For the second time in roughly 10 months, ESPN GameDay made its way to broadcast from the home of a Deion Sanders-coach football program.
It was a different one each time; last year at Football Championship Subdivision and HBCU program Jackson State while Saturday was live from Boulder, Colorado, where Coach Prime has infused pure oxygen into the Buffaloes' program.
As Sanders visited live on ESPN's GameDay set, an ESPN host pointed to the crowd and said look what you've done.
Sanders quickly deflected praise, ahead of his team's Saturday night "Battle of Colorado" against in-state rival Colorado State.
"Look what we've done," Coach Prime said. "We have a tremendous staff, tremendous support staff. (Colorado athletics director) Rick George gave me the opportunity, and I'm loving it. I'm loving every bit of Colorado. Look at the weather. This is beautiful.
"It (does) seem like it was just yesterday that you guys were at Jackson State. It's a trip. That allows you to know how good God is. I love it."
But it was pro wrestling and Hollywood icon Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson who provided the strongest statements -- that Sanders then turned into a recruiting pitch.
"Let's talk about what Deion is doing," Johnson said. "We are witnessing not only something that is not only game-changing in the face of college football, but also something that's very special. And what that special thing is is passion, mixed with love, mixed with disruption, mixed with swagger. Mixed with confidence. But also there's an undercurrent here with what Coach Prime is doing: He's changing the face of college football, and he's doing it his way.
"But he's also doing it in a way, and this is the hard part, that is galvanizing not only a town in Boulder, Colorado, but also galvanizing an entire country."
Sanders, as he patted the ESPN set, quickly reverted to his form as perpetual salesman of his Colorado program.
"You're going to make me cry, man," Coach Prime said. "'The Rock's' trying to make me cry.
"All recruits, did you hear what the Rock said? We ain't hard to find."
Sanders gifted his players sunglasses on Friday and vowed that tonight's contest against the CSU Rams had become personal because of comments made by Rams coach Jay Norvell.