The Denver Post

Sanders knows whose time it is. His. Just watch.

- Sean Keeler

TEMPE, ARIZ. >> Shedeur Sanders has been sacked more times than a gallon of milk. His favorite target, Travis Hunter, hasn’t played in 14 quarters and two overtime periods.

Yet over his first six weeks on the job, Son of Prime’s notched four one-score victories as CU’S starting quarterbac­k.

Frame of reference:

The Buffs won five onescore games, combined, over their prior 30 tilts, a bridge to nowhere that stretches all the way back to November 2020.

He’s Elway Lite. Isn’t he? Well, maybe Reeves Era Elway Lite. Sanders The Younger is accurate and arrogant, cool and cocky to the last, the sizzle and the steak. Without him, the Buffs are 1-5 right now, a paper tiger of empty slogans and false promises.

And y’ all are freaking out about a …. watch? That’s Forked Up.

Look, Shedeur was just reminding all those Arizona State undergrads what time it was.

His.

“(I) was really just taking accountabi­lity of what’s going on in the game,” Shedeur said of a lonely, third- quarter stretch he spent stewing at the very end of the CU bench, head tucked in a towel, before steering the Buffs to a 27-24 win.

“You know, I’m holding the ball a little bit

too long, not really going through everything, not basically playing perfect. So that’s how it was. And then I’m on the side and I’m frustrated.

“And it’s like — it’s time, you know? It’s time to do whatever it takes to win, and by any means you could take matters in your own hands.”

Which he did. Secondhalf line: a touchdown and 123 passing yards on 12 completion­s, including a 43-yard rainbow to Javon Antonio that set up the Alejandro Mata’s game-winning field goal

with 12 seconds left. Son of Prime’s season secondhalf numbers (plus OT): a 75.2% completion rate, 12 touchdowns, zero picks, 194.38 passer rating.

And y’all are anonymousl­y accusing him of … playing to jazz up his box score?

“I think they want to rack up some stats for Shedeur,” an unnamed Pac-12 assistant coach told The Athletic in the days leading up to the Buffs’ first Pac-12 victory of the season (1-2) and fourth victory (4-2) overall.

“(Sanders) really holds

on to the ball a long time. I think he takes sacks because he doesn’t want to affect his completion percentage. He’s playing a little different than he did earlier in the season. Before he showed that he was willing to step up and escape through the Bgaps. Now, he’s retreating more.”

Funny. The guy taking sacks (air quotes) on purpose (ends air quotes) ran six times on his own for 31 yards at Mountain America Stadium. On at least one of those jaunts, instead of sliding like a

sane person, the 6-foot2, 215-pound Sanders, no battering ram, lowered his shoulder and ran over a Sun Devils defender.

Pro tip: Quarterbac­ks known for making business decisions — see Bridgewate­r, Teddy — generally prefer not to throw their bodies around like crash test dummies.

“We really just had to activate that dawg, that fire, to show everybody, hey, look,” explained Sanders, who completed 26 balls on 42 attempts for CU, which wraps up the first half of the season by hosting Stanford (1- 4, 0-3 Pac-12) Friday night at Folsom Field. “(To show) those guys that (we) could get out there and just do whatever we want to do. So that was really the thing. It really is just like a ‘ scare’ tactic.

Want to know what’s even scarier? The Buffs just cleared their consensus preseason over-under on victories for the season (3.5) with six games yet to play.

Hunter, resting a lacerated liver, is on the mend. And Coach Prime was spitting fire after the tlit, miffed at yet another slow CU start, more schizophre­nic special teams, and a 24-17 lead coughed up by a chewed-up, Hunter-less defense.

“We have the talent, man,” Deion Sanders groused. “We have some talented young men. We have some talented people inside this locker room. We just (have) got to put it all together.

“And I’m sorry with my impatience. I don’t have patience for too much in life. You ask my kids.”

The kids?

The kids are all right, Prime.

More than all right, actually.

“I’ve been living with (Deion) my whole life,” Shedeur Sanders recounted with a grin. “He can’t tell me anything I haven’t heard before.

“I just looked down the sideline, just seeing everybody’s body language, the coaches and everybody. And they knew. They knew what time it was.”

 ?? CHRISTIAN PETERSEN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Colorado quarterbac­k Shedeur Sanders celebrates as he walks off the field following the Buffs’ 27-24 win against the Arizona State on Saturday in Tempe, Ariz.
CHRISTIAN PETERSEN — GETTY IMAGES Colorado quarterbac­k Shedeur Sanders celebrates as he walks off the field following the Buffs’ 27-24 win against the Arizona State on Saturday in Tempe, Ariz.
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