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Shedeur Sanders - 2023-25 Tracking History Thread - Drafted by the Cleveland Browns (NFL)

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Worst thing is that with all that has happened this week if Shedeur doesn't want to be again portrayed as the bad guy he has no real option except to accept the apology and move on rather than insist that Jeff Ulbrich be held accountable as well as the young idiot.

The coach has an obligation to secure private information that is in his control. This means no "accidental" leaks and his son knowing that anything he might incidentally see is to be kept quiet.

The son doesn't get a pass because he is a "kid." If you told him he requires additional supervision and restrictions because of his age he would certainly get upset. If he's old enough to make those decisions he's old enough to be responsible for the consequences.

The team is responsible for supervision of it's employees. An appropriate response from the league would be to take away a draft choice, maybe a 5th or around there. Let the coach explain to the management why his lacking concern should cost the team a draft choice.

Meanwhile though with the narative about him be ego driven and self-centered he is stuck not reacting which won't gain him anything among the haters but if he does respond with any anger the will be the one who gets portrayed negatively.
 
Worst thing is that with all that has happened this week if Shedeur doesn't want to be again portrayed as the bad guy he has no real option except to accept the apology and move on rather than insist that Jeff Ulbrich be held accountable as well as the young idiot.

The coach has an obligation to secure private information that is in his control. This means no "accidental" leaks and his son knowing that anything he might incidentally see is to be kept quiet.

The son doesn't get a pass because he is a "kid." If you told him he requires additional supervision and restrictions because of his age he would certainly get upset. If he's old enough to make those decisions he's old enough to be responsible for the consequences.

The team is responsible for supervision of it's employees. An appropriate response from the league would be to take away a draft choice, maybe a 5th or around there. Let the coach explain to the management why his lacking concern should cost the team a draft choice.

Meanwhile though with the narative about him be ego driven and self-centered he is stuck not reacting which won't gain him anything among the haters but if he does respond with any anger the will be the one who gets portrayed negatively.
I agree. No free pass. For me, he’s not a kid. He’s a frat boy. I was a frat boy. I know first hand—not a kid, stupid as ****, and absolutely needs to face some consequences.

I’m embarrassed as **** about what we did decades ago, and I never did anything THAT purposefully harmful to someone else.
 
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Shedeur handled the pre-draft process extremely poorly. Listening to his father's advice—which was based on his own experiences and personal view of Shedeur—didn't do him any favors, as NFL scouts clearly saw things differently. While I've heard he performed well in individual meetings with scouts and during the season, his overall process was considered horrendous.

This year featured exceptional quarterback prospects with great character across the board, making Shedeur's changed demeanor particularly noticeable. When you're evaluating quarterbacks to be the face of your franchise and potential CEO of your team, being perceived to have a poor attitude during the process hurts more than most realize, especially in a draft class filled with high-character prospects.

That said, NFL teams are terrible at evaluating quarterbacks. Absolutely terrible.

You gave Dillon Gabriel an undraftable grade when he played better under Lebby at Oklahoma, but discounted him because his supporting cast wasn't strong, forcing him to do more to win games. Are you serious? His situation at Oklahoma was challenging—he had to improvise frequently with limited weapons (his best receiver was Drake Stoops). He played impressively in my assessment. I gave him the same fourth-round grade last year that I gave him this year. Interestingly, NFL scouts loved his film this year because he didn't drift or force throws when receivers couldn't get open. Of course—he's now surrounded by the nation's best talent compared to Oklahoma's decent but unspectacular team, meaning he had to do far more to win games in Norman.

The same applies to Cam Ward. I had a late first-round grade on him both LAST year and THIS year. I thought his tape last year showed as much potential as Bo Nix and Michael Penix Jr., just more unrefined but with possibly higher upside. While he improved somewhat, his job at Miami looked much easier compared to Washington State. Now Chris Simms ranks him in the top three with Jayden Daniels and Caleb Williams. This is ridiculous. You all-22 film analysts (teams) fail to understand that players in difficult situations naturally take more risks to make plays because their teams aren't good enough. You ignore situation, context, and common sense!

Shedeur being selected in the fifth round demonstrates how poorly he and Coach Prime managed this process. Nevertheless, I'm also disappointed with NFL teams' evaluation processes generally. There's a reason your best quarterback was a sixth-round pick (Brady), another is a third-rounder (Montana), a generational talent fell to the end of the first round (Rodgers), and a two-time MVP also dropped to late first round (Jackson)—you're terrible at evaluating quarterbacks. Consider that most elite wide receivers are first-round picks. Even exceptional ones who weren't, like Terrell Owens, came from small schools and immediately proved scouts wrong. Running backs are scheme-dependent, making evaluation challenging. Offensive linemen depend on coaching and fit, but the best have consistently been first-rounders. Shedeur falling to the fifth round is his own fault—you can't mishandle a process this badly, especially in a draft class filled with quarterbacks who have great personalities.

That said, everyone else from Colorado performed well in the process. Everyone except Shedeur had great pre-draft showings. I hope he learns from this experience and returns to what made him successful.
 
Looks like the leak might have come from Jeff Ulbrich and/or his kid. As a falcons fan, this really pisses me off.
I like Jeff but his son did some stupid **** to Kyle, Tyler, and Shedeur. Why? For kicks, come on son. Jeff should be punished. This is why they do personal information training in corp America and you have to lock your PC or work tablets at all times.
 
