The Denver Post

Defense helps Buffs roll

COLORADO 37, TEXAS STATE 3 Offense picks up the pace vs. Sun Belt team after sluggish start to CU’S home opener

- By Kyle Fredrickso­n

BOULDER» The two alleged known commoditie­s for the University of Colorado football team entering this season are all out of whack. Dynamic offense? Rebuilding defense? Time to recalibrat­e.

CU defeated Texas State on Saturday, with the final score (37-3) suggesting a rout but with play more resembling a slugfest. Because just like the crowd of 43,822 fans under the hot sun at Folsom Field, the CU offense was latearrivi­ng for the Buffaloes’ home opener.

CU was forced to punt on five of its first six offensive possession­s. When they notched a quarterbac­k Steven Montez rushing touchdown early in the second quarter, the Buffs snapped a scoreless streak that extended nearly four combined quarters dating to their 17-3 Rocky Mountain Showdown victory over Colorado State.

Aided by a first-quarter Isaiah Oliver punt-return fumble turned recovery touchdown run by Laviska Shenault, CU led just 14-0 at halftime against a team picked in the preseason to finish second-tolast in the Sun Belt Conference.

“I don’t think there’s any concern, to be honest,” Montez said.

One big reason? A historic start from the Buffs’ defense.

CU now has held each of its first two opponents without a touchdown for the first time since 1958, and Saturday the Buffaloes recorded six sacks for the first time since 2011. Texas State was limited to 283 yards of total offense and converted only 2-of-15 thirddown attempts.

CU’S defense began the year

facing repeated questions as to how it would replace the production of eight missing starters, prompting media skepticism that apparently reached the locker room, as noted by tailback Phillip Lindsay postgame: “You guys sitting here were kind of (ticking) them off when they first started.”

“We’re trying to prove to everyone what we’re really capable of,” said Oliver, who returned a Texas State intercepti­on 41 yards in the third quarter, “and we’re trying to prove it to ourselves as well.”

CU’S offense rebounded after halftime, scoring 17 points in the third quarter with flashes of what it could be this season, as Montez connected on five completion­s of 15 yards or more. Gaining ground traction proved more difficult, though, as Lindsay carried the ball 26 times for 87 yards, just a 3.3- yard average, and one touchdown.

“It takes a couple weeks to start clicking,” Montez said, “and I think we’re just starting to get that chemistry going in the offense.”

Montez, who finished 19-of-31 for 299 yards passing, added he was too quick to exit the pocket in the first half, allowing unintended pass rush pressure to complicate his accuracy and decision-making. Second-half adjustment improved his production, and coach Mike Macintyre said, “I thought he made big strides.”

CU (2-0) gets another test run before Pac-12 play when Northern Colorado visits Boulder for a noon kickoff next Saturday. One more chance to catch fire on offense and another opportunit­y to showcase what many believed to not be true about the Buffs in 2017.

“That defense is nasty,” Montez said.

Kyle Fredrickso­n: kfredricks­on@denverpost.com or @kylefredri­ckson

 ?? Andy Cross, The Denver Post ?? Laviska Shenault scores a first-quarter touchdown for CU during Saturday’s home opener vs. Texas State.
Andy Cross, The Denver Post Laviska Shenault scores a first-quarter touchdown for CU during Saturday’s home opener vs. Texas State.

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