
CU jersey retirements cause a stir
The University of Colorado will retire the jerseys of former Buffs Shadeur Sanders and Travis Hunter at CU's spring game on Saturday.
Why it matters: Hunter and Sanders, CU head coach Deion Sanders' son, will become the fifth and sixth players in Colorado football history to have their numbers retired.
Friction point: The decision to preserve Hunter's No. 12 legacy is understandable, if premature. He is only the second Heisman winner in school history and a two-time first-team All-American. Shadeur Sanders' selection has drawn more criticism, with some calling it recency bias at best and nepotism at worst.
Reality check: Sanders spent two years at CU, was never a first-team All-American, went 13-11 as a starter and made one bowl game.
Some, like former Buff Chad Brown, have pointed out that Sanders is probably not even the greatest player to wear No. 2 at CU. Cornerback Deon Figures was a key player on CU's 1990 championship team, won the Jim Thorpe Award and is in the College Football Hall of Fame.
Buffs greats such as Alfred Williams, Eric Beiniemy, Darian Hagan and Kordell Stewart have not had their numbers retired.
What they're saying: Fans, media and former players have weighed in.
Former CU player and coach Darrin Chiaverini posted on X that there needs to be a "cool-off period" before numbers are retired.
David Bakhtiari, a great CU player in his own right, posted the team was "trying to be slick thinking you can just sneak that one in there."
Denver Post columnist Sean Keeler led off his column with "2 soon."
Caveat: While CU has claimed Nos. 2 and 12 will be " officially untouchable," retiring jerseys does not work in college as it does in the pros. With teams often carrying more than 100 players at a time, numbers in college simply can't stay out of circulation for long.
Three of the Buffs' previously "retired" numbers — Bobby Anderson's No. 11, Byron "Whizzer" White's No. 24, Joe Romig's No. 67 — are already back.
Rashaan Salaam's No. 19 was declared off-limits for 19 years in 2017, but it will come back.

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