Zach Ruebesam’s first season running CSU-Pueblo was good enough to earn him something every coach wants: more time.
The former CU Buffs assistant and Colorado graduate has agreed to a five-year contract extension that will keep him with the ThunderWolves through the 2030-31 season, a reward for a debut year that far outpaced expectations in Pueblo.
Ruebesam spent years doing the unglamorous work that keeps a major college basketball program moving. At Colorado under Tad Boyle, he handled everything from travel logistics to scheduling to recruiting, learning the rhythm of a high-level staff before getting his own shot to lead a program. When CSU-Pueblo offered him the head coaching job last year, he took it knowing the move would test him in ways the assistant role never could.
“Basketball-wise, I felt very prepared for everything,” Ruebesam said. “I think that’s a credit to (Boyle) and everything we do at Colorado.
But they don’t tell you things until you’re in that seat. I called Tad about halfway through the season, and no one really understands the amount of fires you put out every day, or stuff that comes across your desk, until you sit in that seat.
That was the most eye-opening.
“I know everyone on staff at Colorado does a ton. I know I did a ton for coach. But really, you don’t know the half of it about what comes across a head coach’s desk every day.”
A Berthoud native, Ruebesam started at CU as a student manager and graduated in 2016. He later worked as an assistant at Denver and Belmont Abbey, a Division II school in North Carolina, before returning to Boulder for four seasons on Boyle’s staff. He spent his first two years as director of player development, then moved up to assistant coach before taking over at CSU-Pueblo.
The ThunderWolves were coming off a long stretch of struggle when Ruebesam arrived. The program had not won more than 12 games in any of the previous eight seasons and was picked 12th in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference preseason coaches’ poll. Ruebesam flipped that script fast.
CSU-Pueblo finished 22-8 overall and 15-5 in the RMAC, tying for second place. It was the program’s highest win total since the 1990-91 season, and just the seventh 20-win season since CSU-Pueblo became a four-year school in 1962-63.
Ruebesam also brought a familiar CU flavor to Pueblo, leaning on the same defense-and-rebounding principles that defined Boyle’s teams. The ThunderWolves finished first in RMAC games in defensive field goal percentage and fifth in average rebounding margin.
“I’m really, really thankful,” Ruebesam said. “Division II athletics is a lot different than Division I in terms of funding and all that.
I don’t know the numbers, but not every coach in America at the Division II level is on a contract. For CSU-Pueblo to want to make that investment in me and show that trust and excitement in what we’re building here, it means a lot to me.
To be on a contract and have that financial security and have that desire to be at CSU-Pueblo, it’s really cool.”
In Other News...
Travis Hunter Just Gave Colorado Fans Another Reason To Believe In Prime
Travis Hunter has always carried himself like more than just a former Colorado star, and a recent moment in Jacksonville, Florida, showed that again. Before a group of youth athletes headed out for a run, Hunter stopped to speak with them, offering encouragement and stressing the kind of positivity and coachability that fit right into the culture Deion Sanders has tried to build in Boulder.
Hunter also credited Sanders for preparing him for more than football, pointing to the professional and personal lessons that came with his time at Colorado. That matters to Buffaloes fans because it reinforces the idea that Primes program is still producing players who understand the bigger picture, and current Buffaloes like Randon Fontennette are keeping that same standard alive through community work of their own. [Read more 🡒]
Colorado Just Made A Major Change To Its Student Section
Colorado is reshaping the way students get into the building, rolling out a new loyalty system for the 2026-27 academic year that ties attendance to future access. The initiative, called Charged Up, comes through Colorado Athletics and the University of Colorado Boulder Division of Student Life, and it is designed to reward eligible undergraduates for showing up at CU Athletics events rather than relying on the old first-come scramble alone.
Under the new setup, students will be able to buy a CU Athletics Sports Pass starting July 9, 2026, and begin earning points on Aug. 5, 2026, with those points carrying value for better access to home football and mens basketball games along with other rewards. Pass holders also will get a Nike Dri-FIT Gold Rush student section T-shirt, while a separate Buff Club student membership option is set to give early access to the weekly ticket claim process, adding another layer to how Colorado plans to manage demand in the student section. [Read more 🡒]
