Colorado's Dylan Edwards Emerges As Unsung Breakout Star in Week 1 Upset

You can take your pick of standout performances from Coloradoâs shocking 45-42 Week 1 upset over TCU. There was Shedeur Sanders with 510 yards through the air, Travis Hunterâs workmanlike 129 snaps, 119 receiving yards on 16 targets with an acrobatic interception. There were even circus catches downfield by Jimmy Horn Jr. and Xavier Weaver. But the leading receiver wasn't a receiver at all, but rather freshman running back Dylan Edwards.
Offensive coordinator Sean Lewis used Edwards to unlock TCUâs defense, exploiting the Frogsâ linebackers and getting the shifty 5â8â playmaker in space in different ways in the flats, where he proved to be absolutely deadly with 135 receiving yards on five catches with four total touchdowns, including a 75-yard screen weâll get to a little bit later. First, take a look at how one of Coloradoâs first snaps of the game foreshadowed how big a role Edwards would play in his college debut.
The Colorado receiver releases up the field and because of the logjam it creates, the second defender isnât able to get through traffic to cover Edwards in the flat.

Edwards is wide open, and Sanders hits him for a short gain, but the young back loses his footing and tweaks his leg, which is the only reason it wasnât a potentially bigger play.
âHe thought it popped,â Deion Sanders said after the game. âI said nah, nah, nah, God wouldnât have brought you this far for that. Not right now. Watch the impact youâre gonna have on this game, and he had a tremendous impact.â
Whether the credit belongs to divine intervention, a youthful ability to bounce back, or good work by CUâs training staff, Sanders was right about just what his running back would do for the rest of the game.
What a debut at the college level for @DerbyPanther alum Dylan Edwards. 4 touchdowns, the final one the game winner for Colorado to knock off TCU. Ends with 5 catches for 135 yards out of the backfield pic.twitter.com/qQhlieBVOo
â Catch It Kansas (@CatchItKansas) September 2, 2023
In fact, his impact would be felt just a few plays later in a similar fashion, this time on the other side of the field. Itâs unclear which defender was responsible for Edwards on this play, but what is clear is that he got lost in the shuffle as two Colorado receivers (one just off screen) create a void by running routes into the end zone. TCU safety Josh Foster (whoâs walked up onto the line of scrimmage) ends up rushing Shedeur Sanders, while LB Johnny Hodges behind him gets caught in the traffic and doesnât do much of anything. Edwards walks in untouched.

⊠and TCU safety Bud Clark realizes someone messed up when itâs far too late.

One thing thatâs often questioned about skill players is their willingness to block. They donât have to be road graders, but they do have to be up to the task, because when they are it adds a significant dimension to an offense by allowing plays to be even more explosive thanks to perimeter blocking. It showed on Edwards 75-yard touchdown on a screen pass.
One interesting aspect of Coloradoâs offense is the significantly wide splits by the receivers, where the widest players are nearly on the sideline before the snap, something thatâs becoming increasingly more popular across college football. It means thereâs more space to play with, and the Buffs exploit that using Edwardsâ speed.
But this play might have been dead to rights from the outset. TCU doesnât have it defended perfectly on the outside, but the Frogs at least force Edwards back into the middle of the field where, theoretically, they have help. Except they donât, because tight end Michael Harrison has taken care of linebacker Jamoi Hodge.

Itâs enough to get Edwards into open space, where blocks on the edge down the field are able to spring him for a score.

The running back catching the ball out of the backfield isnât exactly a staple of a Lewis offense. In fact, the most receptions for a running back in a Lewis-led offense at Kent Stateâwhere he was the head coach from 2018 to â22âwas Justin Rankin in â18, who finished the year with 14 catches. Even the talented Marquez Cooper was only targeted 14 times out of the backfield last year for Kent State with eight catches, one of which was a 27-yard gain against Georgia last season that was virtually the same screen play as shown here.
But itâs clear that Edwards may be of much more use as a receiving threat than previous backs in Lewisâ system, especially if other opponents defend as poorly as TCU did in Week 1. Edwardsâ final score showed once again how sometimes a playâs success has as much to do with how the defense reacts as it does with the offenseâs own efficiency.
TCU brings a fourth rusher from the second level, but Sanders calmly handles it because he knows he has Edwards as an outlet. Edwards runs right into the space the blitzer vacated and ends up in a footrace to the corner with Hodge. Thatâs already disadvantageous for a linebacker, then you add in the fact that heâs a tick late in realizing whatâs happening, and the penalty is six points for the Buffs and the game-winning score to cap off Edwardsâ electric day.Â

The debut was impressive for so many different players in Coloradoâs win, but the freshman running back showed the full breadth of what the group of skill players Deion Sanders has assembled can do. Itâs not just defending the receivers down the field in the vertical passing game, but also closer to the line of scrimmage, where Edwards shows you have to defend the width of the field against this team or run the risk of watching him run roughshod again.Â