Clearly you didn’t watch many of his games. He has an above average NFL arm. Is it as strong as Cam Ward, no. Is it at least as strong as Bo Nix. Yes and based on throws both made in college probably stronger. If you’re going to douche nozzle then at least pick something where you have a legit argument like Shedeur hangs on to the ball too long or bails on the pocket instead of stepping up.
It's not even remotely close to Nix's arm. It's average at best and he is already incredibly polished. His ceiling is very low for people thinking he was going #3.
 
Tyler Shough and Dillon Gabriel were drafted over him. If you think that's why Sanders isn't being taken, I don't know what to tell you.
Shough is 6'5 220 with a big arm, and runs like the wind. His upside on day 3 absolutely dwarfs Shedeur's.

The Gabriel pick is how GMs get fired. Sanders made way more sense there.
 
Shough is 6'5 220 with a big arm, and runs like the wind. His upside on day 3 absolutely dwarfs Shedeur's.

The Gabriel pick is how GMs get fired. Sanders made way more sense there.
Boy, you better pray Tyler works out because this post will be upped in 3 years and can look real bad for you.
 
Shedeur handled the pre-draft process extremely poorly. Listening to his father's advice—which was based on his own experiences and personal view of Shedeur—didn't do him any favors, as NFL scouts clearly saw things differently. While I've heard he performed well in individual meetings with scouts and during the season, his overall process was considered horrendous.

This year featured exceptional quarterback prospects with great character across the board, making Shedeur's changed demeanor particularly noticeable. When you're evaluating quarterbacks to be the face of your franchise and potential CEO of your team, being perceived to have a poor attitude during the process hurts more than most realize, especially in a draft class filled with high-character prospects.

That said, NFL teams are terrible at evaluating quarterbacks. Absolutely terrible.

You gave Dillon Gabriel an undraftable grade when he played better under Lebby at Oklahoma, but discounted him because his supporting cast wasn't strong, forcing him to do more to win games. Are you serious? His situation at Oklahoma was challenging—he had to improvise frequently with limited weapons (his best receiver was Drake Stoops). He played impressively in my assessment. I gave him the same fourth-round grade last year that I gave him this year. Interestingly, NFL scouts loved his film this year because he didn't drift or force throws when receivers couldn't get open. Of course—he's now surrounded by the nation's best talent compared to Oklahoma's decent but unspectacular team, meaning he had to do far more to win games in Norman.

The same applies to Cam Ward. I had a late first-round grade on him both LAST year and THIS year. I thought his tape last year showed as much potential as Bo Nix and Michael Penix Jr., just more unrefined but with possibly higher upside. While he improved somewhat, his job at Miami looked much easier compared to Washington State. Now Chris Simms ranks him in the top three with Jayden Daniels and Caleb Williams. This is ridiculous. You all-22 film analysts (teams) fail to understand that players in difficult situations naturally take more risks to make plays because their teams aren't good enough. You ignore situation, context, and common sense!

Shedeur being selected in the fifth round demonstrates how poorly he and Coach Prime managed this process. Nevertheless, I'm also disappointed with NFL teams' evaluation processes generally. There's a reason your best quarterback was a sixth-round pick (Brady), another is a third-rounder (Montana), a generational talent fell to the end of the first round (Rodgers), and a two-time MVP also dropped to late first round (Jackson)—you're terrible at evaluating quarterbacks. Consider that most elite wide receivers are first-round picks. Even exceptional ones who weren't, like Terrell Owens, came from small schools and immediately proved scouts wrong. Running backs are scheme-dependent, making evaluation challenging. Offensive linemen depend on coaching and fit, but the best have consistently been first-rounders. Shedeur falling to the fifth round is his own fault—you can't mishandle a process this badly, especially in a draft class filled with quarterbacks who have great personalities.

That said, everyone else from Colorado performed well in the process. Everyone except Shedeur had great pre-draft showings. I hope he learns from this experience and returns to what made him successful.
I won't criticize NFL talent evaluators too much because quarterback assessment is genuinely challenging. Even scouting high school quarterbacks as a college recruiter would be difficult for me, and I'd struggle evaluating quarterbacks with limited college snaps in the transfer portal unless I could work with them directly.

I recognize my own imperfections in evaluation. I completely missed on the entire 2021 NFL Draft quarterback class. Despite having reservations about each prospect, I believed their talent would overcome challenges—but it clearly didn't. I also refuse to label Bryce Young a bust yet. I anticipated he would need time to adjust since Alabama provided an ideal quarterback environment with clean pockets and mostly simulated pressure, whereas NFL situations involve leakier offensive lines and receivers who don't get open as easily as they did in college. Additionally, NFL running games are less reliable, and defenses can't consistently maintain leads.

I think evaluators missed on Patrick Mahomes. And regarding Brock Purdy, he had an outstanding freshman season at Iowa State with Hakeem Butler, Kene Nwangwu, David Montgomery, and a solid offensive line. Unsurprisingly, it was his best collegiate season—Iowa State was loaded with talent then. Breece Hall couldn't even earn playing time that year.

I believe NFL quarterback scouting could improve, and I acknowledge that I can do better myself. I've missed on prospects over the years—for instance, I gave what would now be equivalent to a second-round grade on Malik Willis, who didn't translate to the NFL. That was definitely a miss on my part.
 
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