For the first time in his collegiate coaching career, Deion Sanders is entering a season without his sons, Shedeur and Shilo, in the locker room. And rather than shy away, “Coach Prime” is revealing that the shift isn’t just manageable-it may very well be freeing.
At a recent press conference at Colorado, Sanders admitted with a mix of relief and humor: “I love these young men wholeheartedly… It’s not easy. But I only now have to be a coach. I don’t have to be a coach and a father.
And I like that part of it.” His trademark lighthearted delivery earned laughs-especially when he quipped about mornings sitting in meetings, only half-expecting Shilo to stroll in late and request “five more minutes.”
Emotional transition opens new leadership space
The seats once reserved for his sons are now filled by Colorado’s new lineup-including transfers like JuJu Lewis-transforming the “family meeting room” into a regular locker-room dynamic.
Yet, Sanders isn’t sidelining that bond; instead, he’s doubling down on mentoring his team as if they were his own. “Some of these young men, I love them like they’re my own. I challenge them like they’re my own. And I chastise them like they’re my own,” he emphasized.
Sanders’ coaching journey has always been rooted in fatherhood-from co-founding Prime Prep Academy to his transformative run at Jackson State and the program reboot at Colorado.
This season marks another pivotal chapter. With Shedeur and Shilo now in the NFL, Sanders is free from familial coaching dynamics and focused entirely on shaping the next generation of Buffaloes.
As fall camp begins, the quarterback position is wide open. Spearheading a run-heavy offense built for physicality, Sanders’ message is clear: “completions, completions” and leadership under pressure. Without the distraction of coaching his sons, Coach Prime is stepping fully into the role he’s always craved-and Colorado stands to benefit.
At Boulder’s season opener on August 30 against Georgia Tech, Deion Sanders will be walking onto Folsom Field not as a dad in cleats, but as just Coach Prime, and arguably at his most potent.
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