BOULDER, CO — The NFL dropped its 2026 Scouting Combine invite list on Wednesday, and the silence in Boulder was louder than Folsom Field on a Saturday night. Zero. That’s the number of Colorado Buffaloes invited to Indianapolis. For a program that just posted a 9–4 finish and for a head coach who built his brand on sending men to the league, this isn’t just a snub. It’s a statement.
The Blackout in Boulder
Deion Sanders promised a pipeline. He delivered a turnaround—dragging the program from the 1–11 depths of 2022 to a respectable nine-win campaign in 2024. But the NFL’s talent evaluators seemingly turned a blind eye to the talent on the field. The invite list was overloaded with the usual suspects from Ohio State, Alabama, and LSU, while Colorado’s roster got left in the cold.
The omission of Sincere Brown is particularly glaring. The 6-foot-5 receiver didn’t just play; he stretched the field. Brown racked up 22 catches for 376 yards, averaging 17.1 yards per pop, including three explosive plays of 60+ yards. He has the frame and the film, yet he didn’t get the call.
Then look at the trenches. Zy Crisler was a fortress at right guard. We’re talking 749 snaps without allowing a single sack. In a league desperate for interior protection, leaving a clean sheet like that at home is baffling. His counterpart, Zarian McGill, was nearly flawless across 774 snaps, surrendering just one sack and one quarterback hit all year.
Defense Disrespected
The snubs didn’t stop at the offense. Linebacker Jeremiah Brown was the heartbeat of the unit, piling up 73 tackles in his final year. In the secondary, Preston Hodge quietly led the Big 12 in pass breakups, locking down passing lanes even when the secondary around him looked shaky. Defensive linemen Arden Walker and Keaten Wade brought consistent pressure, racking up TFLs and disrupting pockets, yet the selection committee saw nothing worth evaluating.
“I’m not just building a program, I’m building men for the next level. We’re trying to send you to the league. That’s the goal. If you can play, we’re going to get you there.” — Deion Sanders, Colorado Head Coach
The Shedeur Shadow
You can’t look at this empty invite list without feeling the hangover from the 2025 NFL Draft. The “Deion Effect” took a massive hit when Shedeur Sanders—the face of the revolution—slid all the way to the fifth round before the Cleveland Browns finally stopped his fall.
It wasn’t a lack of production; Shedeur threw 64 touchdowns in two seasons and completed 74 percent of his passes. It was the “football character” whispers. Reports surfaced that he “sandbagged” interviews and came off as “arrogant” to execs. While insiders argued the NFL doesn’t care about swagger if the talent is undeniable, the league clearly sent a message: The Colorado brand alone isn’t a golden ticket.
What’s Next: The Recruitment Ripple
This is a critical juncture for Coach Prime. He sells the NFL dream to recruits and transfers. “If you’re good enough, you’re going to shine here,” he says. But when eight eligible prospects—including starters with legit production—get ignored by the Combine, opposing recruiters will weaponize this immediately. Sanders has to prove that 2026 is an anomaly, not the new normal. If he can’t get his guys in the room with scouts, the transfer portal pipeline might start flowing in the opposite direction.

