The University of Colorado was a member of the
Colorado Football Association in 1893, and became a charter member of the
Colorado Faculty Athletic Conference in 1909, which changed its name a year later to
Rocky Mountain Faculty Athletic Conference. Colorado left the RMFAC to become a charter member of the
Mountain States Conference (a.k.a. Skyline Conference) in 1938. CU joined the
Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association in 1947, then commonly known as the Big Six, changing the common name to the Big Seven. In 1958, the conference added
OSU to become the
Big Eight Conference. It remained the Big 8 until 1996, when it combined with four member schools of the defunct
Southwest Conference (Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, and Baylor) to create the
Big 12 Conference. On July 1, 2011, the school joined the
Pac-12 Conference, along with
Utah. A total of 12 of CU's 17 varsity sports competed in the Pac-12, except the ski teams, indoor track & field teams and the lacrosse team. The ski teams participate in the
Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Ski Association (RMISA), of which it has been a member since 1947, along with fellow Pac-12 newcomer Utah. Both continue to house skiing in the RMISA. The indoor track & field teams participated in the
Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) as the Pac-12 didn't sponsor indoor track. With the Big 12 sponsoring indoor track, CU now competes in that conference. Women's lacrosse was added in the spring of 2014; that team competed in the MPSF until the Pac-12 Conference added women's lacrosse as a sport for the 2018 season. Women's lacrosse now competes in the Big 12, following the conference's decision to add the sport starting in the spring 2025 season. Colorado is one of two Big 12 schools and one of only five
Power Four schools that do not sponsor
baseball, along with fellow Big 12 member
Iowa State,
SMU,
Syracuse, and
Wisconsin. CU does not have a women's
softball program, one of five Big 12 members (
Cincinnati,
Kansas State,
TCU,
West Virginia) opting not to participate.
Football passing at
Michigan in
2016 The Colorado football program is 16th on the all-time NCAA Division I win list and 22nd in all-time winning percentage (.614). Since
Folsom Field was built in 1924, the Buffaloes have been at home. The
Nebraska game in
2006 was CU's 1100th football game.
Bill McCartney is the most famous head coach, leading Colorado to its only
national championship in
1990. Current head coach
Deion Sanders was approved by the university's board of regents in December
2022. Beginning competitive play in 1890, Colorado has enjoyed much success through its history. The team has won numerous
bowl games (27 appearances in bowl games (12-15), 23rd (tied) all-time prior to 2004 season), 8 Colorado Football Association Championships (1894–97, 1901–08), 1 Colorado Faculty Athletic Conference (1909), 7 RFMAC Championships (1911, 1913, 1923, 1924, 1934, 1935, 1937), 4 Mountain States Conference Championships (1939, 1942–44), 5 Big Eight (Six) conference championships (1961, 1976, 1989, 1990, 1991), 1 Big 12 conference championship (2001), 4 Big 12 North Championships (2001, 2002, 2004, 2005), and an
Associated Press national championship in 1990. The team holds rivalries with
Nebraska,
Colorado State, and
Utah. Colorado football also has two
Heisman Trophy winners: •
Rashaan Salaam (1994) •
Travis Hunter (2024) There have also been 9 unanimous
All-Americans: •
Eric Bieniemy (1990) •
Joe Garten (1990) •
Alfred Williams (1990) •
Jay Leeuwenburg (1991) • Rashaan Salaam (1994) •
Daniel Graham (2001) •
Mason Crosby (2005) •
Jordan Dizon (2007) •
Nate Solder (2010) • Travis Hunter (2024) There are seven players and one coach in the
College Football Hall of Fame: •
Byron "Whizzer" White (inducted 1952) •
Joe Romig (1984) •
Dick Anderson (1993) •
Bobby Anderson (2006) •
Alfred Williams (2010) •
John Wooten (2012) •
Bill McCartney (2013) •
Herb Orvis (2016)
Men's basketball They play at the
CU Events Center on campus and are 465–179 (.722) at home, through the 2020-21 season, including 139–24 (.853) in 11 years under coach Tad Boyle. ¹ Invitations
Women's basketball Women's Basketball started at Colorado in 1975. The team has had seven coaches and the current coach is
JR Payne.
Skiing The CU ski team competes as a member of the
Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Ski Association, as CU is one of two members of the Big-12 along with Utah that competes in skiing. Colorado is one of the dominant programs in the NCAA in skiing, winning 21 total national championships, including
20 NCAA Championships, most recently in 2024. The Buffaloes have won 29 RMISA championships, most recently in 2024. The Buffaloes have had 53 individuals connected to the school participate in the Olympics 85 times. Colorado has had 105 individual national champions, including Magnus Boee men's Nordic titles in 2021(2), and 2024 (20k), Cassidy Gray winning the women's GS championship in 2021, and Magdalena Luczak sweeping the alpine events in 2024.
Cross country Boulder's high
elevation of adds aerobic stress to distance runners and is known to produce a competitive edge when altitude-trained athletes compete at
sea level. The 1998 cross country team was the subject of a book,
Running with the Buffaloes, which documents the team's training regimen under long-time coach
Mark Wetmore. Colorado has won five
NCAA Men's Cross Country Championships (2001, 2004, 2006, 2013, and 2014) and three
NCAA Women's Cross Country Championships (2000, 2004, 2018). The men's team also has won four individual titles (Mark Scrutton,
Adam Goucher, Jorge Torres, and
Dathan Ritzenhein), while the women's side has won two (
Kara Goucher,
Dani Jones). The men won the first twelve Big 12 Conference titles in the conference's history and the women won 11 of the first 12 (all but 1998–99), with the two teams combining for 23 of the 32 championships awarded before the Buffs left the Big 12 in 2011 to join the Pac-12. Since joining the Pac-12 Conference, the Colorado men won their first six conference titles (2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016) and the Colorado women have claimed four conference titles, including three consecutive following a shot lapse (2011, 2015, 2016, 2017).
Baseball The Colorado Buffaloes baseball team was
discontinued after the 1980 season. Baseball, wrestling, men's and women's gymnastics, men's and women's swimming, and women's diving comprised the seven programs that were discontinued on June 11, 1980, due to Colorado was the only Pac-12 school and one of only five
Power 4 schools that do not sponsor baseball, the other four being
Iowa State,
SMU,
Syracuse and
Wisconsin.
Men's golf The men's golf team won three
Big Eight Conference championships: 1954, 1955 (co-champions), 1968.
Hale Irwin won the 1967
NCAA Championship. ==Club sports==