Colorado and Oklahoma State are both trying to climb out of ugly seasons, but the Buffaloes may already have one edge the Cowboys don’t: tight end.
That’s not a flashy place to win games, but it matters when two rosters have been turned over this heavily. Colorado brings back a starter at the position in Zach Atkins, while Oklahoma State is still trying to sort out who can give it reliable production there.
Atkins is back for his senior season after starting full-time for Colorado a year ago. He finished with 20 catches for 149 yards, good for fourth on the team in receptions. Among Big 12 tight ends, he ranked in the top 20 in both receptions and receiving yards.
Before arriving in Boulder, Atkins spent three seasons at Northwest Missouri State, where he posted 18 catches for 179 yards and three touchdowns in 2024.
Colorado’s next option is Fisher Clements, a senior transfer from Northern Colorado. He spent four seasons there and was mainly a special teams piece.
Oklahoma State’s situation looks less settled. Donovan Green came in after stops at Texas A&M and LSU, but his career production is still modest: 24 receptions over four seasons. He hasn’t been able to lock down meaningful playing time.
Behind him is Oscar Hammond, another North Texas transfer. He’s got more to prove than some of the other Cowboys newcomers after missing last season with an injury. Hammond did catch 19 passes in 2024, so he knows the offense, but he hasn’t done it in a game with quarterback Drew Mestemaker, who was a redshirt in 2024.
Eric Morris has brought in a new staff and nearly 20 transfers from North Texas after leading the Mean Green to a 12-2 season and a near run at the American Conference title. Oklahoma State is hoping that overhaul sparks a quick rebound after going 1-11 and losing every Big 12 game for the second straight year.
Colorado’s own collapse was steep too. The Buffaloes won three games last season, including one in the Big 12, after coming close to a spot in the Big 12 Championship game in 2024 and watching Travis Hunter win the Heisman Trophy.
With so much change on both sides, there aren’t many clean edges to point to. Tight end might be the one place where Colorado can say it has the more trustworthy answer.
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Oklahoma States Kashie Natt Fight Just Took A Stressful Turn
Kashie Natts path to Oklahoma State has moved from roster-building to the courtroom, adding an unexpected layer to the Cowboys offseason as the transfer tries to secure another season of eligibility. After the NCAA denied his waiver petition, the dispute has become a test case for how the sports new 5-for-5 rule is applied and how the five-year clock is measured for players who have already navigated a winding college career.
Steve Lutz has publicly backed Natt and his legal effort, a sign the program views the matter as more than a technical eligibility fight. For a team already managing its numbers carefully, the outcome matters well beyond one player, because the Cowboys are trying to map out their future with limited flexibility and no clear resolution yet on when Natt will be allowed to suit up. [Read more 🡒]
