
“The CSU construction management program is great. Better yet, he said the program provided him with the perfect pathway to where he is now in his life. By the next semester, he had a new direction in the classroom.įor someone who grew up liking to build things, it was a natural fit. A couple of his teammates were involved in the construction management program, and he went to visit their advisor. He also started as a civil engineering major, but after a year and a half, he wasn’t feeling the fit.

More followed the next season, and he wrapped his career in the program as a student-assistant coach.
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After redshirting that first season, his career was unfortunately derailed by a series of injuries, beginning with a dislocated knee cap his redshirt freshman season. Moss arrived on campus back in 2009 from El Cajon, Calif., as a physically imposing tight end prospect. It was a nice way to gather up some Rams.” We went down to their Denver office and there was a room of 30 people - not all involved with the stadium - but working with the company. We’ve got a lot of neat connections with Mortenson, and they existed before the project. “We feed a lot of students into their company and they’ve done well, and I think that’s why they enjoy coming to campus to recruit talent. It’s a unique combination of having a former student-athlete now working for Mortenson, getting a chance to do something historical in his career and early in his career,” CSU athletic director Joe Parker said. Their goal for their student-athletes is to gain a degree and put it to good use, which Moss has been doing since accepting a position at Mortenson before he graduated. His involvement as a project engineer is also special to the school as well. The project represents everything Moss went to school for at Colorado State as a former football player and a construction management major.
