Deion Sanders's Colorado team both led host UCLA after the first quarter Saturday night and never turned over the ball across all four quarters.
Cool.
The Buffaloes were smashed by the Bruins, 28-16, and in the process, Coach Prime's squad lost for the fourth time in its last five games.
Colorado now is 4-4 on the season, but Deion Sanders already identified team needs moving forward.
"The line ... the line has to improve; there ain't no aspect," Coach Prime told reporters after the loss to Chip Kelly's UCLA squad. "It's a struggle, a struggle to run the ball. We've got to figure that out, because now you're one-dimensional and it's easy to stop a team when they're one-dimensional.
"That's who we are at this point in time."
Sanders said that when his inaugural Colorado squad committed to run the football against the Bruins, it ended up behind the sticks.
"I think we committed to it on first down and it was second-and-15," Coach Prime said. "Those are the type of things you don't want to do and get behind the 8-ball. First downs are so vital, so vital.
"Everything."
The Buffaloes weren't terrible as it pertained to first downs; they managed 20 while UCLA mustered 26.
But Colorado had just 25 net rushing yards on 24 official tries; worse, the Buffaloes allowed star quarterback Shedeur Sanders to be sacked seven times and yielded 10 tackles for losses to the UCLA defense.
How did Coach Prime declare his plan for a solution?
"The big picture you go get new linemen," Deion Sanders said. "That's the picture and I'm going to paint it perfectly."
Colorado, which now has allowed 42 sacks through eight games, has left consecutive home games against Oregon State and Arizona before it has been scheduled to close its season with back-to-back road games at Washington State and Utah.