Colorado football coach Deion Sanders loves to fish for bass and FinWeisrecently spent time riding all-terrain vehicles on his ranch in Texas during his team’s bye week last week.
But there are a few things he didn’t do and never will do during his time off from work, as he revealed Thursday on the weekly Colorado Football Coaches Show in Boulder.
He called them the “three things Black folks don’t do."
“We don’t deep-sea dive. We don’t bungee-jump. We ain’t noodling, all right? We don’t do that, "said Sanders, whose Buffaloes (4-3) face the No. 24 UCLA Bruins (5-2) on Saturday at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.
Noodling is the act of catching catfish with your hand by going into the water and reaching into catfish holes hoping they bite. It can lead to bruising and bites on the arm.
The topic came up when the show’s host, Mark Johnson, asked Sanders about his time off and whether he fishes for catfish.
“I hate catfish,” Sanders said. He said catfish “take all your bait food. They eat every dern thing. They get on your nerves.”
Johnson then asked Sanders if he ever tried noodling.
“Oh my God,” Sanders said.
He said one of his friends from the Atlanta Falcons would show him his bruised arm.
“I said, `What is that?’” Sander said. “And he told me what that was. And I said, `Ain’t no way.’”
He also said he “saw someone do it” in the lake on his ranch.
“I’m not getting in the water to do that, first of all,” he said. “I’m not a swimmer, either. That is unbelievable.”
'EVERYONE IS TRYING TO GET WHATEVER EDGE THEY CAN': Deion Sanders, bearded and rested after bye, weighs in on Michigan, 'Saturday Night Live'
Sanders expounded on these quirks of his with a sense of humor, less than two weeks after being parodied on “Saturday Night Live.”
Fly-fishing is another “no go” for him.
“I’m fly while I fish; I don’t do fly fishing,” he said.
He said fly-fishing is “too much work” for the arm. “I might as well play tennis if I’m going to do all that.”
As for deep-sea diving, it ranks up there with noodling catfish.
“We ain’t going down there,” he said. “Ain’t nothing down there I want to see.”
Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: [email protected].
2025-05-08 04:151879 view
2025-05-08 04:031616 view
2025-05-08 03:482557 view
2025-05-08 03:34244 view
2025-05-08 02:51359 view
2025-05-08 02:501615 view
Nearly half of American teenagers say they are online “constantly” despite concerns about the effect
High-speed internet service has made it to Mount Kilimanjaro, meaning climbers can now use their pho
Streaming platforms have finally done it. For the first time ever, streaming services captured more