Throughout the 2025 season, coach Deion Sanders and the Colorado Buffaloes struggled to find consistent success on both sides of the ball, which has led to many changes on the coaching staff and across the entire roster. Even after a significant number of offseason additions, it still appears that Colorado is doubted in what may shake out to be a very competitive Big 12 conference.Nov 29, 2024; Boulder, Colorado, USA; Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders calls out in the second quarter against the Oklahoma State Cowboys at Folsom Field. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images | Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images2026 Big 12 ProjectionAthlon Sports' Steven Lassan released his Big 12 predictions for 2026, ranking Colorado as the No. 14 team in the conference.To put this ranking perspective, Lassan placed Colorado in front of just Iowa State and UCF, which are both programs that seem to have major questions. Teams just in front of the Buffaloes include Cincinnati, Baylor, Kansas, and West Virginia. When looking at these teams ranked ahead of Colorado, it is interesting to note that all of them are either having a competition tat quarterback to decide the starter, or have a transfer with serious questions projected to start.While the Buffaloes do not have a proven option at quarterback, redshirt freshman quarterback Julian Lewis is expected to start and has shown flashes of being a reliable option after playing four games in 2025 and starting in two of those games while recording 589 yards, four touchdowns, zero interceptions, and completing 55.3 percent of his passes.Based on the continuity that Colorado should have at quarterback, this could give the Buffaloes the advantage they need to climb the rankings. Colorado also has an opportunity to prove continuity matters on the field with matchups against Baylor and Cincinnati in 2026, which could also be monumental games for the Buffaloes to become bowl eligible.With Lewis now entering his second season at Colorado, he could have an opportunity to lead the Buffaloes to prove doubters wrong with the help of several new players and what seems to be a much better coaching staff.Apr 11, 2026; Boulder, CO, USA; Colorado Buffaloes quarterback Julian Lewis (10) prepares to pass the ball during the spring game at Folsom Field. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images | Ron Chenoy-Imagn ImagesColorado’s Offensive ChangesWhile Colorado has made several changes to the roster, there is no question that the addition of Brennan Marion as the new offensive coordinator could be viewed as one of the biggest additions of the entire offseason.Marion has experienced great success almost everywhere he has gone, which does suggest that the Buffaloes' offense could be poised to take a major step forward from a schematic standpoint, but also due to the talent that Colorado has been able to bring in.On offense, the Buffaloes brought in several weapons through the transfer portal on the perimeter and in the backfield to complement Lewis, including running backs Damian Henderson II, Richard Young, and Jaquail Smith in addition to wide receivers Danny Scudero, DeAndre Moore Jr., Kam Perry, and Ernest Campbell.The complement of these weapons could fit right into Marion’s offense and give Lewis a chance to get the ball into space and have a reliable run game, behind an offensive line that Colorado was also able to add a lot of great transfers to.On the offensive line, the Buffaloes were able to add tackles Bo Hughley, Taj White, Jayven Richardson, and Leon Bell, guards Jose Soto and Jayvon McFadden, and centers Demetrius Hunter and Sean Kinney. With this group having undergone massive change, this could be the best offensive line Coach Prime has had at Colorado and may potentially be a major reason why the Buffaloes' offense becomes one of the most consistent units in the Big 12. MSU defensive run game coordinator Chris Marve speaks to reporters at Media Day on Saturday, August 10, 2019 at the Leo Seal Complex. Photo by Keith Warren