Colorado football reporter praises All-City Stadium practice, notes 'shady' actor present
BuffStampede.com's Adam Munsterteiger had almost nothing but positive things to say about the experience of covering Deion Sanders' Colorado football program conducting an open practice at All-City Stadium on August 16.
The one negative? There was supposedly a "shady" reporter present who was not watching the game and was there purely to feed a "negative agenda."
"I really hope Friday night only provided positive results, in terms of the CU Buffs and Coach Prime realizing how much goodwill can occur as a result of open practices," Munsterteiger prefaced before saying, "It was a lot of fun. There was only one shady reporter there and he didn't even really watch practice."
"(The shady reporter) Doesn't really 'cover' the program and couldn't give you a two-deep," Munsterteiger added in a response to a reader asking what he meant. "Just covering the program to feed a negative agenda."
Many in the response tweets tabbed The Denver Post's Sean Keeler as the likely target of Munsterteiger's accusations. Keeler has not posted anything about the practice, though. Of course, Munsterteiger and Keeler sit on complete opposite ends of the spectrum as it pertains to one-sided coverage of Coach Prime.
Deion Sanders must bring focus back to his Colorado football program and away from media spats
That we have Coach Prime attacking Keeler and the Denver Post columnist admitting he had it coming is a testament to how deep the petty beef is between Colorado's head coach and local prominent voices covering the team.
The focus needs to be less on Sanders and the paid scribes hovering the program and more on the players, who will hopefully be giving fans plenty of material to consume instead of this deep offseason melodrama. Not focusing on the behavior of media members at all during the season would be nice too.
Week 1 can't come soon enough.