Current:Home > FinanceEthermac|Deion Sanders is the most famous college football coach ever -Capitatum
Ethermac|Deion Sanders is the most famous college football coach ever
TradeEdge Exchange View
Date:2025-04-06 09:21:06
The Ethermacsimplest, most informative way to think about how America is experiencing Deion Sanders in this remarkable start to his career at Colorado is that he is unquestionably the most famous person to ever coach college football.
That might seem obvious. But fame is one of those phenomena where the degrees of fame actually matter a lot. Nick Saban, for instance, is famous in a way that he'd be recognized instantly by any fan of college football and perhaps by a majority of people who watch sports generally (he seemed to experience this in Italy over the summer, where he thought he could go incognito until he realized that football fans take overseas summer vacations too).
But Sanders’ fame exists on an entirely different level from anyone else because he has been part of mainstream popular culture for 35 years in ways that penetrated outside his career as a pro athlete. You were watching him do Pizza Hut, Pepsi and Nike commercials in the early 1990s. He was in rap videos. He’s hosted a Miss USA pageant. He was the star of his first reality show in 2008. In one way or another, he's been in our lives for a very long time.
Based solely on that star power, maybe we should have expected some of the numbers we're seeing Colorado football generate.
On Tuesday, ESPN said Colorado’s double-overtime win over Colorado State peaked at 11.1 million viewers, a truly remarkable number considering that the game kicked off after 10 p.m. on the East Coast, a time slot where network execs would typically be doing cartwheels to draw a couple million.
And this wasn’t even Texas-Alabama, which did well the week before but not as well as Colorado-Colorado State. The Deion brand might, in fact, be bigger than the sport itself.
But why? The answer is because of Deion’s most quintessentially American quality.
Though perhaps this was clear to some when he was a multi-sport athlete, a pitch man and a television personality, it has become glaring in his more culturally complicated position as a college football coach: Sanders’ fame was constructed in a way that allows everyone to see what they want to see.
That's not a criticism; it's an integral part of his genius. And it's working on a wide swath of the country to penetrate racial, political and generational lines in a way that hardly anything does nowadays.
A headline on Axios on Monday declared that Sanders was “making Colorado ‘Black America’s team,’ ” citing increased television viewership in Black households and the star power from the sports and entertainment world that is flocking to Boulder for games.
Meanwhile, Danté Stewart, an author and commentator, posted on the social media site X (formerly Twitter) that “generational hatred…of confident, defiant and joyful black people” is fueling a massive backlash to Colorado football.
And yet Sunday, Coach Prime was the star of “60 Minutes” – maybe the most establishment hour of television in America – with his segment generating nearly 2 million views on YouTube as of Tuesday morning. The segment with the show’s other big get, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, had 192,000 views.
Even the typically right-leaning sports Web sites that will culture war anything they deem “woke,” especially if it comes from a Black athlete, coach or journalist, have gotten on the Coach Prime bandwagon. Their audience can’t get enough of him either.
How does Sanders get away with that in a time and in a country where everything, including sports, feels polarizing?
A huge part of it, I suspect, is that Sanders has managed to maintain decades of cultural ubiquity without revealing much more about himself than what is necessary to fuel the Prime persona. At this point, we're all in on the joke. And the blank spaces he leaves in between allow for Sanders to be whatever else you want him to be.
The only other sports star in American life who has pulled off anything close to this while having such a constant and aggressive public persona is Charles Barkley. And yet Barkley is far more willing to share his worldview and even offend at times than Sanders, whose bombast is more WWE and whose opinions on anything of substance are pretty much a mystery.
People may roll their eyes at certain things about his swagger or style. They may dislike some things about how he left Jackson State or how he arrived at Colorado and immediately told the bad players to get lost so he could bring in better ones, which by the way is something coaches have been doing forever.
But Sanders generally operates in a world of such broad strokes that the ideological stereotypes we tend to apply to people in his position kind of deflect off him.
He’s appealing to Evangelical Christians because he's been probably most revealing in his personal life about finding his faith after contemplating suicide as a younger man. He taps into old school sensibilities when he says, like he did this spring, that Colorado players weren’t going to be given jersey numbers until they earned them because that’s how he grew up. And when he alludes to being "a confident Black man, sitting up here talking his talk and walking his walk, coaching 75% African-Americans in the locker room" as threatening to the establishment, he appeals to a large group of people — both Black and white — who know that many Black coaches haven’t been given fair opportunities to succeed.
But you'll never really get much beyond that from Sanders because, and he probably understands this as well as anyone, it is precisely because he’s Deion Sanders that his success isn’t going to change the trajectory for Black coaches any more than his three years at Jackson State transformed HBCU football.
He’s one of one. Nobody else can do what he does.
It is natural to look at the way Sanders has taken college football by storm — a sport where the majority of players are Black but the most influential coaches have been overwhelmingly white — and make certain assumptions about his role as a change agent. And his affiliation with Jackson State, brief as it was, connects him to a large portion of Black fans and HBCU graduates in a unique way.
But Sanders also deftly, and probably intentionally, offers the kind of persona that is the opposite of threatening or uncomfortable. Since we don’t know much about what he actually believes in besides himself, he can be the symbol for whatever worldview you want to apply to him.
Consider this: We actually know more about Saban’s politics than Sanders’ — and the former once claimed in 2016 that he missed election day because he was too busy to pay attention. That's not a criticism. Whether he is apolitical or simply private about what he thinks America should look like is completely his business.
But just as an example, Sanders got a little bit of backlash in 2017 when he partnered with the Koch Brothers, some of the most influential donors in Republican politics, on an anti-poverty charity in Texas.
“You're talking about a family that has one desire: to make this country a better place," Sanders said.
One wonders how that quote would land now with a huge swath of his new fan base – not just from the Black community but in an overwhelmingly liberal college town like Boulder — given the Kochs’ political priorities, the programs they’ve funded and associations they've had.
The thing is, Sanders doesn't really need to ever talk about that because he’s always filling the void with something much more exciting.
After Saturday’s game, for instance, the big star of the Prime Show was his mother Connie. During the week, Colorado State coach Jay Norvell seemed to take a shot at Sanders when he said: "When I talk to grown-ups, I take my hat and my glasses off. That's what my mother taught me.”
So it was a pitch perfect way to end his locker room speech — of course broadcast to the world — when he handed the microphone to his mother with The Rock nodding along in the background, and she delivered the line with perfect timing: "I raised him right!”
It was hilarious, but it was also kind of stunning: In decades of watching Sanders, had you ever seen him bring his mother in front of the camera before? At that moment, though, she was the perfect character to bring into the story.
But it was also a well-timed reminder of why he’s breaking through all of these typical barriers and why he just works as a personality. For a guy we've enjoyed having in our lives for decades, we’ll never actually know much about Deion Sanders besides what works to the benefit of Coach Prime. And that's probably the way most of us would prefer it.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Dan Wolken on X @DanWolken
veryGood! (8)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- An American mom and daughter are missing in Israel. Their family says Hamas is holding them hostage
- Venezuelan migrants who are applying for temporary legal status in the US say it offers some relief
- AP PHOTOS: Scenes of grief and desperation on war’s 7th day
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Ada Sagi was already dealing with the pain of loss. Then war came to her door
- ‘Barbenheimer’ was a boon to movie theaters and a headache for many workers. So they’re unionizing
- Microsoft closes massive deal to buy Call of Duty maker Activision Blizzard
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Amid a mental health crisis, toy industry takes on a new role: building resilience
Ranking
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Advocacy group says a migrant has died on US border after medical issue in outdoor waiting area
- Tens of thousands protest after Muslim prayers across Mideast over Israeli airstrikes on Gaza
- 12-year-old's 'decomposing' body found in Milwaukee home, homicide investigation underway
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Biden Announces Huge Hydrogen Investment. How Much Will It Help The Climate?
- Gunmen kill 6 construction workers in volatile southwestern Pakistan
- To rein in climate change, Biden pledges $7 billion to regional 'hydrogen hubs'
Recommendation
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Sophie Turner Unfollows Priyanka Chopra Amid Joe Jonas Divorce
The sun baby from the Teletubbies is having a baby
Judge authorizes attempted murder trial in shooting over Spanish conquistador statue
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Real relationship aside, Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are 100% in a PR relationship
Now in theaters: A three-hour testament to Taylor Swift's titan era
Palestinians flee within Gaza after Israel orders mass evacuation and stages brief ground incursions