Kevin Stefanski Answers âNoâ to Major Shedeur Sanders Question Without Hesitation Before Brownsâ Preseason Game
“Itâs a gift and a curse at the same time,” said Browns rookie QB Shedeur Sanders about his family. But at this point, the legend of his extra work has grown its own roots. Whether it was during OTAs or minicamp, or most recently after the July 29 practice at Berea, the ‘#legendary QB’ doesnât leave the field. A day before that, he threw 9 out of 9 passes for 2 TDs. While other QBs headed inside, Shedeur stayed out 10 minutes longer, still tossing passes. Heâs done this before, 20 minutes after practice ended in June. But HC Kevin Stefanski is now ready to test him in actual scenarios. It starts in the first preseason game against the Panthers on August 8.
As per insider Daniel Oyefusi, the question came early and directly to the coach on August 7, “Do you need to give Shedeur extra reps today, even with the ones to prepare him for the game?” Kevin Stefanski didnât blink, “No.” No overthinking, no coach-speak detour. Just a firm, confident response that echoed louder than it read.
However, the coach also explained, “I think with a lot of our younger guys, theyâre going to get the majority of the reps in the football game. Today has been more about some of the older guys and the starters.” That’s the strategy. He wants to give the rookie some game time now. And thatâs where this gets interesting.
After practice on August 4, Stefanski pointed to a broader NFL trend: veterans are dominating joint practices, while rookies are being thrown into the preseason fire. For QBs like Sanders and Dillon Gabriel, thatâs the best way to prove they can operate in real-time chaos. âYouâre obviously not wearing a red jersey, so youâre free game in those situations,â Stefanski explained. â…Whereas youâre not in practice or a joint practice with another team.â The games, not drills, will show which of these young QBs can take a hit and still deliver.
Question to Stefanski this morning: Do you need to give Shedeur extra reps today, even with the ones to prepare him for the game?
Stefanski: âNo. I think with a lot of our younger guys, theyâre going to get the majority of the reps in the football game. Today has been more about⦠https://t.co/aX6VwfQ2x7
â Daniel Oyefusi (@DanielOyefusi) August 6, 2025
Throughout the training camp, Shedeur Sanders excelled and came out flying. From Day 1 to Day 10 (ending on Aug. 4), he avoided turnovers, throwing for 6TDs. On top of that, Shedeur has been the best QB with almost 71% pass accuracy (56/79 passes completed). But the first preseason game will give an initial hint if he is game-ready. That will separate him from the rest now.
The Browns are already reeling with injuries to Kenny Pickett and Dillon. With Deshaun Watson also expected to miss most of the season, Kevin Stefanski even had to add Tyler Huntley to the mix. So, the Colorado rookie has a chance to seal his spot.
Shedeur Sanders gets huge HOF endorsement
Itâs easy to look at Shedeur Sandersâ name buried on the Brownsâ QB depth chart and assume the preseason opener is nothing more than a formality, a courtesy appearance for a rookie fifth-rounder. But this Friday, Shedeur isnât just dressing, heâs starting. And thatâs where the noise began.
The Hall of Fame left tackle, Joe Thomas, arguably Clevelandâs most respected voice since Jim Brown, took to The Herd and shut the whole narrative down before it got legs. “Shedeur is a huge star. One of the biggest in college football in years. Heâs not some nobody. The Browns got him at great value and theyâre giving him the same shot theyâre giving everyone not named Joe Flacco,” said Thomas. And heâs right.
If anything, Sanders isnât being sabotaged, heâs being tested. This is the NFL. Nobody hands you anything. Yet, the skepticism is understandable. QB stability and Dawg Pound doesn’t go hand in hand. Over the past 25 years, the franchise has cycled through quarterbacks like a college bar does bouncers.
But hereâs what separates Shedeur Sanders. At camp, heâs been calm and sharp. Not spectacular, but stable. The ball comes out clean, his feet are quiet, and it doesn’t trigger him. And Thomas sees that. He said, “There are a lot of people who really believe in him. People want to see him succeed. This isn’t politics or favoritism. It’s football.”
Whether Shedeur becomes the guy or just another name in the Brownsâ dusty QB list? Thatâs still unwritten. But letâs not confuse opportunity for manipulation. The Browns arenât putting him out there to fail. They’re putting him out there to find out.
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