Colorado’s trip to Tempe on Nov. 7 comes with a very different feel than the one the Buffaloes made in 2023.
Arizona State has turned the Kenny Dillingham era into a real problem for the rest of the Big 12. The Sun Devils reached the College Football Playoff in 2024, then followed that with eight wins last season and five combined NFL Draft picks across those two teams. They’ve taken some hits on the roster, but the reload has been strong enough to keep them in the conference title mix, thanks in part to the Big 12’s third-ranked transfer portal class.
That portal haul includes quarterback Cutter Boley from Kentucky, EDGE Jalen Thompson from Michigan State, safety Lyrik Rawls from Kansas and Colorado’s leading receiver from last season, Omarion Miller. With that kind of incoming talent, ASU looks built to stay in the race.
The Buffs beat the Sun Devils on their home field in 2023, but Arizona State answered with a 42-17 win at Folsom Field this past season.
The biggest challenge for ASU this year is replacing what it lost. Wide receiver Jordyn Tyson was selected with the No. 8 pick in the NFL Draft after two productive seasons as the top target in the offense.
He dealt with injuries, but when he was healthy, he was one of the most dangerous players in the Big 12 on a per-game basis. Quarterback Sam Leavitt left for LSU after being one of the most coveted names in the portal, and the Sun Devils now have to find a new starter in an offense that has not clicked without him under center during Dillingham’s run.
Cornerback Keith Abney is another major departure after two seasons of locking down his side of the field.
Arizona State did a lot to soften those losses. Boley, who started at Kentucky last season as a redshirt freshman, looks like the favorite to win the job in camp.
He’s a pocket passer who should be asked to move the offense quickly and protect the football while working with a strong group of weapons. Miller and Reed Harris were both among the top five transfer receivers in the winter portal, giving ASU two different kinds of answers at wideout.
Miller brings strength and burst, with the ability to get behind a defense or power through it. Harris, listed at 6-foot-5, gives Boley a huge target, especially near the goal line.
Junior linebacker Owen Long, who led the FBS in tackles last season at Colorado State, is also set to anchor the run defense.
There’s still uncertainty at quarterback beyond Boley. Senior Mikey Keene is in the mix as a backup with a wide range of outcomes, after previous starts at Fresno State and UCF.
Freshman Jake Fette is also one to watch, and if he has a big preseason camp, he could push the picture in a serious way. By 2027, Fette may be hard to keep off the field.
Dillingham has also built something that ASU fans can feel beyond the roster. He brought back all of his on-field assistants from last season, a notable achievement in a chaotic college landscape, and the program avoided a major scare when Michigan made a serious push for the Scottsdale native.
Dillingham then landed a new contract that should keep him in Tempe for years. In that sense, even an injury-riddled eight-win season felt like a step in the wrong direction, which says a lot about where the standard sits now.
The schedule, though, is no joke.
Arizona State opens conference play in London against Kansas after a road game at Texas A&M, and later has to go to Texas Tech and BYU - two of the toughest trips in the Big 12. The front half is especially demanding, with four of the first six games potentially ranking among the five hardest on the slate.
By the time ASU gets to BYU on Oct. 31, it may already have taken one or two Big 12 losses. A win there would keep the Sun Devils in the title hunt.
A loss could knock them out of the conversation.
There’s also the simple issue of volume. Arizona State has to get through the final nine weeks of the season without a bye, which makes that brutal stretch even harder to survive.
Still, the physical profile of the team has clearly changed. The Sun Devils are bigger, longer and stronger, and the transfer class reflects that shift.
For a program entering its fourth season under Dillingham, that matters.
In Other News...
Jalen Ramsey Just Validated What Deion Sanders Is Building At Colorado
Colorados offseason overhaul is starting to sound like more than a personnel move. With Brennan Marion taking over as offensive coordinator and Chris Marve stepping in on defense for the 2026 season, Deion Sanders has assembled a staff that blends NFL experience with proven college ideas, and that kind of mix is already changing how the program is viewed from the outside. A leadership retreat visit from Jalen Ramsey only added to the buzz, giving the Buffaloes another high-profile voice pointing to the appeal of what Sanders is building.
Ramseys presence mattered because it underscored the shift in energy around the program, one that is tied as much to coaching credibility as to talent acquisition. Colorado has spent the offseason reworking both sides of the ball, and the new structure carries the feel of a program trying to separate itself from the pack by giving players a more professional environment and a clearer strategic identity. For a team still trying to turn recruiting momentum into sustained success, that kind of validation is the sort of thing that can echo well beyond one visit. [Read more 🡒]
Deion Sanders Faces Another Big Recruiting Test In Colorado Backfield
Colorados pursuit of three-star running back Kylan Bobo has become the latest recruiting subplot to watch as July approaches, with the Buffaloes trying to keep momentum going in a backfield they have worked hard to stock. Colorados offensive scheme and its recent recruiting push have both helped make the program an attractive option, and the staff has clearly put itself in position to matter in a race that also includes Arkansas and Memphis.
Prediction models have leaned heavily toward Colorado, but the real answer will have to wait until Bobo makes his commitment decision on July 1. For the Buffaloes, the timing matters even more because they are still looking to add stability to the running back room in their 2027 class, and landing Bobo would give this recruiting run another important lift. [Read more 🡒]
Coach Prime Just Gave Colorado Fans The Update They Needed
Deion Sanders long absence from much of the 2025 offseason left Colorado with plenty of uncertainty, but the Buffaloes have spent the spring and summer building around his return for 2026. The staff looks different too, with Brennan Marion in as offensive coordinator and Chris Marve elevated to defensive coordinator, while the roster has been bolstered by transfers and the retention of quarterback Julian Lewis.
There is also real momentum on the recruiting front, where Colorado has positioned itself with one of the Big 12s top classes for 2027. After a year defined as much by medical concern as football, Sanders being back on the sideline changes the tenor of everything in Boulder, and the next question is whether all those offseason moves can translate into the kind of season the program has been trying to set up. [Read more 🡒]
