EAST LANSING, Mich. (WLNS) - After officially entering the transfer portal on Tuesday, Michigan State offensive lineman Ethan Boyd announced on his social media that he has committed to Colorado. The East Lansing grad originally entered the portal in late November and announced his decision to return to his hometown team in December. Boyd enrolled []
Colorado coach Deion Sanders and QB Shedeur Sanders, his son, clapped back to a former player, another FCS player and other critics on social media.
(The Center Square) – Gov. Jared Polis on Monday signed into law Colorado’s $40.6 billion budget for fiscal year 2024-25. The new budget marks a 3.7% increase compared to the previous state budget, and includes over $500 million more in funding for public education. Polis highlighted increases in funding for education and affordable housing in House Bill 24-1430, also known as the “long bill.” “This bipartisan budget builds a stronger, brighter,...
The death of a Colorado woman who disappeared nearly four years ago has been ruled a homicide
Colorado running back Dylan Edwards, who started six games last season and
Series goes Wednesday (April 24), Friday (April 26) and Sunday (April 28),
The Colorado Rockies beat the Seattle Mariners on Sunday afternoon, 2-1 in 10 innings, during Game 1 of a doubleheader at Coors Field. The Rockies won because t
House Bill 1380, which passed the state House on Wednesday, would require a debt collector to disclose who initially held the debt, and would only allow the collector to sue if they had complete freedom to settle the debt.
Video posted on social media appears to show a member of the Colorado
DENVER, Colo. — The Seattle Mariners game at the Colorado Rockies,
Northern Colorado will honor the 1974 CWS team Saturday on the 50th anniversary of the Bears' most recent appearance in Omaha, Nebraska, the site of the College World Series. The ceremony begins at 11:40 a.m. at Jackson Field in Greeley.
The Colorado River's future may be a little brighter than expected, according to a new modeling study from CIRES researchers. Warming temperatures, which deplete water in the river, have raised doubts the Colorado River could recover from a multi-decade drought. The new study fully accounts for both rising temperatures and precipitation in the Colorado's headwaters, and finds precipitation, not temperature, will likely continue to dictate the flow of the river for the next 25 years.