Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Buffs’ QB nears records, but hurting

- PAT GRAHAM AP SPORTS WRITER

BOULDER, Colo. — Shedeur Sanders is closing in on several Colorado records despite all the bumps and bruises from all the sacks and hits.

These days, the Buffaloes quarterbac­k has become just as fluent in managing the pain that comes with being sacked 48 times as with running the Buffaloes’ pass-centric offense. He’s needed at least two pain-numbing injections this season to get through games and a few days off from practice here and there to recover from constantly scrambling behind a shaky offensive line.

But here he is, with two games left, just 57 yards shy of breaking Colorado’s single-season passing mark of 3,200 yards set by Sefo Liufau in 2014. Sanders, who’s made his watch-flex pose after big moments a popular trend, also has 26 TD passes, leaving him three away from eclipsing Liufau’s mark of 28 for a season.

The durable Sanders is also doing everything he can to help the Buffaloes (4-6, 1-6) pull out of their funk. They’ve dropped six of seven since a 3-0 start and now need two wins on the road — at Washington State on Friday, at No. 18 Utah in the regular season finale — to become bowl eligible.

“You can’t really go in a dark hole and you can’t go in a dark tunnel when you’re having a season like this because nothing will ever be perfect in life,” said Sanders, who went 23-3 as the starting quarterbac­k at Jackson State before arriving in Boulder with his father, Deion Sanders, to help turn around a Colorado program that went 1-11 a season ago. “So you’ve got to take the good, you’ve got to take the bad. So that’s what I take from all this — is just keep being consistent, keep playing the game, keep doing my job, keep doing everything we could do to be able to have success.”

For Shedeur Sanders, that’s making sure he gets enough treatment throughout the week (his dad has given him some rest days) and by any means necessary to make it through a game. He received a pain-relieving injection at halftime against UCLA, his dad explained. And he needed another for his sore hip in order to finish the Oregon State contest.

“You have to mentally prepare yourself all week,” Shedeur Sanders said of dealing with the pain. “No matter what, it’s going to hurt.”

The persistenc­e of Sanders earned him the “Buffalo Heart Award” after Colorado’s final home game of the season last Saturday, a 34-31 loss to No. 21 Arizona. The award is presented annually to the Colorado player who best exemplifie­s “heart, determinat­ion, desire and grit.”

“It means a lot that they understand what I’m going through day to day,” Sanders said. “I’m pushing through mentally, physically and emotionall­y. I’m just very proud they are able to see that, too.”

Couple his production in Boulder with what he accomplish­ed at Jackson State and Shedeur has thrown for more than 10,000 yards in his career.

Not that his performanc­e on the next level is a big surprise to him.

“This proves you could come from anywhere and go to a different division, go play on a different level, on a different stage, and be able to do it,” Sanders said. “I really feel like it should be inspiratio­n toward other FCS players, knowing all it takes is you just have an opportunit­y to do it on a bigger stage.”

 ?? (AP/Mark J. Terrill) ?? Despite numerous injuries, Colorado quarterbac­k Shedeur Sanders is putting his name in the Buffaloes record book.
(AP/Mark J. Terrill) Despite numerous injuries, Colorado quarterbac­k Shedeur Sanders is putting his name in the Buffaloes record book.

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