When Colorado plays Nebraska this weekend, things will differ from last year's 36-14 Buffaloes romp. That's because the Cornhuskers have improved since that defeat while the Buffaloes have remained the same.
That isn't entirely bad for Colorado, considering it has two of college football's most outstanding players — quarterback Shedeur Sanders and cornerback/wide receiver Travis Hunter — on its roster. But based on last week's concerning come-from-behind 31-26 win over FCS North Dakota State, Colorado's problems with its offensive line and defense persist.
Sanders was pressured on 12 of his 39 dropbacks against the Bison (h/t Pro Football Focus), the Buffaloes rushed for a paltry 59 yards on 23 carries (2.6 yards per attempt) and the Colorado defense allowed 449 total yards, including 157 rushing yards and 292 passing yards.
If that contest was supposed to be a tune-up for Nebraska, Colorado head coach Deion Sanders should bring his team back into the shop. Just two days later, Nebraska steamrolled Conference USA's UTEP, 40-7, in freshman quarterback Dylan Raiola's debut, with the Cornhuskers outgaining the Miners 507-205 as the defense picked up where it left off in 2023.
The offense was the bigger revelation under freshman quarterback Dylan Raiola, though. In his first collegiate action, the five-star high school recruit was 19-of-27 for 238 yards (8.8 yards per attempt), two touchdowns and no interceptions.
Raiola showed his arm strength and creativity in the win.
During Nebraska's opening drive on a second-and-30, Raiola completed a 19-yard pass to wide receiver Jahmal Banks, throwing from one hash mark to the other with enough zip to get the ball over a UTEP defender.
boop. pic.twitter.com/sElRTsb7si
— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice) September 3, 2024
On the next play, Raiola stepped into the pocket to his left, stopped and threw a sidearm pass back toward his right in a tight window to wideout Isaiah Neyor for a 16-yard gain and first down.
so Dylan Raiola https://t.co/lmblAfbP9z pic.twitter.com/0pTV1WPWrK
— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice) September 3, 2024
Nebraska had a balanced offensive attack against UTEP, gaining 223 rushing yards on 47 carries (4.7 yards per attempt) and 284 yards through the air.
Since last year's meeting, the Buffaloes and Cornhuskers have diverged. In its last 11 games, Colorado is 3-8 while Nebraska is 6-5. During that span, the Buffaloes have averaged 26.2 points while allowing 35.3 points per game. The Cornhuskers have scored 21.1 points per game and have allowed 16.1, holding eight of its opponents under 20 points.
Sanders' road splits show a less efficient quarterback away from home, too.
In five road starts with Colorado, Sanders has averaged 1.6 yards per attempt less than at home while being sacked 5.4 times per game — as opposed to 3.3 times per game at home. His 30% pressure-to-sack rate on the road is roughly 10 percentage points higher than in Boulder. Colorado has averaged 21.6 points per game away from home with Sanders at quarterback and 36.1 points at Folsom Field.
Saturday's game has the recipe to be much different than the one that preceded it. Nowhere could that be more apparent than on the scoreboard.
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