The Denver Post

TATE’S RISE CHANGES VIEW OF CU’S LOSS

- By Kyle Fredrickso­n Kyle Fredrickso­n: kfredricks­on@ denverpost.com or @kylefredri­ckson

Colorado football players and coaches loaded onto the team plane Saturday after a victory at Oregon State, turned on some television­s and observed the latest edition of what has become must-watch Pac-12 viewing: Khalil Tate vs. The World.

“He looks like a stallion out there, just running by everybody,” CU coach Mike MacIntyre said Monday. “They’re just standing still, it looks like to me. It’s amazing.”

That’s right. More than a week has passed since Arizona’s backup quarter- back torched the Buffaloes for 327 yards rushing in a 45-42 home loss, and MacIntyre is still singing Tate’s praises. It’s hard to blame him. Tate once again put the nation on notice Saturday night with 230 yards rushing in a 47-30 home victory against UCLA.

Combined with reserve duty in Arizona’s first two games, Tate has now accumulate­d 643 yards on the ground this fall — more than stud USC tailback Ronald Jones on 63 fewer carries. That’s wild. But why should it matter to the Buffaloes?

The gut reaction to Arizona’s upset victory in Boulder teetered on inex- Wildcats starting quarterbac­k Brandon Dawkins’ injury ushered in a new face CU’s defense hadn’t gameplanne­d against — but with the same offense on a team picked preseason to finish last in the Pac-12 South Division. The Buffaloes simply couldn’t stop Tate.

Now, a silver lining of sorts will be watching other league foes meet a similar fate and, just maybe, it could prove CU’s defensive woes weren’t accurately characteri­zed.

“I wouldn’t say it makes me feel any better,” CU linebacker Drew Lewis said. “But it kind of makes sense for what happened.”

Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez was notably upbeat on the Pac-12 teleconfer­ence Tuesday, spending the majority of his 10 minutes with reporters gushing over his new star quarterbac­k. The awe of watching Tate run? Even Rodriguez can be caught off guard.

“Khalil’s open-field speed has not been a surprise,” Rodriguez said, “but (it’s) better than we thought.”

Oh, boy, Bob. Did you catch what New Mexico’s football coach had to say during his weekly news conference? The Lobos host Colorado State at 8:15 p.m. Friday, and in assesscusa­ble. ing the Rams, Bob Davie said: “This is a Power Five team, they’ve got my vote, and the sooner they get to a Power Five conference, the better. We can start that campaign, but they are a Power Five team in every way.”

An active Mountain West coach advocating for the departure of a member school is … interestin­g, to say the least. Davie’s comments were probably intended simply as praise for a well-rounded CSU football team poised for a run at the conference championsh­ip, plus a tinge of humor.

Of course, the Rams still have Power Five aspiration­s, but don’t expect players, coaches or administra­tion to lay it out in such forward terms — even with a shiny new stadium on campus built with that same vision in mind.

“We want to be the best version of Colorado State we can be,” CSU coach Mike Bobo said. “Our goal is to play for this conference championsh­ip and eventually win this conference championsh­ip. … If the opportunit­y ever arises for realignmen­t, we’d like to be a part of that discussion. A lot goes into that.”

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