By doing two jobs -- and doing them both as well as any player in the country -- Travis Hunter delivered on coach Deion Sanders' hype and brought the Heisman Trophy to Colorado.
The Buffaloes' two-way superstar won college football's most prestigious individual player of the year award Saturday night, edging Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty to become CU's second winner and first in 30 years.
Hunter joins the late Rashaan Salaam, who won the Heisman in 1994 with a 2,000-yard rushing season with Colorado.
(The total votes were actually close. Hunter finished with 552 first-place votes and 2,231 total points and Jeanty had 309 first-place votes and 2,017 total points.)
With Hunter and Jeanty on top, the 90th Heisman handout marked the first since 2015 with no quarterbacks in the top two of voting. Oregon and Mililani product Dillon Gabriel (24 first-place votes, 516 points) finished third and Miami's Cam Ward (six first-place votes, 229 points) took fourth.
Three straight and seven of the previous eight Heisman winners had played quarterback. Dating back to 2000, 20 Heisman winners had been QBs.
It took two remarkable performances to break the trend.
Hunter has been both an unguardable receiver and a lock-down cornerback, validating Sanders' decision to let the five-star recruit loose on both sides of the ball in a way that makes the junior incomparable to any Heisman winner in over a half century.
You'd have to go back to the waning days of one-platoon football in the 1950s and early '60s to find Heisman winners making major contributions on offense and defense as Navy's Joe Bellino (1960) and Syracuse's Ernie Davis (1961).
Michigan's Charles Woodson is the closest comp to Hunter among recent winners. Woodson was a star cornerback for the national champion Wolverines and moon-lighted as a wide receiver and return man. Even Woodson, who won the Heisman in 1997, doesn't think of himself as a two-way player.
Hunter played 688 defensive snaps and 672 on offense as Colorado jumped from four wins to nine in Sanders' second season as coach. And Hunter's production at both positions was elite.
He heads into the postseason -- and Hunter plans to play Colorado's bowl game -- fifth in the country in catches with 92, sixth in yards receiving at 1,152 and second in touchdown catches with 14. He also leads the team with four interceptions. Earlier in the week, Hunter won the Bednarik Award as the nation's best defensive player and the Biletnikoff, which goes to the top receiver.
Sanders, the football Hall of Famer and two-sport pro during his playing days, never held back when it came to touting Hunter for the Heisman, even over his talented son, CU quarterback Shedeur Sanders.
"Travis gets my vote. Travis is the best player in college football," Sanders said in November. "Truly Shedeur is that guy. He's the catalyst, he makes everything go and enables Travis to be Travis, but Travis Hunter is doing something we've never seen before."
Jeanty only played one position, but few in college football history have ever played it better.
Jeanty heads into the College Football Playoff needing 132 yards rushing to break Barry Sanders' hallowed record of 2,628 in 1988. Sanders finished his Heisman-winning season with a stunning 2,850, including his bowl performance, and did it all in only 12 games.
Still, Jeanty has blown past his modern-day peers -- and opposing defenses -- this season. Jeanty leads the country with 2,497 yards rushing and 30 touchdowns. He has five runs of at least 70 yards this season. Only five other players have two.
When Gabriel was asked by Dan Patrick who he would vote for for the Heisman, the Ducks QB said Jeanty because he understood the challenges playing outside the power conferences.
"I'm going to get some heat for this one, but I'm going to say Ashton Jeanty," Gabriel said Friday on the Dan Patrick Show. "Me being in the Group of Five once (at Central Florida), knowing the challenges that come with that. Of course, I played against Ashton this year, and he's a talented individual. His story is unique, and what he's been able to do has been pretty impressive."
Gabriel also has been impressive in leading the Ducks to an unbeaten season and a No. 1 ranking.
He was joined by his parents, Dori and Garrett, at the ceremony and the question was raised by ESPN reporters when was it apparent that Gabriel was special.
"I knew at the young age, from Pop Warner, just his leadership abilities," said Garrett, himself a standout athlete from Maryknoll and a star QB for Pac-Five and at the University of Hawaii. "He had a lot of intangibles and I knew eventually his physical attributes would be at a level where he could play high school and college ball. I could see it, but it was mostly the leadership abilities. I'd always stress that to him (that) that's just as important as being able to play the game."
Oregon coach Dan Lanning, who was also in New York, recruited him from high school, according to ESPN's Holly Rowe, who asked what makes the QB so special.
"I think Garrett just led to it -- his leadership -- the ability to connect with our players so quick," Lanning said. "Before Dillon ever worried about making plays on the field, he was worried about being connected with his teammates. And what he's done there and how he's unified our team has been so impressive.
"I'm so blessed that I got the opportunity to coach him. What an impressive young man and thrilled that he gets this opportunity."