Why did CU Buffs’ Deion Sanders speed up Sean Lewis’ exit to SDSU

Winning at Kent State is two holy rungs down from turning water into wine. If Deion Sanders was the splash, Sean Lewis was the coup.

And don’t be the schmuck on social media who tries to argue that because Lewis went 24-31 as the head coach of the Golden Flashes, his reported departure from the CU Buffs is no big loss.

KSU averaged 2.8 wins in the five years before Lewis took over. They were 1-11 this past fall in the Flashes’ first season after he left. For all the grief CU gets as a “coaching graveyard,” Boulder’s Club Med compared to Kent. The man grew daisies in the desert. He made a shambling, zombified MAC program watchable.

He also made the Buffs fun as heck, if only for seven or eight weeks. Which is why Aztec fans are giving each other virtual high-fives after multiple outlets reported Tuesday that Big Sean is expected to replace Brady Hoke as San Diego State’s football coach.

Whether it’s Byron Leftwich, Hue Jackson or Hue knows, Lewis’ permanent replacement at CU may well prove to be a step up — just so long as Coach Prime doesn’t hand the pencil over to Pat Shurmur full-time.

Yet none of them tick as many boxes as Big Sean did when he was rescued from Ohio this past December. As play-callers go, the Buffs had married up. The big guy with the bushy beard was as good a potential coach-in-waiting as the Buffs could’ve found in a pinch. If The Great Sanders Experiment ever went off the rails, Lewis was a logical, proven, potential successor. The steak to Coach Prime’s sizzle.

Well that steak is almost certainly gone now. And the Buffs smell a little burnt.

If Sanders gave CU an identity between the ESPN and FOX studio chairs, Lewis gave the Buffs one between the hashmarks.

#FolsomFast was #FlashFast first, a high-tempo, no-huddle scheme imported by Lewis that looked like the perfect marriage at 5,300 feet above sea level. Coach Prime’s speedy transfers blended with Lewis’ scheme and quarterback Shedeur Sanders’ arm laid the path, on paper, for exciting, Big-12 style shootouts. Over two months, it worked out that way in real life, too.

Before Coach Prime handed the keys to Shurmur, Lewis’ offense after eight games had ranked 32nd nationally in points per tilt (32.1) and 55th in average yardage (408.6).

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