🚨Browns Andrew Hawkins Is Going VIRAL FOR SAYING THIS ABOUT SHEDEUR SANDERS AHEAD OF 2026 NFL DRAFT!

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25 comments
  1. Yoo, you basically disagreed to turn around and agree with. The problem is youre a fanatic. So, if anyone say anything critical of Sanders you have an issue. He clearly said, "if he puts in the work in the off season he can absolutely solidly that position. How wrong is that? Wtfytb😂

  2. 4:26 and he got progressively better each week with stepping up in the pocket and getting rid of the ball when the play was over with the worst OL and WR corps in the NFL

  3. Andrew, Go kick Rocks! As far as I’m concerned, considering What Shedeur has had to go through, When he started and the Sabotage he’s endured… he has shown more than enough to be QB1! He holds the ball because the O-Line doesn’t hold long enough for the WR to go through the routes, for him to throw..if in doubt, go look at and listen to Leah, an Aerial Analysis that use data to break it down 🙏🏾💪🏾🏈⌚️

  4. Well, if there are a lot of IFs for Shedeur, then there are 2 times more for DG or a new drafted QB because they all will go through a learning curve, especially the first year. Confidence and leadership matter in the game of football. With a good OL, a fair chance for all QB to practice and play will prove who is who. 😊

  5. I know there things he can work on as there is things all the rookies QBs can work on. Do I think he’s a starting QB? YES. ALOOW HIM THE PROPER DEVELOPMENT AND PROTECTION AND HE WILL TAKE THE FRANCHISE TO ANOTHER LEVEL

  6. For those who constantly compare Shedeur Sanders to other quarterbacks—especially claiming that Mendoza will be a better NFL Quarterback —let’s at least make an apples-to-apples comparison, not a kiwi-to-passion-fruit one.

    If Mendoza is drafted to a losing organization with the same instability Shedeur Sanders walked into—similar coaching turnover, inconsistent offensive line play, and a receiving corps in constant flux—how would that evaluation look? What if Mendoza were publicly dragged to 5th round pick 144 during the draft process, treated like a practice arm throwing to equipment workers, throughout the entire preseason, and not allowed meaningful reps with the first-team receivers until Week 8 when he was thrown in because a qb went down? What if his head coach played him in a preseason game behind offensive linemen who were cut the very next day? We watched the defense throw him around like a rag doll. I believe in my spirit that opened him up to need on going treatment for his back, while the coach smirked and played him dirty every chance he got.
    Now since you want to compair please ask the real questions:
    Would Mendoza still have the same confidence he has right now and be able to lead mentally, emotionally, and spiritually, without publicly complaining or throwing teammates and coaches under the bus?

    That’s not a knock on Mendoza—it’s a reality that needs to be put into your comparisons. Because until a quarterback is tested under those conditions, you cannot fairly say he will be a better NFL quarterback than Shedeur Sanders.

    What you can say is this: Mendoza may never be scrutinized, criticized, or dragged by the NFL and media the way Shedeur Sanders has been. He may never be globally recognized and sell out his jersey before taking a single snap. He may never sell his jerseys at the same level Shedeur’ has or become the highest-paid rookie in endorsements without playing a single down. Wait until they announce Shedeur Sanders is a franchise player on the Cleveland Browns or where ever his Journey will take him and they finally make him official. His merchandise will sell out. I mean straight Off the racks.

    And that matters.

    Evaluation isn’t just about arm talent or stat projections—it’s about being a well rounded QB when you're up under pressure, adversity, leadership, and resilience. Shedeur Sanders has already been tested in the fire infront of the world and the media. He came out in his 7 (completions) with a proven Victory. His fans and most team players in the 32 teams respect, honor and believes in him. Until other qb players you consistently compare him with face that same level of adversity, these comparisons aren’t reliable or fair—they’re full of bias, hidden agendas and lazy.

    "Don’t let that go over your heads."

    Give Shedeur Sanders the same offensive line Cal gave Fernando Mendoza—stable, functional, and professionally coached—and the conversation changes immediately. Even at the NFL level, that protection would be more reliable than what Shedeur endured with the Browns.

    Shedeur doesn’t need excuses. He needs a coach who wants to win—and an offensive line that can protect. Better pass-protection metrics, cleaner pockets, and more time to throw would fundamentally alter his production.

    In fairness, Mendoza benefited from a system and an offensive line that allowed rhythm throws. While not elite, it was clearly superior to what Shedeur dealt with. If you swapped offensive lines, Shedeur’s sack totals would drop sharply—and his output would rise accordingly.

    The data supports this. Shedeur Sanders was among the most sacked quarterbacks in the nation during his Colorado years—42 sacks in 2024 and roughly 52 in 2023. Mendoza took sacks at Cal, but his pressure numbers improved significantly at Indiana, where the offense was smoother and the pocket cleaner. On a Power-5, per-season basis, Mendoza’s 2025 Indiana season shows substantially better protection than Shedeur ever had at Colorado. The difference is simple: offensive line quality, recruiting and coaching.

