Deion Sanders is taking up as head trainer at Colorado, bringing his aura and larger-than-life personality to a beleaguered program that is plunged to the ground of school soccer.
The Pro Football Hall of Famer has been at Jackson State, a traditionally Black faculty (HBCU) that performs within the NCAA’s 2nd tier of Division I, since 2020. Sanders has guided the Tigers to consecutive Southwestern Athletic Conference titles.
The Tigers beat Southern within the SWAC championship sport Saturday in Jackson, Mississippi, and a couple of hours later Colorado introduced he was once leaving for Colorado.
Sanders advised his staff after the sport that he had accredited some other process, however supposed to train Jackson State (12-0) within the Celebration Bowl for HBCUs on December 17 in opposition to Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference champion North Carolina Central.
“In coaching you either get elevated or you get terminated,” Sanders advised his staff. “There ain’t no graveyard for coaches where they die at the place. They’re either going to run you off or you’re going to walk off.”
Sanders talked about the death of Black head coaches at the highest levels of college football and trying to be a catalyst for change. “It’s not about a bag,” Sanders said. “It’s about an opportunity.”
The Tigers went 27–5 in the Sanders era and he was named SWAC coach of the year the last two seasons.
Known as “Prime Time” during his NFL career, the 55-year-old Sanders prefers “Coach Prime” these days. Colorado will prove a challenge for the magnetic Sanders, who inherits a program coming off a 1-11 season. But he brings instant name recognition and a track record of being able to recruit top-level talent.
“There were a number of highly qualified and impressive candidates interested in becoming the next head football coach at Colorado, but none of them had the pedigree, the knowledge and the ability to connect with student-athletes like Deion Sanders,” Colorado athletic director Rick George mentioned in a commentary. “Not only will Coach Prime energize our fanbase, I’m confident that he will lead our program back to national prominence while leading a team of high quality and high character.”
The Buffaloes have turned in just one full-length winning season since joining the Pac-12 in 2011. They dismissed Karl Dorrell in October and interim coach Mike Sanford finished out the season that culminated with a 63-21 blowout loss to No. 12 Utah at home.
Colorado are a long way from their glory days under Hall of Fame coach Bill McCartney, who led the Buffaloes to a national championship following the 1990 season.
While the program is trying to build up its name, image and likeness portfolio, establishing the Buffs4Life Foundation to help out student-athletes, the Buffaloes have also seen several players announce their intention in recent days of entering the transfer portal.
Sanders figures to bring a few players along with him possibly even his son, quarterback Shedeur Sanders, a sophomore at Jackson State who’s thrown 36 TD passes this season and just six interceptions.
Deion Sanders was an All-American at Florida State before a standout NFL career with five teams, including the San Francisco 49ers and Dallas Cowboys, where he won a Super Bowl with each. He also played nine MLB seasons and reached the World Series with the Atlanta Braves in 1992. Over the years, Sanders was an analyst and a star of reality TV shows and commercials, including Aflac spots with Alabama coach Nick Saban.
Jackson State hired Sanders in September 2020 after he coached his sons at a fledgling Texas high school that was fraught with issues.
Moving to Jackson State, Sanders called the fit “a fit made in heaven,” and quickly lifted the school in Mississippi’s capital.
The success of Jackson State was significant as it made a program that has produced Hall of Famers such as Walter Payton, Lem Barney, Jackie Slater and Robert Brazile relevant again among HBCUs, and Sanders was determined to keep it that way.
The arrival of Sanders raised Jackson State’s visibility. They were on the cover of Sports Illustrated in July, and saw ESPN’s College GameDay pay a visit in October. Sanders also appeared on 60 Minutes in a profile story.
Jackson State athletic director Ashley Robinson said in a statement that Sanders “challenged norms and remodeled mindsets of what was once appeared to be conceivable to create new visions for good fortune whilst inspiring the neighborhood and growing a focus at the HBCU sports activities and tradition.”