BYU Cougars at Colorado Buffaloes
· Valero Alamo BowlBYU stymies Sanders, Hunter in 36-14 victory over Colorado in Alamo Bowl
“Understanding that they have great players on the other side of the field," Martin said. "Just knowing the stage is set for us to go out there and try to show (what they can do). No one expected us to win or dominate like we did.”
BYU (11-2, No. 17 CFP) scored in every quarter in rolling to its second straight bowl victory and third in its past four appearances after failing to advance last season.
“It started back in January,” Cougars center Connor Pay said. “Not playing in a bowl game is a bad taste in your mouth. You want to change that. That brings a grit and a fire to our offseason. That’s where it began.”
Colorado (9-4, No. 23 CFP) was held to 210 total yards with only two net yards rushing. The Buffaloes had 90 yards in the fourth quarter with the Cougars leading by 29 points.
“We started to identify and we started with the rhythm of things, but we just wasn’t connecting overall," Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders said. "That’s what stopped us overall, was ourselves.”
Sanders was sacked three times and threw two interceptions before a sellout crowd of 64,261. He threw for 208 yards and two touchdowns while completing 16 of 23 passes.
The Cougars gave 17 different looks defensively in the first half in an effort to confuse Sanders and the Buffaloes' prolific passing game.
“We had guys flying in from every angle putting pressure on the quarterback," BYU defensive end Tyler Batty said. "I don’t necessarily envy Shedeur in that situation, not knowing where the blitz is coming from. Lot of credit to (defensive coordinator) Jay Hill and really proud of our defense.”
Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter had four receptions for 106 yards, including a 43-yard touchdown from Sanders with 6:14 remaining in the third quarter.
BYU linebacker Isaiah Glasker had eight tackles, including four solo and one for a loss, and intercepted a pass in the fourth quarter.
Glasker was named the Defensive MVP and Martin the Offensive MVP.
Colorado's offensive struggles started early.
The Buffaloes failed to convert on fourth-and-1 at the Cougars 49-yard line when Sanders' pass to Will Sheppard fell incomplete.
BYU then marched 52 yards for its first touchdown on a 1-yard run by Martin with four minutes remaining in the first quarter.
Cougars sophomore Parker Kingston returned a punt 64 yards for a touchdown to put BYU up 17-0 with 5:32 left in the first half.
The Buffaloes were shut out in the first half while being limited to 61 total yards, including minus-9 yards rushing on 12 carries.
“BYU, they’re well-coached," Colorado coach Deion Sanders said. "They did a phenomenal job running the football. Special teams kicked our butts and we couldn’t do nothing offensively much at all.”
Sione I. Moa added a 13-yard rushing touchdown in the third quarter for the Cougars.
Will Ferrin kicked field goals of 51 and 54 yards for BYU.
Colorado: The Buffaloes entered averaging 34.5 points per game, which was 22nd in the nation, but struggled against the Cougars.
How To Watch
How can I watch BYU Cougars vs. Colorado Buffaloes?
- TV Channel: Cougars at Buffaloes 2021 College Football, week 1, is broadcasted on ABC.
- Online streaming: Sign up for Fubo.
Matchup Prediction
Scoring Summary
TD | 1st Period 7:10 | LJ Martin 1 Yd Run (Will Ferrin Kick) | |
FG | 1st Period 2:19 | Will Ferrin 51 Yd Field Goal | |
TD | 2nd Period 5:32 | Parker Kingston 64 Yd Punt Return (Will Ferrin Kick) | |
FG | 2nd Period 0:00 | Will Ferrin 54 Yd Field Goal | |
TD | 3rd Period 8:03 | Sione I Moa 13 Yd Run (Will Ferrin Kick) | |
TD | 3rd Period 6:14 | Travis Hunter 43 Yd pass from Shedeur Sanders (Alejandro Mata Kick) | |
TD | 4th Period 10:27 | LJ Martin 9 Yd Run (Two-Point Pass Conversion Failed) | |
FG | 4th Period 5:28 | Will Ferrin 31 Yd Field Goal | |
TD | 4th Period 2:17 | Sav'ell Smalls 2 Yd pass from Shedeur Sanders (Alejandro Mata Kick) |
Statistics
BYU | COLO | |
---|---|---|
22 | 1st Downs | 9 |
8-14 | 3rd down efficiency | 3-9 |
0-0 | 4th down efficiency | 0-1 |
331 | Total Yards | 210 |
151 | Passing | 208 |
12/23 | Comp/Att | 16/23 |
6.6 | Yards per pass | 9.0 |
180 | Rushing | 2 |
42 | Rushing Attempts | 19 |
4.3 | Yards per rush | 0.1 |
9-80 | Penalties | 8-65 |
3 | Turnovers | 2 |
0 | Fumbles lost | 0 |
3 | Interceptions thrown | 2 |
35:56 | Possession | 24:04 |
College Football News
National signing day: Winners, losers and takeaways from 2025 recruiting
The class of 2025 cycle is in the books. Here's why Oklahoma has big questions and one QB is poised for stardom.
Five-star OT Ty Haywood caps strong Michigan recruiting class
One-time Alabama commit Ty Haywood, a five-star offensive tackle, made his formal commitment to Michigan on Wednesday.
National signing day 2025: Facts on the NCAA event
National signing day is a rite of passage for student-athletes on the collegiate level. Learn more about how the process works now.
2025 college football recruiting class rankings: Top 75 schools
Some late shuffling includes a new team at the top and the entry of Bill Belichick and the Tar Heels.
Nyzier Fourqurean testifies in Wisconsin eligibility case, estimates NIL earnings
Wisconsin CB Nyzier Fourqurean said during a hearing Tuesday that he will earn "hundreds of thousands" of dollars in compensation if he receives an injunction enabling him to maintain his eligibility and play for the Badgers this fall.