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AllBuffs.com - Covering CU-Boulder Athletics

Ralphie Report: Kansas State DB commits to Colorado

Noah_King_1.1.0.jpeg


We need a lot more bodies

Spring football is an illusion. We may have gone to a spring game, but with the transfer portal closing AFTER the spring game is played, there is still so much roster movement. Who cares who you saw in April?

The Colorado Buffaloes are no stranger to rebuilding their roster after spring. Coach Prime was one of the first coaches to embrace everything the portal has to offer, and that has not changed. The Buffs are rebuilding the offense and defense after a senior-heavy team last year. Shedeur Sanders gets the headlines, but the Buffs are also replacing Shiloh Sanders.

Noah King is a pretty exciting replacement for him. King was a top 300 recruit last year for Kansas State before redshirting as a freshman. Noah King is about 6’3 and 200 pounds with plenty of speed. That means he can play almost anywhere on the secondary, but I’d bet he ends up at safety for CU before it’s all said and done.



pic.NOPE/j4v0IH4qYm

— Noah King (@NoahKing7) May 1, 2025​

Welcome, Noah!

by Jack Barsch
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Ralphie Report: Shedeur Sanders selects new number with Cleveland Browns

Colorado Black & Gold Spring Game

Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images for ONIT

Sanders will no longer be #2

Shedeur Sanders is officially wearing number 12 with the Browns.

After two legendary seasons with Colorado, most fans know that Sanders wore #2 in college. However, that #2 belongs to veteran receiver DeAndre Carter in Cleveland, so Shedeur had to go with something different and chose #12, which a number with some meaning behind it.

#12 is the same number Travis Hunter will wear in Jacksonville, which gives Buffs fans a fun connection. Sanders’ choice of #12 could also an homage to Tom Brady, the greatest quarterback in NFL history. Ever since getting to Boulder, Shedeur hasn’t been quiet about his praise from Brady, as the two have become friends.

More importantly, picking #12 feels like a nod to his dad. Deion Sanders wore number 21 during his Hall of Fame career. Flipping the digits to 12 gives Shedeur his own spin while still honoring the legacy.

It’s a good look and a fresh chapter. If Sanders lives up to the hype in Cleveland, #12 might take on a whole new meaning for Browns fans. To the Buffs and Browns fans who have already made his jersey the best-selling of all incoming rookies, they’re hoping this is a permanent number for Shedeur.

Still, the number may be temporary, and for a couple of reasons. The Browns have five quarterbacks on the roster right now and will likely need to cut down to three or four before the season. If #2 opens up, or if Shedeur finds himself on a different team by September, a change could be coming. There is no doubt that Sanders will be on an NFL roster this fall, but it is not set in stone that it will be with the Browns.

by Jacob.Thompson
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Ralphie Report: Buffs in the NFL: Could Shedeur Sanders start for the Cleveland Browns in 2025?

2025 NFL Draft - Rounds 4-7

Photo by Perry Knotts/Getty Images

Let’s take a look at the Browns’ QB situation.

It took a couple more days than expected, but Shedeur Sanders is officially an NFL quarterback.

Selected 144th overall in the fifth round by the Cleveland Browns, Sanders finds himself in a peculiar situation. Typically, fifth-round quarterbacks are never put in a position to start their rookie season, but the Browns find themselves in limbo at the QB position. Shoveling $200+ million at DeShaun Watson after his sexual assault scandal proved to be a big mistake, as the former Clemson quarterback regressed greatly during his time in Cleveland before rupturing his achilles tendon in week seven of the 2024 NFL season.

Watson will likely be out for the remainder of the 2025 season, but even if he does recover, it’s looking like the Browns are ready to cut their losses and move on from the controversial quarterback. As a result, the team has brought in four new quarterbacks, including Sanders, to compete for the starting job. Let’s break each of them down to see who’s the frontrunner to start in Cleveland this season.

