{"id":12625,"date":"2025-04-30T13:57:10","date_gmt":"2025-04-30T13:57:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/12625\/"},"modified":"2025-04-30T13:57:10","modified_gmt":"2025-04-30T13:57:10","slug":"shedeur-sanders-was-pushed-down-the-nfl-draft-board-heres-why","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/12625\/","title":{"rendered":"Shedeur Sanders Was Pushed Down the NFL Draft Board. Here&#8217;s Why."},"content":{"rendered":"<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"0\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u201cBe humble. Sit down.\u201d \u2014Kendrick Lamar<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"1\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u201cI deserve it all.\u201d\u2014Kendrick Lamar<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"2\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u201cWe never seen anything like this.\u201d\u2014Stephen A. Smith<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"3\" class=\"body-dropcap css-197ercg emevuu60\">A dreams-come-true affair, aka the NFL draft. Shedeur Sanders, projected first-round pick, forsook traveling to Green Bay, where the festivities occurred, in favor of hosting his ballyhooed big day at his crib in Canton, Texas. As would be a young man nurtured by Deion Sanders and a college career reported to have earned him upwards of six milli in NIL deals, Shedeur was driptastic. A black leather bomber embroidered with the logo for his brand\u2014Legendary. Deion\u2019s youngest son also flaunting his logo as a huge custom diamond-encrusted medallion, one effulgent enough to double as stadium lights. His special draft room was branded everywhere with Legendary. And featured ample seating and big-screen TVs; plus mics and gear to host a Twitch stream with his brother Shilo. And hella conspicuous, a shelf filled with hats for all 32 Teams, one of whom Shedeur held faith would make him a high first-round pick. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"4\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">Then the shock. The precipitous falling, falling, falling down the draft board. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"5\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">Shedeur Deion Sanders: a player touted during the last college football season as a high first-round pick if not the first overall, who was the Big 12 offensive player of the year, who threw a Colorado-record 37 touchdowns, who led the FBS in completion percentage (74), who was fourth in FBS passing yards (4,134); a star who had no major off-the-field scandals, who carried himself with poise despite the glare of constant scrutiny. How did a player with such a stellar r\u00e9sum\u00e9 fall out of the first round? The second round? The third round? The fourth round?  <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"6\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">News flash: Shedeur didn\u2019t fall. He was knocked down, pushed down, held down. But why?  <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"7\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">The seeds of the answer lay in draft day 1989. Shedeur\u2019s Jheri-curled dad beaming on a couch after the Atlanta Falcons chose him with the sixth pick of the first round. \u201cLooks like you\u2019re wearing your signing bonus here,\u201d said the interviewer. Deion bedecked in chains to rival Mr. T, three-finger rings on both hands, and a custom track jacket stitched with the logo of his brand\u2014Prime Time\u2014which is also his preferred nickname. \u201cI thought Detroit was gone take me,\u201d said Deion. \u201cI woulda asked for so much money that they would\u2019ve had to put me on layaway.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Shedeur didn\u2019t fall. He was knocked down, pushed down, held down. But why?<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"9\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">What\u2019s evident in that brief clip from the drafting of a Future NFL Hall of Famer was that Deion was assured to the point of arrogance, that he favored ostentation, that he was brave enough to try dictating the terms of his career. Deion was so much about his scratch that he later recorded a rap song called \u201cMust Be the Money.\u201d The interviewer\u2019s snipe also made clear that certain white people weren\u2019t  keen on Deion\u2019s aplomb.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"10\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">Deion\u2019s been the same dude all these decades in the limelight. And he seems to have instilled the qualities that made him a success\u2014including his vocal religious faith\u2014in his sons. There are beaucoup advantages to being a football-playing son of Deion Sanders. However, a disadvantage is that the Sanderses\u2019 cast of cocky confidence also risks rubbing no few folks the wrong way, not in the least people who count humility, even if it\u2019s false, as a prerequisite for the persona of prosperous Black men. Some of whom would find ways to chasten those who they deem lacking in modesty. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"11\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">Under Deion\u2019s guidance last year, Shedeur helped double ticket sales and fuel a huge increase in merchandise revenue. The team was featured on national TV several times. Plus, its games were hot tickets for celebrities and constant fodder for sports talk.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"12\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">The team that drafted Shedeur, which the Browns did in the fifth round (144th overall pick), had to know they stood to gain not only a good player who\u2019d never had off-the-field troubles but a sure boost to ticket and jersey sales and media buzz, and maybe even a few national TV games. All to say, adding Shedeur would\u2019ve been a lucrative business decision for any team. The fact that all 32 passed on Shedeur once, twice, thrice, four times was telltale that the rationale was something beyond football business.