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He acts like his kids are infallible though
>>https://theathletic.com/5094370/2023/11/28/deion-sanders-colorado-recruiting-decommitment/ >> >>Deion Sanders has already proven multiple times he can pull >a >>rabbit out of his hat late in a recruiting cycle. This is >more >>about a big-picture look at Colorado’s recruiting. >> >>It’s bad. And it’s time to push the panic button. >> >>His high school recruiting, even with late fireworks in the >>2023 cycle, hasn’t been average. It’s been far below >>average, which is shocking given the shot of adrenaline his >>arrival provided the Colorado program. Colorado’s 2024 >class >>ranks No. 65 nationally, three spots ahead of Colorado >State. >>The Buffaloes have only nine commitments, including three >who >>rank in the top 400 nationally. >> >>This isn’t June. It’s Nov. 28, and we’re roughly three >>weeks away from prospects being able to sign with schools. >>There aren’t a lot of elite-level prospects there for the >>taking, either — only 12 of the top 200 players in the >class >>remain uncommitted. >> >>Yes, Sanders can theoretically flip a five-star prospect in >>December like he did with Cormani McClain last year and >Travis >>Hunter the year before at Jackson State. But it seems >>unreasonable to think that Colorado is going to go on some >>massive flipping spree and somehow wind up with a top-30 >>class. This class is almost finished. >> >>Even when Sanders landed Hunter at Jackson State, neither he >>nor anyone from his staff ever stepped foot at Hunter’s >high >>school in Georgia to recruit him in person. You may call >that >>powerful recruiting, and it is. But that isn’t going to >cut >>it when you’re trying to build a Power 5 program. >> >>This is a critical juncture in the Colorado build. When the >>Buffaloes started 3-0, there was proof of concept of how fun >>it would be to play for Sanders. Colorado can offer things >to >>prospects that other middle-tier programs cannot. Between >>Sanders’ profile, the beauty of Boulder, the promotion on >>social media and the income that comes with it, you’d >think >>this would be a very attractive destination. >> >>But we’re not seeing it. The results aren’t there. And >>that makes it easy to question whether Colorado is ever >truly >>going to get where Sanders promised it was going. > >I have NOT been following close, but noticed he was catching >flack for too much "them" and not enough "we." > >Is he hitting the road hard and getting in living rooms or >coasting on the name and the hype?
------------------- I wanna go to where the martyrs went the brown figures on the walls of my apart-a-ment...
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