It’s widely known that Colorado’s Folsom Field has narrower sidelines than most modern college football venues.
That thought was somewhere in the back of Brandon Dawkins’ mind as he ran toward the left sideline in the first quarter of the ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ Wildcats’ Oct. 7 game in Boulder.
Two CU defenders, Drew Lewis and Ryan Moeller, hit Dawkins late and sent him somersaulting into the Buffaloes’ bench.
That personal foul changed the fortunes of two quarterbacks and one football program.
Dawkins’ knees were bloodied. He feared for a moment that he had broken something.
“I checked it out and hopped up,†Dawkins said. “I was like, ‘OK, I’m good.’â€
But ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥â€™s trainers already had come onto the field. Dawkins had to sit for at least one snap.
He hasn’t taken another one since.
Dawkins’ painful exit paved the way for Khalil Tate’s grand entrance. The sophomore went from backup to record-setter, rushing for more yards (327) than any FBS quarterback had in a single game. Tate has won three straight Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Week awards entering Saturday’s homecoming game against Washington State.
Now Dawkins — who had started 14 of 17 games since the start of the 2016 season — is the backup. He’s dealing with his new reality the only way he knows how: by preparing daily, doing his job and sharing whatever knowledge he has gained in three-plus seasons at ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥.
“I want to do anything that helps this team win,†Dawkins said. “Khalil’s been doing an excellent job. I’m just trying to pass on as much knowledge as I can every drive and every practice and make sure we keep this ball rolling.
“I’m not selfish enough to want to be ‘The Guy’ all the time. If it so happens somebody subs in and we’re winning games, I don’t care who’s in there — as long as we’re putting wins in the win column.â€
When he went down, Dawkins was two games removed from the best performance of his career: He completed 18 of 21 passes, rushed for 133 yards and accounted for six touchdowns at UTEP on Sept. 15. But consistency eluded Dawkins during his time as ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥â€™s starter. He turned the ball over four times in ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥â€™s loss to Utah the following week.
Then the collision with the bench happened, and Tate happened, and Dawkins slipped into the background. Coaches have lauded him for his attitude and professionalism since Tate took over. In Rich Rodriguez’s view, the Wildcats have “two starting quarterbacks.â€
Dawkins is prepping as if he’s the starter, as he always has. He knows better than anyone that a backup’s big chance is only a play away.
“That never changes,†Dawkins said of his approach. “No matter what group I’m rolling with, I’m just going to keep working and grinding.â€