Times-Call (Longmont)

CU football

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After graduating from Washington State, Bartolone embarked on a coaching career that took him to three different Division III schools — Whittier College, St. Lawrence University and Carleton College — in a four-season span, from 20162019. He also worked as the offensive coordinato­r for the Flash Football Club in France in the spring of 2017.

Then, in 2020, he got his first opportunit­y in the FBS, working as an analyst and assistant quarterbac­ks coach at Nevada.

He spent two seasons learning from Nevada head coach Jay Norvell, now the head coach at Colorado State.

“A lot of what I’ve learned from wide receiver play has come from (Norvell) and that’s his specialty,” Bartolone said. “He hired me at Nevada, he took me under his wing and he was huge for me.”

A year ago, Leach helped Bartolone land the job as Sanders’ offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­ks coach at Jackson State. The Tigers had one of the most prolific offenses in the FCS, with 37.7 points per game.

“(Leach) has been instrument­al in everywhere that I’ve been, and obviously I wouldn’t be here today if it weren’t for him and his relationsh­ip with coach Prime,” Bartolone said. “He’s one of the greats and him helping me get that role last year at Jackson State and being in that role, that was huge for me and my career and my developmen­t, being at that stage and at that level.”

Sanders trusted Bartolone enough to bring him to Boulder. With CU, Bartolone is in a different role, but one he’s excited about as he mentors the Buffaloes’ receivers.

CU returns junior Montana Lemonious-craig and sophomore Jordyn Tyson, who was spectacula­r last year before a knee injury that will keep him out of spring practices. Since Sanders arrived, the Buffs have added the top two receivers from South Florida, Xavier Weaver and Jimmy Horn Jr., as transfers. Jackson State cornerback/receiver Travis Hunter will also play a key role.

The group also includes several young, unproven returners and six incoming freshmen.

“Those are my guys,” Bartolone said. “My job as a coach right now is to hold all those guys accountabl­e to the standard that we’ve set as coaches every single day.”

It’s a standard Bartolone has learned from highly respected coaches during a short, but impressive coaching rise.

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