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CollegeFootballNews: And the hard part about it? The 5-7 season was the program’s second-best since joining the Pac-12 in 2011.
But there’s a window open right now that’s going to slam shut very, very soon.
With one winning season since 2005’s strange run to the Big 12 Championship Game, it’s been a long, long time since the former national championship-level superpower has been more than just a team on a schedule.
This year’s version has a whole lot of flaws and concerns, but if it’s ever going to make a push, this has to be it.
UCLA, Arizona and Arizona State might all need a little bit under their respective new head coaches to get going, USC doesn’t quite appear to be the USC of the last two seasons, and Utah is a home game for the Buffs. All five of those programs are going to be looking at 2018 as a stepping-stone season.
Colorado can’t.
https://collegefootballnews.com/2018/04/colorado-buffaloes-college-football-preview-2018
– What You Need To Know: Offense | Defense
– Top Players, Key Game, Fun Stats
– What Will Happen & Win Total Prediction
SBNation: Was Colorado’s good year a mirage?
The shine can wear off pretty quickly. In the first week of December 2016, there wasn’t a better story in college football than Mike MacIntyre’s Colorado Buffaloes. In his fourth year in Boulder, MacIntyre had pulled off a rise that would have made Bill McCartney proud. The engineer of CU’s mid-1980s rise, McCartney had won seven games across his first three seasons before winning seven in his fourth and never looking back.
MacIntyre’s feat was similar: 10 wins over the first three seasons, 10 in the fourth. Colorado surged from 98th to 18th in S&P+ thanks to a solid offense and an aggressive defense. They were projected to fall thanks to turnover, but once you’ve broken through, you never want to think previous depths are possible again.
They’re very much possible.
https://www.sbnation.com/college-football/2018/5/17/17322524/colorado-football-2018-preview-schedule-roster
The Athletic: Colorado football trying to recapture magic of 2016
It’s kind of hard to believe that one year ago Colorado was coming off a Pac-12 South title, having gone 8-1 in conference play in the regular season, with the lone loss coming to USC by four points. In 2017, Colorado followed up that division title by finishing 2-7 in conference play, its sixth last-place finish in seven seasons as a member of the conference. Five of the Buffaloes’ seven Pac-12 losses came to teams they had beaten the previous season. They went from playing a top-25 team in the Alamo Bowl in 2016 to a three-loss November that prevented them from going to a bowl game, the ninth time in 10 years that they’ve stayed home for the postseason.
https://theathletic.com/383959/2018/06/13/colorado-football-season-preview-depth-chart-schedule-2
Athlon: 2018 Buffaloes Preview and Prediction
After winning the Pac-12 South in 2016, the Colorado Buffaloes slipped to 5-7 in a rebuilding season last fall. Both sides of the ball were to blame for the decline, but Colorado has to get its defense back on track after giving up 6.1 yards per play in 2017 (up from 4.9 in 2016). The Buffaloes return six starters, but question marks remain about this unit's ability to stop the run, and they must find a replacement for standout cornerback Isaiah Oliver. Quarterback Steven Montez returns after an up-and-down 2017 season to anchor the offense. However, his supporting cast will be revamped, as the Buffaloes lost prolific running back Phillip Lindsay and three key receivers. A favorable home slate -- featuring five Pac-12 games -- could be enough for Colorado to return to the postseason.
https://athlonsports.com/college-football/colorado-football-2018-buffaloes-preview-and-prediction
More to come....
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