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Travis Hunter injury: Colorado star suffered apparent shoulder injury

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Colorado and Kansas State played one of the more exciting games of the 2024 college football season late Saturday night, with the teams combining for three touchdowns in the final seven minutes in a back-and-forth 31-28 victory for the No. 19 Wildcats at Folsom Field in Boulder, Colorado.

The matchup was just as notable for who wasn’t on the field than who was.

Though they mounted a 10-point fourth-quarter comeback and very nearly won without him, coach Deion Sanders and the Buffaloes played much of the night without Travis Hunter.

The Colorado two-way sensation, one of the front-runners for the Heisman Trophy entering Week 7, left the game in the second quarter with an apparent shoulder injury.

The junior wide receiver and defensive back was one of several key contributors the Buffaloes lost at one point in their loss to Kansas State. The team’s top two remaining receivers, Jimmy Horn Jr. and Omarion Miller, also left the game with injuries in the second and fourth quarter, respectively.

Despite the lack of healthy, available targets, Colorado star quarterback Shedeur Sanders still managed to complete 34 of his 40 passes for 388 yards, three touchdowns and an interception. After the game, thrilling as it was, much of the attention remained on Hunter, one of the most captivating players in the country whose stellar 2024 season encountered a bump in the road.

Here’s a closer look at Hunter’s injury and what his playing status is moving forward:

Travis Hunter injury update

The play that ultimately knocked Hunter out of the rest of the game occurred with about eight minutes remaining in the second quarter, when he hauled in a 14-yard pass from Shedeur Sanders and absorbed a hit from Kansas State safety Daniel Cobbs.

Shortly after that, Hunter left the game. He was looked at by a team trainer and taken back to the locker room to be evaluated. He returned to the sideline early in the third quarter in his full uniform, but did not re-enter the contest.

Prior to his injury, Hunter had three catches for 26 yards on offense and a tackle on defense. When asked after the game about the status of Hunter, Horn and Miller, Deion Sanders did not have any new information.

“I haven’t gotten an update on those particular young men,” he said. “Hopefully, they can get back at it. But we’re not going to rush them. Their safety and their health is much more important than this game.”

The player who replaced Hunter at cornerback, Auburn transfer Colton Hood, intercepted a tipped pass from Kansas State’s Avery Johnson and took it back 59 yards to the Wildcats’ 17. Two plays later, the Buffaloes scored a go-ahead touchdown with 3:12 remaining in regulation.  

Hunter has shouldered an immense load for Colorado and was one of the primary reasons the Buffaloes got off to a 4-1 start this season, Sanders’ second at the helm.

At the halfway point in Colorado’s regular season, Hunter has 49 catches for 587 yards and six touchdowns, the first two of which are team highs, as well as 16 tackles, three pass break-ups, two interceptions and a forced fumble.

Given his importance to the team offensively and defensively, Hunter has played the overwhelming majority of the Buffaloes’ total snaps this season. Prior to his injury Saturday, he had been on the field for 44 of the game’s 45 offensive and defensive snaps.

‘Certainly losing Jimmy (Horn Jr.), Travis (Hunter) and others was tremendous because they’re a vital part of our team, a vital part of our identity, a vital part of who we are,’ Deion Sanders said after the game Saturday night. ‘That took a lot of us but other guys had the opportunity to step up and they did. I’m proud of them.’

That extraordinary output has raised questions about his durability and whether he can withstand such an enormous workload.

Colorado returns next Saturday with a game at Arizona before heading back home for an Oct. 26 matchup with Cincinnati. With two more victories, the Buffaloes will be eligible for just their third bowl since 2008.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY