CU Buffs’ Jordan Seaton won’t back down from expectations

US

BOULDER — I mean, sure, you could start a fight with Jordan Seaton. I’m just not sure you’d finish it.

Not in one piece, at any rate.

“Are the older guys … cool with you?” I asked the best lineman to sign with the Buffs out of high school since Jake Moretti as we kibitzed outside the Champions Center on Monday.

“Yes,” Seaton, CU’s five-star true freshman tackle replied.

“So no hazing?”

He raised an eyebrow.

“Hazing?”

He raised another.

“Like rookies carrying veterans’ pads at camp, stuff like that,” I replied. “It happens everywhere. You’ll find out at the next level. It’s what they do with rookies.”

Rookies! The light went on.

“Oh, like in The League,” Seaton said, referring to the National Football League.

“Yeah, in The League.

“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” he continued, catching the drift and running to daylight.

“We don’t really have that. For me, freshman initiation is just — listening, you know? Just listening to the guys in front of me. They don’t really do the hazing. Or the fighting. No, we don’t do that. This is a brotherhood. Brothers fight. But not to the point where it’s like we don’t like each other.”

Seaton’s easy to like, stellar resume notwithstanding. His arrival gives quarterback Shedeur Sanders a wingman with a 6-foot-10 wingspan, which doesn’t hurt. No. 77 is  6-5, 285 pounds of mess-around-and-find-out, a lineman who ran pass routes at the Under Armour Next All-American Game and reportedly registered a closing speed of 17.7 miles per hour on GPS during another tilt. (Context: The fastest wideouts in the NFL usually max out at roughly 20 mph.)

“I feel like the O-line last year (at CU) lacked passion. And right now we’ve got a lot of it,” Seaton continued. “We’ve got a lot of dudes. We’re just going at it … One dude might have a bad day today, next day, it’s ‘Oh, I’m getting back at that guy.’ So I feel like passion is what this offense and defense has the most, and integrity, like, within themselves.”

Like his head coach, Seaton fears neither man nor microphone, regardless of how hot they happen to be at that given moment. The teen from D.C. calls it like he sees it. Even if some truths land harder than others.

“I actually thought this place was going to be really, really bad,” the Buffs’ star blocker said of Boulder, and his first impressions therein.

“This is my opinion. Everybody has their own opinion. But I took a risk. And then me coming in and having Coach Prime and everything he told me that he was going to do, he did.”

While CU sports staffers around us chuckled awkwardly and clutched imaginary pearls, we had to ask the big man to backpedal on that one.

“Bad?” I asked, raising an eyebrow of my own this time. “Define ‘Bad.’”

“Nothing really too crazy,” Seaton continued. “Just as far as ‘bad’ — you don’t know how much money we’re bringing in here. So you go to other universities — the Big Tens, the SECs, they’ve got $10 billion contracts, all crazy stuff.

“So … I thought I was taking a risk. But then coming in here, it exceeded expectations. We actually have a great facility. We actually spend a lot of money on food, as you can see, which I was talking about (earlier). And everything’s exceeded expectations, from the littlest things to the biggest things for me.”

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Sister pleads over her brother’s indefinite prison sentence
USC student found critically injured in downtown L.A. apartment after attack, sources say
New DNA could shed light on “Monster of Florence” serial killer case decades after mysterious murders of couples
Teen charged after stabbing spree at Taylor Swift dance party
White Sox routed by Twins for longest MLB skid in 36 years

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *