Daily Camera (Boulder)

Harrell ready to grow CU run game

He helped Jackson State offense under Sanders

- By Brian Howell bhowell@prairiemou­ntainmedia.com

When Deion Sanders decided to leave Jackson State in December to become the head football coach at Colorado, Gary Harrell knew he would follow him if the opportunit­y was presented.

“I’ve been in coaching for about 22 years and in this business, you need someone that can take you places that you probably can’t get to on your own,” Harrell, CU’S assistant head coach/ running backs coach, said this week. “And I knew I had a special guy when I met Coach Prime. I knew he was going places based on some of the things that we implemente­d within a short span of time at Jackson State.”

It was Sanders who helped Harrell get his first opportunit­y with a Power 5 conference program, but Harrell was one of the keys to helping Sanders get his collegiate coaching career off the ground three years ago.

Harrell, who grew up in Miami, knows HBCU football better than most. He played at Howard and worked as an assistant coach at four different HBCU programs (Howard, Texas Southern, Florida A&M and Morgan State) before a six-year run as Howard’s head coach from 2011-16. He was an assistant at another HBCU program, Alabama State, in 2019 when he met Sanders.

“When I met him four years ago, before he became head coach at Jackson State, we had maybe about three or four conversati­ons,” said Harrell, known as Coach Flea. “The conversati­on was based on some of the things that I’ve been through as a head coach, especially at the HBCU level. So he just wanted to know some of the ins and outs as far as how to go about it, some of the things structure wise, organizati­on wise, some of the things to expect. And through that conversati­on, we built trust.”

That trust led to Harrell being hired at JSU and now at CU.

“I would not be here if it wasn’t for the trust and loyalty that I gave to him along the way,” Harrell said.

As assistant head coach, Harrell will play a major role as Sanders’ right-hand man, but he’s also tasked with getting the Buffaloes’ run game going.

Being new to CU, Harrell said the Buffs have plenty of work ahead to figure out roles in the running back room, but he would

like to find a lead back.

“We’ll have to find out one guy that’s an all-purpose guy (to lead the group),” he said. “In this offense you’ve got to be smart, you’ve got to think like a quarterbac­k when it comes to protection, when it comes to understand­ing what we call the box, things of that nature. So you’ve got to know how to think like a quarterbac­k, you’ve got to be wellcondit­ioned because (offensive coordinato­r Sean Lewis), he dials it up. He goes pretty fast.”

Lewis runs a fast-paced offense, but it’s an offense

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