• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Mike Farrell Sports

Mike Farrell Sports

College Football Recruiting, Opinion, and Analysis

  • Player Promotion
  • Recruiting
  • Portal
  • Fact or Fiction
  • Mind of Mike
  • Draft
  • Sponsors
  • About

Whitlock ‘Way Down In The Hole’ On Deion

Jason Whitlock’s comparison of Colorado’s Deion Sanders to The Wire’s ‘Bubbles’ is offbase

August 12, 2024
FacebookTweetPin
Jul 10
Jul 10

By Kyle Golik


The way Colorado head coach Deion Sanders is dealing with the fallout from the Athlon Sports report can be questioned. During a recent press conference, Sanders’ lack of maturity as a head coach was on full display with a contentious exchange with CBS affiliates.

Coach Prime is not taking any questions from CBS outlet👀

“What they did was foul” pic.twitter.com/Lpx8AKX8FW

— GUCCE🦬🐦‍⬛ (@gucceCU) August 9, 2024

“CBS, I’m not doing nothing with CBS. Next question,” Sanders said after the first question came from a CBS affiliate. Athlon Sports happens to be a media outlet owned by CBS. “It ain’t got nothing to do with you. This is above that. It ain’t got nothing to do with you. I’ve got love for you. I appreciate you. I respect you. It ain’t got nothing to do with you. They know what they did.”

Sanders’ hurt feelings continued when he began to spar with Denver Post’s Sam Keeler, “Why do you – you always on the attack,” Sanders said. “What did we do? What happened to get you like this?”

Sanders’ behavior has gotten many takes, including from the Blaze Media’s Fearless podcast right-wing host Jason Whitlock. Whitlock is no stranger in his attacks on Sanders during his time at Colorado and took to X (Twitter) over the weekend to lob another attack at Sanders.

More Sports News

Farmageddon Heads to Ireland for 2025 Season Opener

Sep 6

TRENDING: Interesting New Job for Former ACC Head Coach

2026 QB Liam Nelson

Spotlight on Maryland Prep QBs: 2026 QB Liam Nelson

LaNorris Sellers

Face of the SEC: LaNorris Sellers

Nov 16

Sumrall, Candle, and More: Top 10 G5 Head Coach Rankings

Vols Are Cooking on the Recruiting Trail

2026 QB Gavin Beard

Talented Texas Prep QBs: 2026 QB Gavin Beard

Football and culture: How sport has shaped American society

Jan 9

Bigger Playoff, Smaller Stakes: The Decline of College Football’s Regular Season

New Era, Same Grit: Inside the 2025 Big 12 Football Race

SEC

TRENDING: SEC Head Coach Proposes 30-Team College Playoff Field

The Best Way to End the Scheduling Debate

“Deion Sanders needs help. This isn’t about wins and losses. It’s about a man so fragile, fraudulent, and feminine that he can’t take questions from men who mean him no harm. It’s embarrassing. He’s wearing sunglasses and constantly snorting like Bubbles from The Wire. It’s being glossed over because he’s black and everyone is scared. This dude needs help. He finished in last place in the PAC-12 and is so insecure about it he won’t answer questions from reporters unless they “like” him. A 10-year-old girl has thicker skin. He’s 57 and makes everyone call him a childhood nickname. This isn’t leadership. It’s malpractice. Softer than baby poop,” Whitlock said of Sanders on his X account.

Deion Sanders needs help. This isn’t about wins and losses. It’s about a man so fragile, fraudulent, and feminine that he can’t take questions from men who mean him no harm. It’s embarrassing. He’s wearing sunglasses and constantly snorting like Bubbles from The Wire. It’s being…

— Jason Whitlock (@WhitlockJason) August 10, 2024


A portion of Whitlock’s tweet that left my scratching my head is the comparison to the character Bubbles from the landmark HBO drama The Wire.

For those who haven’t heard or know the landmark drama, it aired for five seasons on HBO between 2002 and 2008 that originally centered around being a police drama, but evolved into various walks of life in a major city whether it was troubled unions with local stevedores (Season 2), political machines (Season 3), broken education systems and how children end up in street life (Seasons 4 and 5), and local media with the newspapers (Season 5) all the while shifting and making the main character truly the city of Baltimore.

Throughout the series, there was a character named Reginald “Bubbles” Cousins, portrayed by Andre Royo that followed his life around being at first an addict and trusted informant for the local police. As “Bubbles” addiction was not giving him the high he once enjoyed and had a desire to want a better quality of life, one of the greatest arcs done on television was witnessing the path of addiction. The ultimate triumph of “Bubbles” was watching him get sober, tell his story, and (spoiler alert) being able to welcomed upstairs for dinner with his sister and her children.

The character arc has been lauded as an achievement in television, “I think it’s one of the greatest — not just television shows but pieces of art — in the last couple of decades,” former President Barack Obama said to creator David Simon in a sitdown interview.

I don’t feel Whitlock is on the same page as Obama when talking about The Wire, but it goes to show Whitlock’s comparison is offbase and beneath him for the caliber of writer and creator he is. Whitlock is trying to get attention, and yes he got mine, but do we need to compare Sanders breathing to one of an addict? I don’t think that is necessary.

Sanders, all by himself, is seemingly unraveling with the pressure beginning to mount about his program. If the Athlon Sports allegations are false, why is Sanders allowing it to bother him? I truly feel the weight of expectations and realizing how tough it is to build a Power 4 program is on full display. The attraction to the Colorado circus is Sanders himself, and the questions are not going to come any easier. Sanders has to produce, the criticism isn’t going away anytime soon.

As for Whitlock, stealing a lyric from The Wire theme song, is any more ‘way down in the hole’ in getting attention. I get it, people anymore want sensationalized content, and that is what fuels Jason Whitlock because he appeals to a demographic. I feel that to compare Sanders to a fictional character that battles addiction is a low blow, he didn’t need it. 

Category: Featured, NewsTag: Colorado Buffaloes, Deion Sanders, Jason Whitlock
FacebookTweetPin

You’ll Also Like


Ryan Silverfield

Exploring Conference Realignment: Potential Hits and Misses

Most Dangerous Players in CFB the Last 20 Years

B1G Media Days

9-Game Conference Schedules: It Just Means More

2026 Quinn Purnell

A Legacy of Football Talent: 2026 OL Quinn Purnell

Biggest Surprise and Biggest Disappointment in the Big Ten Will Be…..

Three players, who were recently arrested, have been indefinitely suspended

TRENDING: Three Players Suspended Indefinitely After Arrest


  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

© 2025 · All Rights Reserved

Powered by the BizBudding Publisher Network

Privacy Manager