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"13\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">Last year\u2019s number-one pick, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.esquire.com\/sports\/a64304402\/caleb-williams-chicago-bears-interview-2025\/\" target=\"_blank\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.esquire.com\/sports\/a64304402\/caleb-williams-chicago-bears-interview-2025\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"Caleb Williams\" data-node-id=\"13.1\" class=\"body-link css-144f60g emevuu60\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\">Caleb Williams<\/a>, negotiated his four-year, $39.5-million contract without a traditional agent. This year\u2019s number-one pick, Cam Ward, also hasn\u2019t hired an agent. Shedeur represented himself with Deion as his advisor. All three players are anomalies\u2014per the NFLPA, only 29 of the 2,000-plus NFL players negotiate contracts without a traditional agent. Since it\u2019s almost assured that players without agents are a threat to the ecosystem of pro sports, you can bet there are people in and around the league who are working overtime to keep that decision from becoming the norm. What better way to discourage players from representing themselves than to crash their value? (Shedeur lost out on $40 million over four years by being drafted in the fifth round rather than the first.) <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"14\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">The night after the first round, opinions abounded about his descent:<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"15\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u2014\u201cYou\u2019re never bigger than the program.\u201d \u2014Chad Ochocinco Johnson <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"16\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u2014\u201cHis confidence exceeded his perceived ability.\u201d \u2014Emmanuel Acho<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"17\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u2014\u201cI\u2019m gone keep it on the field.\u2026Teams decided that they didn\u2019t believe that the evaluation was worthy of a first-round pick. Nor the projection of what he would be was worthy of a first-round pick.\u201d\u2014Dan Orlovsky <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"18\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">But no one\u2019s take struck me as more revelatory than Colin Cowherd. On his Fox Sports show, The Herd, Cowherd decried Shedeur\u2019s lack of humility as his ultimate undoing. \u201cIt didn\u2019t really bother me when they retired Shedeur Sanders\u2019 number. But he\u2019s a .500 quarterback who couldn\u2019t get drafted in the first round,\u201d sniped Cowherd, who also took special umbrage with Shedeur adorning his draft viewing room with his Legendary brand. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"19\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">A charitable read of Cowherd\u2019s comments (he also criticized Shedeur for wearing New York Giants cleats in one of his games; the Giants owned the third pick, once considered the floor of Shedeur\u2019s draft prospects) is that he believed Shedeur thought too high of himself and was also entitled. (Granted, he later added, \u201cI like Shedeur Sanders. I think he\u2019s good&#8230;I would have drafted him if I needed a quarterback.\u201d) Touch\u00e9, humility is a virtue, but I also allow that there\u2019s hazy distance between confidence and cocky; between cocky and arrogance; and furthermore, that a young man embarking on an NFL career should have the chance to tune his self-image without the heap of outside sabotage. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"20\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">A more critical read of Cowherd\u2019s comments (along with the gestures and tone that animated them) is that Shedeur was cocky if not arrogant (descriptors which have also been lobbed at Deion) and thus deserved penalty. Or, in other words, Shedeur needed to be put in his place.  <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"21\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">What the NFL did to Shedeur is an example of \u201cknow-your-place aggression,\u201d a term coined by Boston University professor Dr. Koritha Mitchell. A prime target of know-your-place aggression are Black people maligned as uppity. Uppity comes from the British uppish, which means \u201carrogantly self-assertive,\u201d but how I see it, an uppity Black person is one who\u2019s proven their excellence and reaped rewards for it and\/or who spreads good news about themselves and\/or who refuses to genuflect to the people in power and\/or to show inordinate gratitude and\/or who stands on their beliefs no matter the opposition. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"22\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u201cOh, they think they somebody,\u201d has went the rub. As if believing oneself an unworthy nobody is the only proper self-conception.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"23\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">In the world where white people dominate, the rightful place for an uppity Black person resides somewhere along the continuum of humbled, humiliated, and ruined. Putting Black people in their place has sounded like \u201cShut up and dribble,\u201d has looked like The Greatest having his belts stripped for deigning to oppose the Vietnam War, like the post-Olympic crucibles of Tommie Smith and John Carlos, like the NBA exiling Mahmoud Adbul-Rauf for his religious faith. Fordamnsure, putting an uppity Black man in his place has looked like the NFL conspiring Colin Kaepernick out of its ranks for taking a knee against the systemic killing of Black people by the law. While I grant that there are key differences between the collusion allegations the NFL settled with Kaepernick and Shedeur\u2019s draft woes, last week\u2019s saga seems much too blatant to be happenstance. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"24\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">Matterfact, it was a happening that could\u2019ve broke the young man\u2019s spirit.  Which ain\u2019t at all a novel intent. Back when my people were the capital and not citizens able to take part in capitalism, the attempt to break our spirit included flogging, sometimes with a cat-o\u2019-nine-tails; included vicing our fingers with a thumbscrew; involved chopping off of our hand or arm or leg or castrating us; or else involved the evil of a speculum oris wedging our mouth wide. Among many aims, the tortures were meant as stern warnings for any Black somebody with even of a drop of recalcitrant blood.  <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"25\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">And yet, there were the Sanderses\u2014Deion, Shedeur, and Shilo\u2014on the day after the first round, chatting with each other in their yard.