Joe Flacco

AFC Wild Card Playoffs - Cleveland Browns v Houston Texans
Photo by Ryan Kang/Getty Images

Flacco is a familiar face in Cleveland, stepping in for Watson after he suffered a season-ending shoulder injury in 2023. The former Super Bowl MVP slid in seamlessly to the Cleveland offense, leading the Browns to a 5-0 record to end the regular season, eventually losing in the Wild Card game to Houston. Flacco’s heroics in Cleveland earned him the 2023 NFL Comeback Player of the Year and a lucrative one-year contract in Indianapolis last season. Browns GM Andrew Berry took a page out of his own book, once again bringing in Flacco to quarterback for Cleveland after another Watson injury in early 2025.

With 17 years of NFL experience and a Super Bowl MVP under his belt, Flacco is the likely frontrunner to start in Cleveland this season, at least to start the season. The only glaring weakness about Flacco is his age. The 40-year-old quarterback has been doing this for a long time, and Father Time comes calling for everyone eventually, which the other three quarterbacks can use to their advantage.

Kenny Pickett

Super Bowl LIX: Kansas City Chiefs v Philadelphia Eagles
Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images

Pickett shined during his time at Pitt, leading the Panthers to an ACC Championship in 2021, but has struggled since coming to the NFL. The Steelers took a flyer on the local kid with the 20th overall pick in the 2022 Draft, but Pickett had a 1:1 touchdown-to-interception ratio and 62.5% completion ratio during his two seasons in Pittsburgh. Steelers coach Mike Tomlin ran Pickett out of town ahead of the 2024 season, where he landed with the eventual Super Bowl Champion Philadelphia Eagles, backing up Jalen Hurts.

After one year of back-up duty, Berry and the Browns acquired Pickett in a trade from the Eagles for fellow QB Dorian Thompson-Robinson and a fifth-round pick in 2025. The Browns clearly see something in Pickett, or they shouldn’t have traded for him. If he can clean up his interception issues and revert back his 2021 form at Pitt, he could realistically start in Cleveland in 2025.

Dillon Gabriel

2025 NFL Scouting Combine
Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images

Along with Sanders, Gabriel is one of two rookie quarterbacks that Berry brought in to compete for the starting job. The former Oregon quarterback had an elite 2024 season in Eugene, throwing for 3,857 yards and 30 touchdowns, leading the Ducks to an undefeated 12-0 regular season and Big Ten Championship in their first season in the conference, before eventually getting smacked by Ohio State in the Rose Bowl.

Gabriel was considered one of the top ten quarterback prospects in this year's draft, but many eyebrows were raised when Cleveland selected Gabriel with the 94th overall pick in the third round, significantly higher than Sanders.

Gabriel is your prototypical college quarterback in the West Coast offense. He’s got an alright arm and loves to check it down, and doesn’t mind relying on his run game. He also has a good football IQ and enough talent to make a roster.

Shedeur Sanders

2025 NFL Scouting Combine
Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images

In a group that includes a Super Bowl MVP, Sanders may be the most famous quarterback on this list, which says a lot. The former Colorado quarterback and son of NFL Hall of Famer Deion Sanders worked miracles with the Buffs, helping to dig what was a 1-11 team before he arrived into one of the top programs in the Big 12. Sanders won the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm and Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year awards last season, throwing for 4,134 yards and 37 touchdowns with the Buffs in 2024.

Although Sanders' slide in this year’s draft was unprecedented, it sounds like it was almost entirely non-football related. After a series of bad interviews in the run-up to the draft, NFL teams had concerns about the former CU quarterback. Sanders’ talent is undeniable, and he’s surely one of the most naturally talented quarterbacks on the Browns’ roster. Throughout training camp, he’ll have to showcase that talent and ability to handle adversity if he wants to see the field in 2025.



With five (including Watson) quarterbacks rostered by Cleveland, it seems likely that one will be cut in training camp to make additional roster space. Flacco is already a lock to stay on the roster, so one of Pickett, Gabriel and Sanders will be on the chopping block. As to which of Pickett, Gabriel or Sanders will be released, it’s anyone’s guess, and we’ll probably have to wait until the end of preseason football to see.

