Deion Sanders caught on camera with surprised display during dramatic loss

Deion Sanders caught on camera with surprised display during dramatic loss

As the team suffered a crushing defeat, Deion Sanders was seen on camera quarreling with his own players.

The man commonly referred to as “Prime Time” seemed to get into a heated argument with one of his players while his Colorado Buffaloes team gave up a 29-point lead at the half to ultimately lose.

After the Colorado Buffaloes’ team gave up a 29-point halftime lead to lose, head coach Deion Sanders appeared to get into a heated argument with Carter Stoutmire.

After Stanford pulled off the greatest comeback in school history to win 46-43, the man known as “Coach Prime” was clearly dejected. Joshua Karty broke Colorado hearts with a 31-yard field goal to seal their dramatic victory in double overtime.

With only seconds remaining in regulation time, Karty’s 46-yard field goal would put the Cardinals on a 26-point scoring run, shocking Sanders’ team.
The game went into overtime thanks to the kicker’s timely heroics, and from that point on, the odds were in his team’s favor.

Mittent panic ensued, and deep into double overtime, Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders intercepted Stanford safety Alaka’i Gilman.
As fate would have it, Karty would deal Colorado’s last deadly blow on a day that will never be forgotten.

It seemed as though his team’s collapse caused some friction in the Colorado camp; head coach “Prime Time” even got into a verbal altercation with one of his players.
Sanders’ annoyance was evident after Stanford tied the score at 36 points halfway through the fourth quarter.

It was evident that the coach was under pressure as the reality of his team’s impending collapse played out on the sidelines as the camera panned to him. The video then showed him and cornerback Stoutmire getting into what looked like a heated argument.

This former two-time Super Bowl champion doesn’t seem to have been impressed with what he saw after halftime.
According to him, it’s not true that people say “it’s 0-0,” as he acknowledged in an admission.
It is 29-nothing, not 0-0.

“At the half, I sensed complacency because we stalled offensively and gave up some yardage. I simply didn’t feel good going in at halftime.
Once we step outside again, complacency sets in.

This is the team that neither you nor I can stand.
It’s incomprehensible how that could possibly happen to us, but it did.
I don’t recall ever losing a football game when we were up 20-0 in my early years.
****.

Sanders went on, “I really don’t.
I find this to be a little difficult. We are forced to move forward.
Such is life.
We weren’t prepared for that.
We are unable to take a seat and hold a sympathy gathering.
****.

Goddonz

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