While the college football world focuses on traditional signing day theatrics, Deion Sanders is intentionally sidelining his Colorado Buffaloes from the high school recruiting frenzy. After a dismal 3-9 season, Sanders is doubling down on his transfer-heavy strategy, signing a minimal freshman class and betting his program’s future on finding ready-made talent in the portal. This isn’t just a plan; it’s a high-stakes gamble that could either revolutionize roster-building or prove disastrously unstable.
As the early signing period begins, most powerhouse programs are celebrating massive hauls of high school talent. The Colorado Buffaloes are not one of them. By design, Head Coach Deion Sanders is poised to sign a class of only about 10 freshmen, a number so small it has sent the program’s rankings plummeting. After several top recruits decommitted, Colorado’s 2026 class sits at 69th nationally and 14th in the 16-team Big 12, according to On3’s industry rankings.
To the casual observer, it looks like a recruiting disaster. But for Sanders, it’s the execution of a radical, portal-centric philosophy that treats veteran transfers as the lifeblood of his program. The critical question facing Boulder is whether this strategy is a sustainable model for success or a shortcut to perpetual inconsistency, especially coming off a brutal 3-9 campaign in 2025.
The Prime Philosophy: Quality Over Quantity, Portal Over Preps
Sanders has never hidden his preference for experienced players over developing teenagers. He famously doesn’t make off-campus recruiting visits to high schools, instead relying on the transfer portal to build his roster. He sees the modern landscape of player movement not as a problem to be managed, but as an opportunity to be exploited.
“You want about 15 to 17 high school kids,” Sanders explained at a recent news conference. “Why do you say that, coach?’ Well, check the statistics. You get 30. Are they gonna be here in two years? Statistically, check the statistics.”
His point is backed by his own numbers. Of the 43 high school players he’s signed in his first three years at Colorado, only 21 were still on the roster at the end of the 2025 season. The rest have already transferred or left. This reality fuels his belief in a portal-heavy strategy, one he pioneered in 2023 by bringing in 47 scholarship transfers.
A Tale of Two Seasons: The Boom-and-Bust Cycle
The risk and reward of Sanders’ approach have been on stark display. The 2024 season was a resounding success, a 9-4 campaign built on the backs of elite transfer talent. Stars like quarterback Shedeur Sanders, two-way phenom Travis Hunter, and receiver Jimmy Horn Jr. all arrived via the portal and were drafted into the NFL, validating the model. That team was a “hit.”
Conversely, the 2025 season was a spectacular failure. After a promising start, the Buffaloes lost five straight to finish 3-9. Sanders himself took the blame, admitting he “missed” on his portal recruits. The most notable miss was quarterback Kaidon Salter, a transfer from Liberty who struggled to a 3-6 record as a starter. This volatility is the core criticism of the Prime Plan: it creates a roster with minimal shared history or chemistry, leading to wild swings in performance year after year.
The Traditionalist Counter-Argument
Many experts believe long-term success requires a foundation of high school talent. Former Colorado and NFL linebacker Chad Brown is among the skeptics. “Just to go into the (transfer) portal, it becomes like trying to build through free agency,” Brown stated. “You can get it done in spots… but home-grown talent is always going to be the best to coach up and get up to speed with your offense and defense.”
Brown’s point is that constant roster churn prevents a team from ever building depth in its playbook or culture. While Colorado signs 10 freshmen, traditional powers like Georgia, Ohio State, and USC are expected to sign classes of 25 to 30, banking on their ability to develop and retain that talent.
The Revolving Door of Talent
The modern era, defined by Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) compensation and unrestricted annual transfers, is the perfect environment for Sanders’ experiment. Players can leave if they aren’t happy with playing time or pay, a reality Sanders embraces. Freshman linebacker Mantrez Walker, a four-star signee from last year’s class, is already heading out after one season of limited action.
But the portal giveth and the portal taketh away. While some depart, Sanders’ biggest recruiting wins have come from it. His challenge now is to not only retain key foundational pieces like offensive tackle Jordan Seaton and redshirt quarterback Julian Lewis but also to strike gold again in the portal when it opens on January 2. As On3 recruiting analyst Josh Newberg noted, “You’re not finding Jordan Seaton-type players in the portal.” Sanders has found NFL-caliber players there before, and he’s betting everything he can do it again.
Ultimately, Coach Prime is leaning into the chaos of modern college football more aggressively than anyone else. His 2026 recruiting class is not a failure; it is a declaration. He is betting that assembling a new team of mercenaries each year is more efficient than building an army from the ground up. The 2026 season will be the ultimate verdict on whether his gambit is genius or a path to ruin.
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