    Even now, Mendoza has better coaching in college than Shedeur had in the NFL his rookie yearunder Stefanski. That is not Shedeur’s fault. Despite poor coaching, limited reps with the starters, a weak offensive line, and unreliable, injury-plagued receivers—one of whom couldn’t catch anything—Shedeur still outplayed expectations. He showed leadership, poise, and championship-level composure under conditions most quarterbacks never survive.

    Finally, the claim that “Shedeur holds the ball too long” is an oversimplification that ignores reality:

    Historically poor pass protection

    Scheme and coaching responsibility

    Unblocked rushers and immediate pressure

    You can fairly say:
    “Shedeur plays aggressively and extends plays.”

    You cannot fairly say:
    “He holds the ball too long,”
    without acknowledging the offensive line failures that forced it.

    The film doesn’t lie. Some analyst, content creators and NFL commentators do. They repeat false narratives while ignoring context. No quarterback in modern history has walked Shedeur’s journey under that level of scrutiny—while the entire world watched.

    That is why Shedeur requires a certain mentality around him: men who want to win, coaches who can build real relationships, and a structure worthy of a quarterback with his experience and pedigree—the son of a two-time Hall of Famer who has already proven he can lead under fire.

    Bottom line: Shedeur Sanders has the mentality, experience, leadership and pedigree to lead a championship team—if given the right coach and the right protection and weapons.

  7. Mannn that’s crazyyy Josh Allen ran for a safety retreating and they still dogging SS for retreating lol but yeah I do think throwing the ball away more will be much better in some situations but most of the time he has less than 2 seconds in the pocket & he does have that good WR talent getting open quick enough for that line disaster they have.

  8. Tony Rossi said that 12 wasn’t given a opportunity that was clear & Kevin didn’t want 12 he wanted Dillion so the owners made the decision 2 move on from Kev he never gave 12 a chance & still was better the Dollar General

  9. I've seen other QBs do the same thing that some of these podcasters say about Shedeur. He holds the ball too long. Blah, blah, blah. He can't keep throwing it away either. Shedeur has said people are on the sidelines or watching TV, saying he should have done this or that. He says it's different when you're on the field. Some want him to be perfect! Nobody's perfect. He's going to make mistakes.

  10. I dont know why the Cleveland media brings up his fellow qb drafees? Those guys got reps with players would and will play meaningful minutes during the season. He was thrown in the fire and told be him.

  11. They don't watch the film. They use the false narratives They have been fed. S12, if given the opportunity, there is a feeling he is going to pull the game out. There are only 3 starting QB's that present this characteristic. Rogers, Mahomes and Stafford. Dropped pass against Baltimore, no blind side protection against Buffalo and he led game winning drive against Cincy. All questions will be answered after REAL training sessions this year.

  12. I seldom hear legitimate commentary that draws off the, "What he's done with no reps with fellow rookies and backups as supporting cast" contextualized convo from any1 addressing Shedeur Sanders

    The bottomline is this,,,
    If he won 3 games and isn't responsible for dropped TD passes and ints that hit receivers' hands, etc…

    If he could've won 2 to 3 more games had it not been for factors outside of his control,,,

    Had coaching been better
    OR
    Just think if he had what so and so had as far as coaching, OLine, and receivers, etc,,,,
    OR
    If only he'd practiced with the 1s from Day1,,,

    Bc REALISTICALLY,,,
    This is how potential coaches are evaluating Shedeur, Gabriel, Watson, and this ENTIRE roster with existing coaches

  13. Why doesn't he include their data that moderately suggests that by week 17, Shedeur is said to be outplaying all rookie QBs?
    And Yes, this includes the PFF analysis, BTW

  14. These guys are all repeating what each other says. Shedeur has already given his self-assessment and they keep running it in the ground to stay relevant. Shedeur will be fine with a good coach who supports him, a better O-line and better receivers. Looking forward to the 2026 season.

  15. Everybody fail to realize that the reason ss was holding the ball or trying to make big plays was because the pressure he was up against. Meaning he was competing with Dillon, had to be prefect on every drive if not the internet/podcast was going to say he is not good enough even tho we all watch each game the kid got better and better. Also it was times he was getting in a rhythm the coach would make him hand the ball off. He was up against a coach who didn't want him so of course it was plays he should have threw it away but every week he was the only rookie qb getting graded so what do you expect for him to do. TRY TO MAKE A PLAY!!

  16. MagDog: I agree with you 💯%!! The only thing I would like to add is Shedeur is not accustomed to and don't like losing. Because of this, it makes him hungry and causes him to fight until the play clock reaches zero.

    Andrew Hawkins: I've forced myself not listen to the majority of these Black analysts. They are non-committal when it comes to Shedeur, because they are more focused on staying in the good graces of their white counterparts. I understand…some people are not as strong as others.

    #WalkingInTruthIsRealFreedom

    IA – Dallas, Texas 😇🙏🏿❤

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