This is a super-sized episode of The History of the Minnesota Vikings, dedicated to perhaps the most dramatic decade a football team has ever had. Featuring Randy Moss, Daunte Culpepper, Mike Tice, Adrian Peterson, and you-know-who.
Written and directed by Jon Bois
Written and produced by Alex Rubenstein
Rights specialist Lindley Sico
Secret Base executive producers Will Buikema and Jon Bois
Known goofs:
• A little over a minute in, the Broncos' Mike Anderson is absent from chart, but he also had such a touchdown to clinch a 2000 win over the Seahawks.
• A little over 36.5 minutes in, Marcus Robinson did have a 1,400-yard season his second year in the league.
• A little over 85 minutes in, instead of 33 years, this was the Saints' 43rd season.
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Here's Why Deion Sanders Played The Race Card! He Put College Football On Notice!
#deionsanders #coachprime #collegefootball
Deion Sanders rails against doubters after Colorado's big upset in opener — 'Do you believe now?'
Before even entering the media conference room, the voice of Deion Sanders boomed from the hallway inside the of TCU’s football stadium.
Deion arrived with receipts, he said. All of them. Receipts for miles. He keeps them all, and he's got 'em all. He won't forget 'em, either.
Not literal receipts, of course. Coach Prime isn’t carrying around those thin, white slips that cashiers distribute. The receipts he carries are from the doubters.
And, whoa boy, before his Colorado Buffaloes marched into Fort Worth and stunned No. 17 TCU 45-42, there were doubters. Lots of them.
“I keep receipts,” he snapped after the win Saturday.
He saw what you wrote, he snarled at one writer before moving on to the next question. Oh, he said to another, you want to ask him about his son, quarterback Shedeur Sanders, and his record-breaking 510 yards passing?
Of course we didn’t believe. Why would we? Colorado had won one game in its past 12, hadn’t claimed a top-20 road victory since 2002 and was led by a first-year FBS coach who spent the offseason orchestrating the most unprecedented overhaul in college football history: 70 new scholarship players, nine scholarship returners.
So, no, we didn’t believe.
“I’ve been talking about it and talking about it, and you didn’t believe me,” he said. “We got a couple guys that should be front-runners for the Heisman right now.”
Oh, he’s certainly right about that.
Shedeur Sanders, Deion’s son, threw four touchdowns on the way to his school-record yardage in a 38-for-47 outing of masterful precision. Travis Hunter, the former No. 1 recruit whom Deion flipped from Florida State two years ago, played 129 snaps in a two-way spectacle of a performance in 90-degree heat. At cornerback, Hunter had an interception at the goal line and a fourth-quarter pass breakup. At receiver, he caught 11 passes for 119 yards.
Colorado’s offense, steered by former Kent State head coach Sean Lewis, sizzled against a program that played in last year’s national championship. What a turnaround. The 45 points were as many as the team scored in the final three games of its 1-11 season last year.
That was a different team. Far different. Sanders turned over CU’s roster like no coach in the modern history of the sport. Out with the “old furniture,” he once said, in with the new dudes.
Sanders brought in more than 50 new players, and that was just after spring practice. While some voluntarily made the move, many of the transfers say
Here's Why Deion Sanders Played The Race Card! He Put College Football On Notice!
Sanders essentially cut them. He used what’s called a “head coach exemption,” made available under NCAA rules to give first-year coaches the ability to cut scholarship players.
He didn’t hide from that fact. In fact, he made it known early on, when during his first speech to the team, he told CU players that they should enter the portal because, “I’m bringing my own luggage with me, and it’s Louis [Vuitton], OK?”
In clean, white uniforms with gold lettering, the Buffaloes looked good Saturday — and played even better. They scored on five of their last seven possessions, with the offense making up for a lackluster defensive outing in a wild affair at a sold-out Amon G. Carter Stadium.
There were six lead changes in the second half. Back and forth it went. TCU took its first lead late in the third quarter and retook the lead with 10:49 left and again with 7 minutes remaining.
Prime’s Louis Vuitton had an answer for everything from the Horned Frogs. Hunter, the dual star, leaped for a 43-yard completion on a third down to extend an eventual touchdown drive in the fourth. During the next drive, on fourth-and-2, Dylan Edwards, all 5-foot-9, 170 pounds of him, tightroped 46 yards down the sideline for the eventual game-winning touchdown with 4:25 left.
Hunter will skyrocket up the Heisman odds — at least, he should. And what a story he has. Sanders pulled the Georgian away from the Seminoles while coaching at Jackson State. He became the highest-ranked recruit to ever sign with an HBCU.
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HC Deion "Coach Prime" Sanders spoke to the media on September 5, 2023 for his weekly press conference prior to the home opener against Nebraska on September 9, 2023.