, including Colorado ($31.9 million), Houston ($38.4 million), Arizona State ($51.7 million) and South Florida ($63.7 million), according to public records collected by USA TODAY Sports in conjunction with the Knight-Newhouse College Athletics Database at Syracuse University.
The House settlement added a potential new $20.5 million expense to their bills starting July 1, 2025.
At Colorado, last year the university projected a small but growing budget deficit for the campus starting in fiscal 2027. It even told faculty and staff to move forward by “being comfortable with being uncomfortable.” This has led to concerns about how football is paying for its big new expenses.
“With a lame-duck athletic director, a dismal football season, who-knows-what to happen with the (transfer) portal, donor fatigue, the distancing of football leadership from football alums — the prospects for making much of a dent in that deficit seem very slim,” said Roger Pielke, an emeritus professor at Colorado who previously taught sports governance in the CU athletics department. “That would mean that the university will have to fill the gap.”
Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com
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