Colorado
Colorado weather: Denver, Eastern Plains brace for frigid cold as snow is headed to mountains
Winter is back.
Temperatures on Friday are expected to rise no higher than 15 degrees in Denver, with the thermometer dipping to a few notches above zero tonight. Oh, and throw in some snow while you’re at it.
In the metro area, accumulations this weekend are expected to be insignificant — at less than an inch, according to the National Weather Service. Snow is not expected to begin falling until after 3 p.m. Friday.
It’s a different story in the central mountains, where a winter weather advisory goes into effect at 11 a.m. Friday and lasts until 5 p.m. Saturday, with five to 11 inches of snow expected. The National Weather Service warns of hazardous travel conditions Friday evening into Saturday morning along the Interstate 70 corridor into Summit County.
On Colorado’s northeast and east central plains, the arctic blast has already arrived, with the weather service issuing a cold weather advisory that went into place at 3 a.m. Friday and will last until 9 a.m. Saturday. Wind chills on the plains could go as low as 22 degrees below zero.
Meterologists are warning that in areas east of Denver and out to the Kansas state line, frostbite could develop in less than 30 minutes if people are not dressed properly, which includes layers and wearing a hat and gloves to reduce skin exposure to the cold.
Snow on the plains is forecast to begin falling Friday and will wrap up sometime during the day Saturday. Little accumulation is expected.
Frigid conditions continue into Saturday in Denver, with snow likely but additional accumulations of less than 1 inch. The high on Saturday will be 21 degrees. Saturday night will drop to around 6 degrees, with wind chills at 2 below zero.
Cities across the metro area activated emergency cold weather shelter programs on Thursday as Colorado braced for a wave of arctic cold and snow.
The sun returns on Sunday, according to the National Weather Service, but temperatures remain cold — with a high of 24 degrees. Bundle up if you’re headed to the Broncos AFC Championship game versus the New England Patriots at Empower Field at Mile High.
Then the warmup begins, with temperatures rising to 47 on a sunny Monday and Tuesday. The high on Wednesday could eclipse 50 degrees.
Colorado
Lack of Depth Costs ASU Late Against Colorado
Arizona State men’s basketball once again showed fight, effort, and competitiveness—but once again, the lack of depth caught up to them late. In a 78–70 loss to Colorado, the Sun Devils stayed close most of the night before running out of gas in the final minutes.
For long stretches, Arizona State looked like the team that wanted the game more. The energy was there early, and the Sun Devils even opened the second half with a strong run that briefly flipped momentum in their favor
However, as the game wore on, Colorado’s deeper rotation and second-half adjustments became the difference.
The biggest issue continues to be Arizona State’s limited lineup.
Head coach Bobby Hurley was forced to rely on an eight-man rotation, which leaves very little room for rest or flexibility. In a tough conference like the Big 12, that becomes a major problem late in games.
When players are asked to play heavy minutes night after night, fatigue is unavoidable.
Late possessions become tougher, shots come up short, and defensive mistakes start to show. That was clear down the stretch against Colorado, as ASU struggled to generate clean looks offensively.
Odum Leads, but Pressure Builds
Moe Odum did everything he could to keep Arizona State in the game.
He finished with 23 points and played nearly the entire contest. His shot-making abilities and leadership carried the Sun Devils for long stretches.
But Colorado made smart adjustments in the second half.
The Buffaloes put extra pressure on Odum, blitzing him on drives and forcing the ball out of his hands. With fatigue building and limited scoring options around him, ASU struggled to counter.
Massamba Diop added 19 points and seven rebounds, while Anthony Johnson chipped in 14 points and hit timely threes.
Still, the Sun Devils needed just a little more help from the bench to change the outcome.
Colorado’s Depth Makes the Difference
Colorado benefited from having more players available.
They rotated freely, stayed fresh, and closed the game with energy. Sebastian Rankic stepped up with 17 points and 11 rebounds, giving the Buffaloes a big boost inside.
While both teams played hard, Colorado simply had more options late, and that mattered.
What This Loss Really Means
This loss doesn’t mean Arizona State is failing.
It shows how competitive they’ve been despite tough circumstances. Many of their conference losses have been close, and this was another example.
As the season continues, ASU still has chances to prove itself and evaluate its future core. Depth may be holding them back right now, but effort isn’t, and that’s something this team can build on.
Colorado
No. 2 Northwestern Entertains Colorado in Monday Home Opener – Northwestern Athletics
The Wildcats (1-0, 0-0 Big Ten) have won 10 consecutive home openers, dating back to the 2016 season.
LAST TIME OUT
Northwestern earned a decisive 20-12 road victory at No. 3 Boston College this past Friday. Eight different Wildcats scored goals in the program’s most prolific scoring display against a top-five opponent under Combe Family Lacrosse Coach Kelly Amonte Hiller. NU never trailed and outscored the Eagles 12-6 in the second half.
Senior attacker Madison Taylor led the charge with a team-high nine points (five goals, four assists), sophomore attacker Aditi Foster tallied a career-high five points (four goals, one assist) and junior attacker Taylor Lapointe had a hat trick.
The Wildcats’ No. 1-ranked transfer portal class by Inside Lacrosse lived up to its lofty billing. Senior attacker Maddie Epke and graduate student attacker Olivia Adamson combined for six points, graduate student defender Annabel Child dispatched a goal and graduate student goalkeeper Jenika Cuocco posted 15 saves on a .556 save percentage. Cuocco set a new program record for saves in a season-opener.
SCOUTING COLORADO
Led by former Wildcat assistant Ann Elliott Whidden (2009-2012), the Buffaloes enter the 2026 campaign searching for their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2019.
Last season, Colorado had the NCAA’s No. 80 scoring offense (11.13 goals per game) and No. 43 scoring defense (11 goals allowed per game).
Maddie Shoup, the Buffaloes’ top scoring returner, tallied 43 points last season (30 goals, 13 assists). Lily Assini, who scored 39 points last season (23 goals, 16 assists), will look to complement Shoup in Colorado’s offensive scheme.
Goalkeeper Elena Oh, a Big 12 All-Newcomer Team selection in 2025, backstops the Buffaloes’ defense. She recorded 83 saves, 9.8 goals allowed per game, a .399 save percentage and an 8-6 record in 14 starts last season.
Defender Jess Peluso led Colorado with 19 caused turnovers, 29 ground balls and 96 draw controls last season. Peluso was named the Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year in 2025.
SERIES STUFF
Monday will mark the seventh all-time matchup between the two programs, with Northwestern holding a 5-1 record in the series. The teams most recently faced off on Feb. 21, 2025, when the Wildcats secured a 20-5 victory. Northwestern is 4-0 against Colorado in Evanston.
UP NEXT
Northwestern will host Army West Point and Central Michigan on Saturday, Feb. 14 at 1 p.m. CT and Sunday, Feb. 15 at 3 p.m. CT, respectively. Both games will be inside Ryan Fieldhouse and streamed on B1G+.
Colorado
Colorado beats Arizona State 78-70, passes last season’s Big 12 win total
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