2012 Colorado Buffaloes

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Jun 7, 2012
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This could be a fun team to root for. Two young and big white wide receivers are starting for the Buffs and the total number of white starters is 11.

Offense:

Tyler McCulloch WR SO
Nelson Spruce WR RS FR
David Bakhtiari OL JR
Alex Lewis OL SO
Gus Handler OL JR
Jack Harris OL JR
Nick Kasa TE SR
Connor Wood QB SO

Defense:

Will Pericak DT SR
Brady Daigh LB SO
Jon Major LB SR
Parker Orms SS JR

Also there is the intruiging case of Thor Eaton, the redshirt freshman that's being moved to defensive end and is right now listed as a backup. I don't know why Colorado doesn't want this kid to play quaterback or maybe even wide receiver - I've looked at his high school tape and he's a 6'6" superman, just an incredible athlete.

Newcomers: Peyton Williams WR, John Stuart DE, Shane Dillon QB, Tyler Henington DT, Austin Ray TE
 
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Jack Lambert

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I think you missed two Kaiser. The other two OL for Colorado should be LT David Bakhtiari and RG Ryan Dannewitz, both white players. So the Buffs should have 13 white starters!
 
Joined
Jun 7, 2012
Messages
131
I think you missed two Kaiser. The other two OL for Colorado should be LT David Bakhtiari and RG Ryan Dannewitz, both white players. So the Buffs should have 13 white starters!

Dannewitz is behind Harris on the official post spring depth chart. Bakhtiari is of Iranian descent and I wasn't sure how to classify him, but I will add him to the list.
 

Highlander

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The first official depth chart for Colorado was released last night.

There are two less Whites than were anticipated and Kansas transfer, Jordan Webb, gets the starting nod over Connor Wood.

Here it is:

Jordan Webb - QB
Jack Harris - RT
Gus Handler - C
Alexander Lewis - LG
David Bakhtiari - LT
Nick Kasa - TE
Tyler McCulloch - WR
Nelson Spruce - WR
Alex Wood - FB (Co-starter w/ other afflete)

Will Pericak - DT
Jon Major - OLB


An afflete will start instead of Colorado native, Brady Daigh, at LB.
Another afflete somehow surpassed Colorado native, Parker Orms, at SS (completely ridiculous).

Orms was recruited to play CB, and was starting and doing very well as a true freshman, considering the extremely short leash that White players are given at this position, until he got injured. Now he is 2nd string SS even though he is completely recovered from his injury and back to his old form.

So, at most, including the FB, there will be 11 White starters for the Buffaloes this year and this will probably be considered a generous number in the years to come.

The level of high school football talent of White players in Colorado is very high. Black talent is almost nil in comparison, yet they continue to mine for coal elsewhere when they have loads of White diamonds at home.

As a side note...almost 9000 people packed the stadium last night to watch 5-A newcomer Valor Christian take on established 5-A powerhouse Mullen last night. These two team are absolutely loaded with White talent, including Christian McCaffrey of Valor Christian. Peyton Manning was in attendance as was Jack Del Rio, whose son, Luke, starts at QB for Valor. It was televised live on ESPN3 last night. Mullen won 14-13.
 

Highlander

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Caste article on the Buff's two starting White receivers.

Unheralded Colorado receivers eager to show they're playmakers

BOULDER — What college kid doesn't love watching sports highlights? Yeah, Colorado wide receivers coach Bobby Kennedy sure knows how to get his players' attention.

Kennedy doesn't just reach for video of the upcoming opponent. He loves to find footage of receivers from yesteryear, some of whom he may have coached along the way.
Colorado sophomore Tyler McCulloch was issued jersey No. 87 when he arrived in Boulder last summer. Don't expect him to ever give it up. Kennedy has shown hours of Ed McCaffrey highlights, pointing out how the Broncos' old No. 87 was able to gain separation from a cornerback despite lacking breakaway speed. McCulloch, 6-foot-5 and 205 pounds, is about McCaffrey's size.

"We've looked at a bunch of one-on-ones — how NFL guys release from the defender, how they come off the ball, things like that," Kennedy said. "I think it's a great teaching tool for our team."

The announcement this week that CU's most explosive receiver, Paul Richardson, will redshirt this season so he can fully recover from knee surgery leaves the Buffaloes with possession-receiver types as starters in McCulloch and redshirt freshman Nelson Spruce as they open the season Saturday against Colorado State at Sports Authority Field at Mile High.

Coming off the CU bench, sophomore Keenan Canty and true freshman Gerald Thomas add speed, with Thomas being particularly dangerous in the open field. But depth is lacking, as evidenced by former walk-ons Dustin Ebner and Justin Gorman making the rotation.

There isn't much experience. Among wideouts, the top returnees in 2011 receptions are Canty (14) and McCulloch (10).

But watching film of NFL players enables them to pick up the nuances that can help them get open.

"We'll watch tape of McCaffrey," Kennedy explained, "and I'll say: 'Tyler, you have to get off the ball better. You have to make your cuts better.' After we watched those tapes, you could see that he understood. I've seen a big change in Tyler."

Viewing old footage is not only productive. Players say it's fun.
"We've seen guys that played at Texas, USC and other places, and it's really helpful," Spruce said.

Kennedy said the unit will "desperately" miss Richardson's sprinter's speed. There are other ways to move the chains, however.

"Paul is a unique talent, but there are different ways to scheme some things," Kennedy said. "It just takes one play (for a long gain). It just takes one play for a defender to bite wrong or fall or something. What I'm most excited about is they've changed their mind-set.

Now, they want to be good. Before, it was they hoped to be good."

Colorado featured exceptional speed at both wideout positions last season, with Richardson and NFL draftee Toney Clemons. This year, not so much.

"I hope people look at us as an underrated group and that we have something to prove every game," Kennedy said. "We've got to take the old junk-yard dog approach that we're going to go out and fight and scratch and claw."

Right out of the box, Colorado State will pose a great challenge to CU's receiving corps, Kennedy said.

"Colorado State is really talented," Kennedy said of the Rams' secondary. "Everything I've heard and read, they're really pleased with those guys. Their safeties (6-3, 210-pound Trent Matthews and 6-3, 208-pound Austin Gray) and big, powerful guys that will hit you. And their corners are good cover guys."

CU's receivers say they are ready.

"I think people think with P-Rich out that we don't have any talent at wide receiver," McCulloch said. "But we still have a lot of guys that can go out and make plays."

Added redshirt freshman Spruce, "We're young guys for the most part and are anxious to show people that the passing game is going to be a huge part of this offense."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Spruce had 65 catches for 1325 yards as a senior in high school, for an average of over 20 yards per catch, and runs a 4.5/40...hardly a "possession-receiver type".
 

Colonel_Reb

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Pathetic! :thumbdown: I'd expect to see that kind of castean language down here but not so much in Colorado. I'm sure the coaches will make some trips to Florida so they can rectify this tragic WR situation.
 
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