BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - The decades separating Colorado's Heisman candidate quarterback Shedeur Sanders and NFL coach-turned-college offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur are bridged by one like-minded thing - play-calling.
Separated by decades, Colorado QB Shedeur Sanders and coordinator Pat Shurmur form play-calling bond
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - The decades separating Colorado's Heisman candidate quarterback Shedeur Sanders and NFL coach-turned-college offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur are bridged by one like-minded thing - play-calling.
Sanders trusts Shurmur. Shurmur trusts Sanders. It’s a partnership that's allowing the 21st-ranked Colorado Buffaloes to post prodigious passing numbers as they work on the ground game.
Melding a style Shurmur refers to as a West Coast offense in a no-huddle format inspired by the mountain air of Boulder, the Buffaloes (6-2, 4-1 Big 12) are averaging 323.9 yards passing per contest. Sanders’ precise reads and accuracy, along with a cast of wideouts that includes two-way standout Travis Hunter, has vaulted Colorado into the running for not only a league title but possibly even a berth in the College Football Playoff.
Sanders has earned a high level of autonomy under center, with one small addendum: "I really don't care what we run,” the 59-year-old Shurmur cracked, "as long as I know what it is and we have success running it."