Tad Boyle is already laying the groundwork for Colorado’s 2027 recruiting class, and his first swing is a big one.
On Sunday, small forward Isaiah Santos announced on X that the Buffaloes had offered him, putting Colorado into the mix for one of the more coveted prospects in the cycle. Santos is a four-star recruit according to both 247Sports and ESPN, and 247Sports’ composite ranking has him as the No. 5 player in Texas, the No. 22 small forward and the No. 78 overall recruit in the class of 2027.
The competition is real. Santos has already picked up offers from 17 other Division I programs, according to 247Sports, and Butler appears to be the team Colorado has to beat right now.
The Bulldogs are scheduled to host him on an official visit on June 29, and On3 lists them as the only school with any visit currently arranged. That same site gives Butler a 63.8 percent confidence rating to land his commitment, while the next closest program is Houston at 3.6 percent.
Colorado is part of that chase, but it looks like Boyle will need to move quickly if he wants to stay in striking distance. Other programs in the mix include Texas Tech and Illinois, and if those schools gain ground before the Buffaloes do, the climb gets a lot steeper.
Santos’ junior season at Seven Lakes High School in Katy, Texas, is the kind of production that explains the attention. In 2025, he put up 22.6 points, 11.2 rebounds, three assists and 0.6 blocks per game.
He also did plenty of damage on the offensive glass, with nearly half of his rebounding coming there. At 6-6 and 205 pounds, he brings the kind of size Colorado has been missing on the offensive end.
That size, along with his production, makes him the sort of player who can shape a class early. If Colorado lands Santos, it would send a message to other high-end recruits and give the Buffs a foundation to build around.
That matters even more because Colorado’s 2026 class left plenty to be desired. The Buffaloes had the fourth-worst class in the Big 12, according to 247Sports, and only one of their seven recruits was rated by all the major recruiting services. The rest were listed as zero-star prospects.
The lone four-star in that group, according to 247Sports, is forward Rider Portela. He had a strong high school run, averaging double-digit points in each of his four seasons, but the overall class still came with plenty of question marks.
Getting Santos would not solve everything for Colorado, but it would give Boyle the kind of early momentum the program badly needs. It would be a strong first step for 2027 and, just as important, a chance to start balancing out a rough 2026 haul.
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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 🡒]
Justin Neely Could Be The Buffs Answer To A Costly Problem
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Boyle has also made it clear that Neelys value goes beyond missed shots and rebounds. His basketball IQ and years in the college game give him a head start in helping the Buffs learn how to function together, which matters even more with so many fresh faces in the mix. For Colorado, the question is not just whether Neely can help solve a costly problem, but how quickly he can become the kind of anchor the Buffs can build around. [Read more 🡒]
Buffaloes Earned Major Big 12 Academic Honors Across Colorado Athletics
Colorados spring on the Big 12 academic side came with a broad spread of recognition, as Buffaloes from golf, lacrosse, tennis, track and field, basketball, soccer and volleyball filled out the conference honors lists. The University of Colorado also landed 27 first-year athletes on the Big 12 Academic All-Rookie Team, underscoring how much of the programs depth is being built by players who are already making themselves visible in the classroom.
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 🡒]
