Despite loss, Colorado will remember the Alamo Bowl
December 30, 2020
Freshman QB Brendon Lewis rushes the ball during the Buffs 55-23 loss to Texas at the Alamo Bowl. Dec. 29, 2020 (Nigel Amstock/CU Independent)
A depleted Colorado Buffaloes’ defense struggled to limit the big plays as CU fell to the No. 20 Texas Longhorns, 55-23 in the 2020 Valero Alamo Bowl. The final score may have looked ugly for the Buffs, but there was plenty of promise on display Tuesday night in San Antonio.
In Colorado’s first bowl game since 2016, its defense struggled with several key players out with injuries. Leading tackler senior Nate Landman, junior defensive end Terrance Lang, junior defensive back Chris Miller and others were all absent on Tuesday. The Buffs’ inexperienced defense surrendered three plays over 50 yards and allowed 638 total yards.
president, to specific situations evolved. but criminality is a different thing, remember, these regulations are internal regulations, he would have to prove that there s an attempt to obstruct justice, and that an order was communicated to the fbi, with the intent of curbing an investigation that might lead to the white house. now that s a very serious allegation and i don t see that based on what we know so far. so we have to know exactly what was said, and the context in which it was said before we can make a judgment as to whether it s a criminal act. it s certainly raising more than just year brows. at best, it s a rookie political move for people operating at this level. paul callan, nice to have you, to you all, mark, evan, have a nice weekend. and up next, a toxic nerve agent that can kill within minutes took out the north korean big brother. also we take you to the
sayisay saying they are the enemy of the u.s. people. we see cnn getting punished by evan s report on this meeting regarding the fbi talking about, you know, with mr. priebus, regarding the investigation, and what have you, we can also look at it as a very savvy media operation in some ways, certainly donald trump is, because he knows the media will chase this shiny object. we have seen since day one of the campaign, is that he has taken to twitter and he had put out statements that would force the narrative to change, from what the narrative is of that day. of course when you upset an entire press corps, from excluding some of their clearings from attending, basically a basic briefing, that does help tend to take your eyes off the ball, it could have been done intentionally, no question.
this bizarre, is to see the white house picking and choosing their media outlets. and i contacted the white house today and asked why they went one by one and choose outlet by outlet. sarah murray, thank you very much for the reporting at the white house tonight. evan price is was, mike prescott and our legal analyst paul callan. given what sarah s saying about the frustration that s palpable within the white house, that goes all the way up to the president. this is not a story that s going to go away any time soon. the irony is by what they have been doing, which is to try to say that the new york times story is false or that there was nothing to it, they have actually drawn more attention to it, including by trying to pressure the fbi, you know, to try to go out there and knock down the stories. one of the reasons why the fbi did not do that is because even though perhaps there was some parts of the new york times