BOULDER — Lincoln Riley got the Buffs right. And he knew it. Heck, he darn near admitted it.
“They obviously RPO-ed some in the run game, you know, they did commit to it a lot more than they have in the the previous game,” USC’s visored head coach said after CU piled up the program’s most rushing yards in two years on his unbeaten Trojans, who held on for a 48-41 victory at Folsom Field.
“So obviously, (I’d) have to go back and look at the tape, but they put you in some of those positions where it’s either going to be one-on-one on the perimeter, if you get those extra hats to the run game. Or you’re going to give them potentially favorable numbers in the box.”
The Trojans (5-0, 3-0 Pac-12) went with the latter. And the Buffs (3-2, 0-2), for maybe the first time all season, really made those favorable numbers count.
Using a combination of bruising Anthony Hankerson (16 carries, 74 yards, one score) and shifty Dylan Edwards (12 carries, 44 yards) at tailback, CU flashed some nifty RPO — run-pass option — sleight of hand with quarterback Shedeur Sanders (14 carries, 50 yards) that left USC guessing all Saturday afternoon. And often guessing wrong.
“We had some missed tackles in the backfield a couple of times where they came out that we didn’t get gapped out,” Riley continued. “Give them credit. They were a lot more patient and stayed with (the run game) more than they had certainly in previous games.
“And I thought they did a good job of staying with it even when we got way up and (were) running the ball. I mean, we weren’t great on the offensive line, I didn’t think, didn’t play our best game up front. We missed a couple of holes. I didn’t think I called it very well in the run game.”
The Buffs’ run game, meanwhile, kept humming long enough to open up plays over the top via Sanders’ arm that aided CU’s comeback from 41-14 down in the third quarter.
“We’re still searching for an identity,” Buffs coach Deion Sanders said after his squad dropped a second-straight game to a top-10 foe.
But in using the ground game to set up the pass, a twist on previous CU offensive scripts, the Buffs might have found one.
And one to keep.
CU nearly matched their entire 2023 rushing output to date (223 yards over four games) in one tilt, piling up 193 yards on 45 carries. The Buffs doubled USC’s rushing numbers (95 yards), even though the Trojans came into Saturday tied for second in rushing TDs (11) and fifth in rush yards per game (192).
“It wasn’t really even what I saw,” the younger Sanders reflected after the game. “It was basically just following (my) keys and always having an understanding of what the play call is and executing it. These are the same plays we’ve been running forever. Everybody runs ‘Power,’ everybody runs ‘Zone,’ and that’s what it is. It’s about just the players executing it. I feel (Saturday) we had a better mindset and understood, O, we’ve got to execute these plays for (it) to be able to work and that’s what we did. We’ve just got to it quicker.”
The Buffs actually piled up more rush attempts in the second half (23) than they did in the first (22), and this was after digging a 34-14 hole at the halftime break. Which led several folks inside the CU camp to ask, justifiably, can you imagine how much fun that ground-and-pound with Hankerson and Edwards might be if the Buffs were up two scores and not playing catch-up, as they have the last two weekends?
“Hankerson stood out. Hank is resilient,” Buffs coach Deion Sanders said of one of the few offensive holdouts from the ’22 CU offense who remained with the program during The Coach Prime Roster Makeover. “All these (new tailbacks) came in and tried to force him out and he wouldn’t let them.”
Sanders’ trust has to be earned. Despite competition from a deep positional room that includes much-lauded transfers Alton McCaskill (ex-Houston) and Sy’veon Wilkerson (Jackson State), it’s clear that Hankerson, a sophomore out of Boynton Beach, Fla., is becoming Coach Prime’s change-of-pace back of choice.
“Give them credit,” Riley said. “(The Buffs) made some really tremendous competitive plays, a couple of plays where our guys were right there, and they made the play.
And that (happens a) lot of time when you have two good teams and really good individual players out there. That’s what it comes down to, are those competitive plays. And we certainly didn’t make as many. And had a lot of mental errors in the second half.”
Want more sports news? Sign up for the Sports Omelette to get all our analysis on Denver’s teams.
Share this:
- Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
- Policies
- Report an Error
- Contact Us
- Submit a News Tip
- 2023
- September
- 30
Most Popular
-
40,000 drivers caught on camera cutting illegally in and out of Colorado highway express lanes
40,000 drivers caught on camera cutting illegally in and out of Colorado highway express lanes
-
Terrell Davis pays $3.3M for Cherry Hills mansion
Terrell Davis pays $3.3M for Cherry Hills mansion
-
Everything you need to know about the solar eclipse at Mesa Verde National Park
Everything you need to know about the solar eclipse at Mesa Verde National Park
-
Lauren Boebert escorted out of “Beetlejuice” musical in Denver after “causing a disturbance”
Lauren Boebert escorted out of "Beetlejuice" musical in Denver after "causing a disturbance"
-
Construction starts on $125M, 81-acre technology park in Broomfield
Construction starts on $125M, 81-acre technology park in Broomfield
-
Kiszla: Have 0-3 Broncos hit rock bottom? Frank Clark says: “This is going to be a season of grit. We’re going to have to take some (bleep).”
Kiszla: Have 0-3 Broncos hit rock bottom? Frank Clark says: "This is going to be a season of grit. We're going to have to take some (bleep)."
-
CU Buffs vs. USC quick hits: Shedeur Sanders runs out of time in masterful duel with Caleb Williams
CU Buffs vs. USC quick hits: Shedeur Sanders runs out of time in masterful duel with Caleb Williams
-
Gov. Jared Polis orders plan to keep Colorado’s national parks open in a federal shutdown
Gov. Jared Polis orders plan to keep Colorado's national parks open in a federal shutdown
-
Discovery of Suzanne Morphew’s body raises new legal questions in 3-year-old case
Discovery of Suzanne Morphew's body raises new legal questions in 3-year-old case
-
Bustang canceled 51 Colorado rides over past two weeks
Bustang canceled 51 Colorado rides over past two weeks
Trending Nationally
- What services and benefits are at risk if Congress fails to fund the government? Here’s what you should know
- Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s career: From San Francisco mayor to U.S. senator
- California has 6 of the most-valuable housing markets in US
- Discovery of Suzanne Morphew’s body raises new legal questions in 3-year-old case
- PHOTOS: New York City pummeled by torrential downpours, flash floods
Source: Read Full Article