Can Deion Sanders’ second extreme CU Buffs makeover work?

BOULDER — Gerry DiNardo doesn’t know Deion Sanders from Adam Bledsoe. But he knows this: If ex-CU Buffs coach Bill McCartney had his mitts on the transfer portal four decades ago, he would’ve used that bad boy the way Rembrandt used a brush.

“Bill was a master of trying to bring teams together,” DiNardo, the offensive coordinator of the Buffs’ national championship team in 1990 and an analyst with the Big Ten Network, told The Post recently. “I’d say the more that anybody uses the transfer portal, the better they better be with personal relationships. And with team-building skills.”

So how proficient is Coach Prime on both fronts? For better or for worse, CU fans are about to find out.

Since Nov. 27 of last year, according to the 247Sports.com database, the Buffs have seen 40 football players enter the portal — a turnover of roughly half the CU football roster for the second spring in a row.

But while Sanders promised wholesale roster changes at this time a year ago, and delivered on every word, the last five months have presented the same song with a slightly different verse. Even Sanders’ 2023 luggage is being replaced by newer, snazzier models.

Of the 40 reported portal departures in the ’23-24 cycle, 29 of them are players from the Buffs’ Class of ’23, Sanders’ first full recruiting haul as CU’s football coach.

If that sounds like a lot, it is. For context, the other three “Four Corners” programs leaving the Pac-12 this summer for the Big 12 — Arizona, Arizona State and Utah — had an average of seven players out of their respective 2023 classes decide to hit the portal over the last five months.

In the “Portal Age,” combined with varying temptations of Name/Image/Likeness (NIL) opportunities for student-athletes, meaty roster churning is becoming a college football constant. As Sanders and his proponents frequently point out, it’s happening everywhere. Yet it’s rarely happening anywhere else to the historic, sweeping degree that it’s happened in both Year 1 and Year 2 of the Coach Prime Era.

“A lot of people are fighting for backups. When a guy is a starter and he transfers, you’ve really got to think about that,” Sanders said last month when asked about the comings and goings. “We can attract those type of players, but I don’t think we’re losing those type of players. And if we do, we’re good. We’re good.”

Sanders is banking on a familiar formula, one proven during his successful tenure at Jackson State: Enough Jimmies and Joes (talent) will win out, eventually, over Xs and Os (scheme). Prime inherited a 1-11 roster and sent most of it packing before he’d even held a formal practice. That makeover produced a 4-8 season, although the silver lining rolled over the Flatirons with several clouds. There was a disappointing 1-8 mark in Pac-12 play; recurring leaks along the offensive and defensive lines; and issues with overall depth.

Sanders and his staff are doubling down on the idea that if replacing the majority of a roster quadrupled CU’s win total in one season, then replacing the “less-talented” half of the 2023 depth chart could double the Buffs’ win total from four to, say, eight or nine.

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