BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — The rain and the cold couldn’t dampen the demeanor of Deion Sanders.
The cowboy hat-wearing coach of the Colorado Buffaloes was in a feel-good mood during the spring game Saturday at Folsom Field.
Before the game, he awarded a scholarship to a hard-working running back. Before kickoff, he pledged a bowl game to a 99-year-old super-fan in the stands. And before retreating out of the rain, he watched some new transfer-portal additions step up and saw a receiver-turned-cornerback-turned-tailback shine.
On top of it all, his QB son, Shedeur, looked sharp in front of a respectable crowd given the weather.
“We already know what we had,” Deion Sanders said. “But it was a good display of talent, I believe.”
Running back Charlie Offerdahl had a day he won’t soon forget, even if he didn’t play a snap due to an intestinal ailment. In the locker room before the game, Sanders gathered the team together, along with Offerdahl’s family, and presented the junior with a scholarship.
Ship that caused Baltimore bridge collapse has been refloated
Student shocks by filming her £700
Iowa center called police nearly 1,000 times in 3 years before teen killed staffer, records show
A Palestinian converted to Judaism. An Israeli soldier saw him as a threat and opened fire
The 13 style rules that every midlife woman MUST follow (and yes, beige really is banned!)
Pictured: Woman, 81, killed in 'axe attack' at her sister
Pip Edwards flashes her toned abs as she dons skunk faux fur jacket at Australian Fashion Week
Student shocks by filming her £700
Macron is making a surprise trip to New Caledonia amid deadly unrest and indigenous frustration
Skins star Megan Prescott plans to strip off for OnlyFans snaps to fund her one
DR MARTIN SCURR: How losing your hearing may cause dementia
Pictured: Woman, 81, killed in 'axe attack' at her sister