Adam Munsterteiger and Brian Howell met up to discuss some of the latest additions to Colorado’s football program this summer. #cubuffs #skobuffs #deionsanders #coachprime
Spring game is not when you show all ! They have to plan appropriately we are lucky we get to see some things developing I’m ready for good and bad! Go Buffs!
Its crazy how a non running back was able to run the ball behind that new line!! Imagine wats gone happen wen hayden, welch, offerdhal, or augstave run the ball!!!
This is great for Charlie. You put in all this work and fans overlook you the second an unknown transfer commits on Twitter. He needs to enter a villain stage. F everybody they don’t actually believe in you. You gotta bully your way to the starting spot. I remember when a Denver Broncos undrafted RB came out of nowhere and did the same just because he outworked everyone. What’s his name??
when do you think CU Football will have a roster worth developing through the season and off-season? Playing musical chairs is no way to build consistency. They looked like garbage in the spring game
With the portal being a viable option, how can anyone expect teams to develop players like they used to? How many teams look like a championship-ready team in their spring game?
@@derrickburwell7777 "championship-ready" isn't what spring game is about. Did you watch CU's spring game? They STILL couldn't run the ball and have zero depth at any position. Compare that with Nebraska's or Iowa's or UNC's spring game. Fundamentals and depth. That's all you're looking for. Those program's games displayed a PROGRAM. No need to take it personal. Be objective. Yes, the Portal allows programs to get another's program's cast-offs. It is NOT free agency. Every other P5 program builds the front 7 by dominating in-state (first) and region recruiting. You need a pipeline. Its the reason you have an S&C program and training table. That is never going away. Even in the NFL, you don't turn over entire rosters every 4 months. You build a program and you CAN add a few specialists via the open market. Sander's approach to doing ALL the wrong things that are antithesis of what college football has been about for 100 years is not a recipe for success.