Colorado Still Has 5 Starting Jobs Fans Will Be Watching Closely

As the Colorado Buffaloes gear up for their 2026 season, intense position battles during fall camp are set to redefine their roster and strategy.

Colorado’s 2026 season is shaping up as a full-on roster sorting exercise, and fall camp is where the real answers have to start showing up. With so many new faces in Boulder, Deion Sanders and his staff are staring at a lineup full of open doors - and not nearly enough settled jobs.

The most crowded, and maybe the most important, competition sits in the secondary. Colorado has nearly remade the back end of its defense, leaving the staff to sort through corner, safety and nickel options all at once.

Cree Thomas looks to have one corner spot after a strong spring, while RJ Johnson, James Madison transfer Justin Eaglin, Appalachian State transfer Emory Floyd and Makari Vickers are battling for the other roles. At safety, Randon Fontenette and Naeten Mitchell are the names at the front of the line, with Ben Finneseth still in the mix after coming back healthy from injury.

Then there’s Boo Carter at nickel, the kind of wildcard that can change the whole feel of a defense if things go right. If he stays available and productive, Colorado could get a real boost there. If not, that spot remains another puzzle piece the Buffs have to keep working through while trying to build a tougher unit on the back end.

Up front, the defensive line is another area where Colorado is hoping new faces can finally create something it has lacked during the Coach Prime era: a pass rush. Albany transfer Balansama Kamara, Lamont Lester Jr. and Domata Peko Jr. are all names to track, and Quency Wiggins enters the picture after shifting to a new role and getting a fresh start on the interior. The Buffs need somebody who can win one-on-one, force hurried throws and make the rest of the defense play faster.

Quarterback is projected to belong to Julian Lewis, but Colorado is not treating the job like it’s already closed. Lewis is expected to lead the offense, yet Isaac Wilson and Kaneal Sweetwyne give the staff other options if the room needs a different direction.

Brennan Marion’s go-go offense demands sharp timing, quick decisions and a steady tempo, so the staff will be watching for the quarterback who can handle it cleanly and consistently. Lewis has the edge, but fall camp could still determine how long this conversation lasts.

Linebacker is another spot where Colorado is still searching for dependable every-down answers. The Buffs need someone in the middle who can handle the run, communicate and stand up to the physical side of Big 12 football.

Texas transfer Liona Lefau, New Mexico State transfer Tyler Martinez, Gideon Lampron and former highly regarded recruit Carson Crawford are all in the mix, which gives Colorado options but also pushes the competition deeper into camp. With Chris Marve now running the defense, that group carries even more weight, especially after last season’s bismal 3-9 finish.

The offensive line may be the biggest question of all. Colorado has brought in close to a full class of new linemen and still has several returners battling for snaps, but the task remains the same: find five reliable starters and figure out the best combination.

Bo Hughley, Taj White, Leon Bell, Yahya Attia and Demetrius Hunter are among the contenders. Some bring size, most bring experience, and all of them are fighting to turn the group into something cohesive and dependable.

That front five matters because it has to protect a young quarterback and give the offense a chance to function. If the line comes together early, Colorado can quiet one of its biggest concerns before the season even starts.

That’s the larger theme across the roster. Not many spots are settled, and that creates both pressure and opportunity.

The staff has talent to work with, but the combinations have to come together quickly enough to matter in September. With a road trip to Georgia Tech in the opener and a tough Big 12 schedule right after that, these battles will tell a lot about whether Colorado is ready to take a step in 2026.

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Finneseths path also says something about the new look of this roster, where persistence can still matter as much as pedigree. He has already become a more visible part of the Buffaloes plans, and the next question is how far that trajectory can go now that he has a scholarship and a coach clearly willing to keep investing in him. [Read more 🡒]