The obsession with high school rankings is outdated when evaluating Colorado's roster construction. They brought in 43 transfers for immediate impact, and that's how you win now in modern college football. Their 2026 high school class being outside the top 70 is irrelevant because the portal is the foundation. Look at their quarterback room, it's entirely portal-built and will outperform most developmental recruits. A team's talent level isn't measured by 18-year-old commits anymore, it's measured by the proven production they import. Colorado's approach is identifying Power 4 ready players, not waiting three years for a high school kid to develop. The transfer class includes multiple players with All-Conference potential from last season, which is more valuable than a hypothetical top 50 recruiting class. Their strategy is to compete immediately in the Big 12, not stockpile for 2028. The author from a rival school is clinging to an old model that doesn't reflect how rosters are built today. Colorado's 85-man roster will have more experienced, game-ready talent than most teams with "better" high school rankings. The proof will be on the field this fall, not on some recruiting website three years from now.