Of the two younger QBs that do make the roster, they’ll get ample opportunity to see the field in 2025. The Browns are a rebuilding team, so there’s a good chance that head coach Kevin Stefanski will rotate through his quarterbacks at the end of the season if the Browns are eliminated from playoff contention early.

TD;DR - Sanders could realistically land the starting job in Cleveland at some point this year, but as of now, he’s got bigger fish to fry. Focus on making the 53-man roster first and foremost, and take it from there.

by RylandScholes
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CU At The Game: Colorado Daily

New CU video: "We Ain't Hard 2 Find Showcase / NFL Draft" ... Jordan Seaton: “As far as, like, physical ability, I feel like I changed my body up a lot” ... Top CU 2026 NFL Draft prospects on on the defensive side of the ball ...

Stuart
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Ralphie Report: Colorado basketball great Josh Scott comes out in social media post

NCAA Basketball: Arizona at Colorado

Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Scott has always been a role model, on and off the court.

Josh Scott, one of the greatest players in Colorado Buffaloes basketball history, expressed his full self to the world today.

The 31-year-old revealed on social media Friday evening that he’s “living openly and unapologetically” as a bisexual man.

A local recruit from Palmer Ridge, Scott was the program’s highest rated recruit in a generation and surpassed every expectation. The 6’10 forward stepped onto campus as a two-starter, a double-double machine who would average nearly 14 points and 8 rebounds across 124 career games.

Scott was a two-time First-Team All-Pac-12 selection, a one-time All-Defense pick, and most importantly led the Buffs to three NCAA Tournament appearances. (One of the great what-ifs in CU basketball history is if Derrick White was eligible for Scott’s final season, as the future NBA Champ had to redshirt after transferring from Division II UCCS.)

Scott tried his hand at NBA Summer League, but ultimately pursued a professional career overseas. He spent one year in North Macedonia, then headed to Japan where he’s played ever since. He’s been a staple in the B-League, winning the 2022 title as his crowning achievement.

In his coming out, Scott expressed himself clearly in his Facebook post:

“This is me-fully and unapologetically.”

Today, I am living openly and unapologetically as a Bisexual man. God made me exactly as I am, and I am proud of who I am.

For too long, I spent too many a dark time trying to fit into other people’s molds, shrinking myself to make others comfortable. I’m done with that. I refuse to make myself small to fit into spaces where I belong fully. God quite literally made me too tall to walk quietly through life!

Basketball has been my entire world for as long as I can remember. I have poured my heart, my time, and my entire being into this game. And I have been great at it—I am great at it. Striving always to be known not only as a great player, but as a great person.

Over the past few years, I have quietly endured discrimination, intimidation, harassment, and false narratives. All in an effort to protect my career, my family, my friends, my peace, and the life I worked so hard to build. I sat in silence, hoping that by staying quiet, I could shield everything and everyone I cared about.

But what I have learned is this: I can’t control whether the world accepts me. What I can control is how I accept and love myself.

I am the same player. The same person. The same leader. The same friend, teammate, and competitor I have always been. My resume speaks for itself. Nothing about me has changed! Except now, I live my truth openly.

What I have been through could have broken me. But it didn’t. It has been building me. They didn’t take my strength, my pride, my voice, my work ethic, my character, my values or my talent. If anything, they gave me a deeper passion and an even greater strength to overcome.

For every bit of pain and darkness I have experienced, I have found even more overwhelming love and support. Even when I don’t understand the journey, I know this: Light always beats darkness. Truth and love are more powerful than hate and fear.

To anyone out there feeling pressured to hide or compromise who they are—hear me. You are not alone. You are worthy. You are powerful. You deserve to take up space, just as you are. And you deserve to have it all!

I fully intend to continue my playing career. Though no one knows the future! I know I have had an amazing act one. And act two? I know will be great—if not greater! I will stand up, keep learning, keep teaching, keep coaching, and keep fighting for the next generation.

This is my truth. This is my life. This is me imperfect, whole, and unapologetic.

And I’m just getting started.

Scott was already a role model for those who grew up during his playing days. Now it’s even more important to celebrate him, his impact on those around him, and his openness as his full, unapologetic self.

by Sam Metivier
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