Here’s another feel-good story, similar to Scotty Scheffler, world’s #1 golfer, who knows what matters. Deion Sanders, flamboyant coach of the Colorado Buffaloes, has just recovered from bladder cancer. Here are some snippets of Mark Kizla’s editorial in the Colorado Springs Gazette, July 28, 2025: Deion Sanders beat cancer with good medicine, God’s grace and the power of football.
Who did cancer think it was messing with?
Deion Sanders doesn’t blink.
Football made him Prime, rich and famous.
But now the game has bestowed a far greater gift on Sanders.
Since a dark day in April, when a malignant tumor was discovered in his bladder, football has given Sanders a reason to live and the strength to stand up against cancer.
“I didn’t stare death in the face. I stared life in the face,” Sanders said Monday. “I’ve got too much life to be thinking about death.”
With a clean bill of health, Sanders is back on the job at CU, wearing a white cowboy hat and blue overalls and faith on his sleeve.
…
“It was never in my spirit, in my heart, that God wouldn’t allow me to coach again.”
But there were moments when the future of Sanders and the CU program was dicier than Prime lets on. Early in this three-month fight, after the 57-year-old coach made the mistake of researching the mortality rate of bladder cancer on the internet, he promptly got his end-of-life financial business in order. The real reckoning that results in writing a will is how the act can force a man to consider what makes his life worth living.
Coach Prime is convinced God has brought him back to Colorado to shape the lives of young men and bring championship glory to the Buffs.
…
Without any warning signs of his cancer, Sanders was fortunate that football helped find the devilish disease lurking inside him, when a medical examination during spring practice alerted doctors to abnormalities in his bladder. A dangerous tumor, malignantly invading through the bladder wall, was removed. “I am pleased to report that the results from the surgery are that he is cured from cancer,” Dr. Janet Kukreja said.
But it requires more than good medicine to beat cancer. There’s also the healing power in a sense of purpose that can make every sunrise a blessing.
…
During recovery on his 5,000-acre ranch in Texas, Sanders would rise with the sun to go for a walk or fishing, accompanied by two bags that would fill with urine and blood.
While carrying that weight day after day, steadfastly refusing to burden two sons now off chasing their own NFL dreams with the truth or details of his serious health ailment, Coach Prime was left to wrestle alone with what matters the most during the finite days we all have on earth.
I asked Sanders how the doubts and fears instilled by cancer challenged or re-affirmed his commitment to a football job often coldly judged by numbers on a scoreboard.
“The decision I made and the surgery I chose was based on not just family. It was based on football. I didn’t want to be going weekly to the hospital while I’ve got practices,” replied Sanders, fired up by the opportunity to lead the Buffs to greater heights in his third season at CU.
“So football is in there (among the top priorities). But faith is No. 1. Football is somewhere down the line, behind family and all that.”
Faith. Family. Football. In that order.
“I’m too blessed to be stressed,” Sanders said.
A lot of good stuff in there. The priorities, of course: faith, family, football. But what about, “There’s also the healing power in a sense of purpose that can make every sunrise a blessing.”
God has his people in all walks of life, even college football. And no one has more of a platform than a head football coach.
For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do. (Ephesians 2.10, NIV)
…And who knows but that you have come to your…position for such a time as this? (Esther 4.14, NIV)