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"26\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u201cI trust God,\u201d said Deion.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"27\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u201cThis ain\u2019t God,\u201d said Shedeur.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"28\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u201cThis the devil,\u201d said Shilo, which drew an insouciant laugh from all of them. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t cute after 21. That was the final straw.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"29\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u201cBut you could explain it,\u201d said Shedeur. \u201cThis is just unexplainable now.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"30\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">\u201cThis to the point now where you like, Hey man. Aight. Ya\u2019ll gotta stop now. It\u2019s too obvious,\u201d said Deion. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"31\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">Be clear: The obviousness of which Deion spoke was elemental to putting Shedeur and his family in their place. Which was not at all surprising given the current sociopolitical climate. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"32\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">Bear in mind that there is still not a single Black majority owner of a team. That earlier this year a Black quarterback beat the great hope of middle America in the Super Bowl. A game during which Kendrick, an incontestable symbol of Black excellence, turned its halftime into a spectacle of Black consciousness. Bear in mind that, while the Sanderses have made no overt political statements on behalf of the whole Black diaspora (maybe no clearer sign of how apolitical they\u2019ve been on racial justice than the fact the 45\/47 advocated for Shedeur to be drafted), Deion did go on Tamron Hall\u2019s national talk show and proclaim, \u201cIt\u2019s not who I would like for him [Shedeur] to play for. It\u2019s a couple teams that I will not allow him to play for.\u201d (It\u2019s damn near a parody that the team that drafted Shedeur has never been to the Super Bowl and, in 2022, gave a $230 million guaranteed contract to a quarterback who had several pending sexual-assault accusations. Though that quarterback has been steadfast in his denials.) <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"33\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">Bear in mind that this year\u2019s draft occurred during a time when corporate America (and the multi-million\/billionaires who run it) is kowtowing to a regime machinating returning Black people to as close as possible to Jim Crow if not full-on reenslavement: by forcing the abandonment of diversity, equity, and inclusion; by firing EEOC commissioners in an effort to thwart redress for workplace discrimination; by erasing Black people from historic sites and registries (going so far as to disappear Harriet Tubman from the government website chronicling the Underground Railroad); by targeting for defunding the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture; by jailing and deporting scores of brown and Black people without due process. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"34\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">And making sure all those injustices are as in-your-face-and-what-the-fuck-you-gone-do-about-it evident as possible. We are living in a season (let\u2019s pray it\u2019s just a season) where people in power could give good gotdamn what the rest of us say or do or feel about their words and deeds. Which is to say, the micro aggressions of yore have gone boldly, flagrantly MACRO! <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"35\" class=\"css-auya5i emevuu60\">What to do in the face of such stark hostility? The Sanderses are model in how they\u2019ve presented themselves as unflappable if not indomitable, in how they have handled the crucible of the last few days with style and grace and mirth. One example is the video clip of Shedeur and Shilo dancing in a room full of cheering people\u2014elation that didn\u2019t seem contrived\u2014when the Browns announced him as their fifth-round pick. \u201cThank you for the fans. Thank you for everybody. Thank you for the Browns organization for giving me a chance,\u201d said Shedeur, while at last donning the cap of his NFL team. \u201cThat\u2019s all I need.\u201d <\/p>\n<p><img src=\"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/90ffdb11-4134-49b9-a91a-02ebfb72d6ae_1608649397.png\" alt=\"Headshot of Mitchell S. Jackson\" title=\"Headshot of Mitchell S. Jackson\" width=\"100%\" height=\"100%\" decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" class=\"css-o0wq4v ev8dhu53\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Mitchell S Jackson is a contributing writer for Esquire. He is the winner of a Pulitzer Prize and a National Magazine Award as well as the acclaimed author of the memoir Survival Math, and the award-winning novel The Residue Years. He is the John O. Whiteman Dean&#8217;s Distinguished Professor of English at Arizona State University.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"\u201cBe humble. Sit down.\u201d \u2014Kendrick Lamar \u201cI deserve it all.\u201d\u2014Kendrick Lamar \u201cWe never seen anything like this.\u201d\u2014Stephen A.&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":12626,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[7320,7324,7322,7,7321,6,15,7323],"class_list":{"0":"post-12625","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-nfl-draft","8":"tag-content-type-feature","9":"tag-contentid-855ae50a-8e7a-4d7a-9f49-ad8b6c71b1df","10":"tag-displaytype-standard-article","11":"tag-football","12":"tag-locale-us","13":"tag-nfl","14":"tag-nfl-draft","15":"tag-shorttitle-what-happened-to-shedeur-sanders"},"share_on_mastodon":{"url":"https:\/\/channels.im\/@nfl\/114427268038054573","error":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12625","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=12625"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12625\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/12626"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=12625"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=12625"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nfl\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=12625"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}