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Celeb Spill Daily

Texas Tech at Wyoming is delayed due to weather

Author

Daniel Johnston

Published Apr 07, 2026

Deion Sanders is not one for letting reporters get their full questions out. He often has one of his own. So, at his postgame news conference following his stunning Colorado debut — a 45-42 upset of 17th-ranked TCU — Sanders cut off a familiar reporter who’d apparently expressed doubt in his coaching abilities.

“Hold on, hold on, hold on! Oh no, no, no,” he said, before pounding the table in front of him. “DO YOU BELIEVE NOW?”

The reporter didn’t want to play along, but I will.

I believe.

I didn’t before. I absolutely do now.

To paraphrase his own lingo, Deion Sanders is THAT Guy.

I can see you rolling your eyes already, dear reader. It was only one game! TCU was overrated! They didn’t play any defense.

Who. Cares.

TCU reached the national title game last season, while Colorado fielded a non-competitive 1-11 squad. Colorado hadn’t beaten a team ranked as high as TCU since 2009, and it had not beaten a top-20 team on the road in more than 20 years.

Be honest: You thought his team would come out and get embarrassed in “the biggest season opener college football has seen in years.” (Fox’s promo tagline.) I know I did.

Deion — or Coach Prime, as he prefers to be called — showed up at his introductory news conference and matter-of-factly went ahead named his son Shedeur the starting quarterback. Then, on camera (as everything is in his program), he basically told all of last year’s players he was going to run them off and replace them with Louis Vuitton-level transfers. He said over and over and over again, “We coming.”