Colorado Is Battling For A Recruit Who Could Change Everything

With an esteemed coaching staff and revamped recruiting strategies, Colorado aims to secure top talent for the class of 2027.

Colorado’s pitch to Nate Carson has centered on something recruits notice quickly: who’s actually in the room helping develop them.

Carson, a class of 2027 offensive lineman out of Columbia, South Carolina, is set to announce his commitment on Friday, July 3. The Buffaloes are among the final four schools still in the mix, alongside Clemson, South Carolina, and Georgia.

The 6-4, 290-pound tackle is rated a four-star recruit and sits as the No. 23 offensive tackle in the 2027 class, according to the 247Sports Composite. He told Chad Simmons of Rivals that the recruiting process was enjoyable at first, then started to weigh on him as the decision drew closer.

“At the start, it (the recruiting process) was definitely fun…Getting offers and hearing from coaches was exciting. Toward the end, it got stressful because you realize it’s really a business.

You don’t want to make the wrong decision,” Carson said to Rivals. “They (Colorado) have three offensive line coaches, and they showed me exactly how they would develop me.

I love the experience they have.”

That experience is part of the appeal. Colorado lists Andre Gurode and George Hegamin as offensive line coaches.

Gurode played in the NFL from 2002-2013 and made five Pro Bowls, while Hegamin spent time in the league from 1994-2000. The Buffs also have Gunnar White, who is listed as the offensive run game coordinator and offensive line assistant, and Grant Hammer, listed as a football assistant and offensive line assistant.

If Carson ends up choosing Colorado, it would be another sign that the staff’s development pitch is landing with top recruits.

The Buffaloes’ 2027 class is currently ranked No. 42 nationally by Rivals, which is fourth in the Big 12. That marks a clear jump from Colorado’s last cycle, when the 2026 class finished No. 67 in the country and No. 15 out of 16 in the Big 12.

Colorado already has 18 commits in the 2027 class, and it could wind up being Deion Sanders’ best high school haul since he arrived in Boulder in 2023. Sanders has leaned heavily on the transfer portal during his time as coach, a strategy that fit the situation when he took over after a 1-11 season in 2022.

That approach produced quick results. Colorado won four games in 2023 and nine in 2024. But the portal also leaves room for misses, and that showed up in 2025 when the Buffaloes finished 3-9.

The portal still matters, but so does building from within. Colorado has started to make strides there, helped in part by director of player personnel Darius Darden-Box, who was hired in December and has already made an impact in recruiting.

The Buffs will open the 2026 season on the road against Georgia Tech on Thursday, Sept. 3.

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Derrick White Is Getting Serious Praise For A Surprising New Move

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Spencer Dinwiddie was quick to highlight the fit, pointing to White as someone deeply connected to Colorado and well suited to help the program navigate the modern landscape around player support and recruiting. The two former Buffs never shared the floor, but their shared background gives Whites hire extra weight, especially as Colorado leans on familiar names to strengthen its basketball operation in an era that keeps changing fast. [Read more 🡒]

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Buffaloes Earned Major Big 12 Academic Honors Across Colorado Athletics

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Among the most notable individual acknowledgments were five Buffs who earned the Dr. Gerald Lage Award for high academic achievement, including skier Luka Riley, skier Elena Grissom, volleyball player Avery Bolles and track and field athletes Abbey Nechanicky and Alaina Fantaski. With so many names spread across so many sports, the bigger takeaway is how consistently Colorado keeps showing up in these postseason academic roll calls, even as the competitive details of each season keep moving in different directions. [Read more 🡒]