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Shedeur Sanders stuns Browns coaching staff with elite field vision ahead of training camp showdown originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Entering his second professional season, Shedeur Sanders has quietly shifted the narrative around Cleveland's quarterback room. What began as a lopsided competition favoring Deshaun Watson has tightened considerably, with the 24-year-old former first-round pick winning over the coaching staff through preparation and football intelligence rather than raw athleticism.
Browns quarterbacks coach Mike Bajakian put it plainly when describing Sanders' spring performance: "I'm blown away. I think Shedeur has a really good vision of the field, and he'll say things in practice sometimes, where I'd be like, 'What did you get there?'"
Bajakian cited one specific instance in which Sanders targeted a deep post route against a post-safety look, a decision that appeared questionable at full speed but proved sound after film review, as the safety dropped to the crosser and vacated the over-the-top window.
That kind of pre-snap awareness was well-documented before the draft. Analysts consistently highlighted Sanders' defensive recognition and football IQ as his defining qualities, traits that now appear to be translating to the pro game faster than skeptics anticipated.
He was reportedly studying Lamar Jackson's Baltimore film before Cleveland's coaching staff even had him in the building for Phase 1 workouts.
His rookie numbers were uneven: 1,400 yards, seven touchdowns, 10 interceptions, a 3.24-second average time to throw, and 23 sacks taken. However, ESPN's Jeremy Fowler noted Sanders had "bridged the gap" after Watson entered the spring as the clear frontrunner.
The veteran finished spring 90-of-133 with 13 touchdowns and three interceptions, while Sanders went 79-of-113 with five touchdowns and three interceptions, with first-team reps split between the two.
Why Mike Bajakian Says Training Camp Will Settle the Browns QB1 Debate
Head coach Todd Monken has declined to name a starter, with the decision now expected to hold through at least the first two preseason games in August. The logjam is deliberate. Bajakian made clear that the spring setting, with its controlled tempo and limited contact, simply cannot replicate the conditions that separate starters from backups.
"The beauty of what training camp will give you that OTAs and minicamp haven't given you is more live bullets, frankly," Bajakian said. "It's a little bit easier to make a faster evaluation when you have a defensive line that's coming at you full speed, when you really have to react to the full-speed aspect of the game."
That framing matters for Sanders specifically. His critics have long questioned whether his measured, cerebral process holds up when pass rushers disrupt timing. His rookie struggles, particularly the sack total and slow release, fed that concern.
But the spring suggested his footwork and processing speed have both improved. Browns analyst Nathan Zegura noted Sanders had made "a big leap" in his ability to cycle through progressions and get the ball out quickly compared to his first year.
Monken has acknowledged the situation directly: "I'm not there yet… I would have loved to do it. I was being honest. I think you'd love to have the starter named. I just can't do it." Trade speculation has surfaced around Sanders, but no deal has materialized before camp. For now, both quarterbacks remain in the mix with the Week 1 job genuinely undecided.
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