Monterey Herald

Deion Sanders brings Prime Time to Colorado

- By Arnie Stapleton

BOULDER, COLO. >> A year after the Colorado Buffaloes' only victory came on a disputed touchdown in overtime, Folsom Field is suddenly the epicenter of college football.

Tickets can set fans back more than $400, and Deion Sanders' guest list never disappoint­s. For his home coaching debut Saturday, fellow Hall of Famers Michael Irvin, Terrell Owens and Shannon Sharpe were in attendance, along with the WuTang Clan.

With thousands of students itching to storm the field as the resurgent Buffaloes were putting the finishing touches on their 36-14 drubbing of Nebraska, Fox announced that its “Big Noon Kickoff” set would remain in Boulder for another week.

Fox originally had planned to pack up and head to Champaign, Illnois, for the Penn StateIllin­ois matchup. Instead, the network will feature the Rocky Mountain Showdown when the Buffaloes (2-0) host Colorado State (0-1) on Saturday night.

The Rams-Buffs game isn't exactly a marquee matchup, but the draw here is Coach Prime and all that he brings to the program, the stadium, the campus and the community.

The Buffaloes, who moved up four spots to No. 18 in the AP Top 25 on Sunday, will be featured by Fox with its early kickoff for the third consecutiv­e week.

In Week 1, the set was in Fort Worth, Texas, where the Buffaloes became the first Power Five team since 1997 to win its opener as a 20-plus point underdog when they beat last season's national runner-up, the TCU Horned Frogs, 45-42.

Sanders told the Fox crew before kickoff in Week 2 that he slept in his office overnight so he could enjoy every bit of his debut at Folsom Field, where the crowd of 53,241 was Colorado's largest since 2008.

After the game, as Sanders settled into his chair to field questions from reporters, ESPN announced its “College GameDay “crew would head to Boulder next weekend for the first time since 1996.

Sanders reacted in typically unflappabl­e fashion to the dual developmen­ts keeping his Buffs the talk of college football for another week.

“At the risk of sounding arrogant, we truly expect that,” he said. “And that's why those kids come, they want the biggest stage and they're getting that every darn week. And the numbers justify it.”

The CU-TCU matchup was the most-watched college football game on Sept. 2, with 7.26 million viewers, “and I'm pretty sure these numbers are going to justify it, as well,” Sanders said of the Nebraska-CU game.

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