The moment Shedeur Sanders has spent his entire life preparing for is finally here – and the spotlight couldn’t be any brighter.
Shedeur Sanders looks broken and gets comforted by former Colorado teammate
The Cleveland Browns rookie quarterback will make his first NFL regular-season start in Week 12 when the Browns face the Las Vegas Raiders at Allegiant Stadium, a primetime stage loaded with symbolism, pressure, and storyline.
It’s not just Sanders‘ debut as an NFL starter – it’s a chance to prove he belongs in a league where doubters have multiplied loudly over the last 48 hours. And if the stakes weren’t high enough, he’ll do it against a franchise partially owned by Tom Brady, the seven-time Super Bowl champion and widely considered the greatest quarterback ever.
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A surreal experience for Shedeur
For a young quarterback trying to find his footing, it’s a surreal twist: the GOAT could’ve had him in silver and black. Instead, the Raiders passed on Sanders with the No. 6 pick and selected Boise State star Ashton Jeanty, leaving Cleveland to draft Shedeur later and develop him slowly.
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On Sunday, “slowly” suddenly turned into “ready or not.” Shedeur Sanders wasn’t expected to see the field this early. But when starting quarterback Dillon Gabriel was evaluated for a concussion at halftime against the Baltimore Ravens, the Browns turned to their rookie backup, who had been preparing quietly since Week 6.
“Playing a backup quarterback role, that’s tough to come in there,” head coach Kevin Stefanski said. “But we trust him.” Sanders took the field for the second half and flashed some of the talent that made him a Colorado sensation. His first completion went to Cedric Tillman for five yards, followed by a tight-window throw to David Njoku. He later ripped a strong 25-yard pass to Harold Fannin Jr., showing the arm strength scouts fell in love with.
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Shedeur understands his current level
Sanders finished 4-of-16 for 47 yards, one interception, and two sacks, and the Browns were shut out in the second half. After the game, Sanders didn’t sugarcoat a thing. “I don’t think I played good at all,” he said. “I think it’s a lot of things we need to look at during the week and go and just get comfortable… We just got to go next week and understand so then we have a week to prepare stuff I like to do.”
In fairness, this was the first time Sanders had thrown a pass to several teammates – including his first throw to Jerry Jeudy all season. Timing wasn’t just off; it didn’t exist. But he also noted the valuable perspective the reps gave him. “Playing against a great defense… it’s exciting to see this is what it’s like,” Sanders said. “I just got to take this one and build on it.”
Raiders matchup: high stakes for both sides
The Raiders are having a disastrous season of their own, sitting well below expectations and searching for answers on both sides of the ball. But none of that will matter if Shedeur struggles. Fair or not, this start could shape the narrative around him for months. If he plays well? He’s a future franchise quarterback who finally got the runway he needed.
If he melts against a struggling opponent? The criticism – already bubbling after his debut – will explode. The labels of “overrated,” “not ready,” or “not NFL material” will only grow louder. And because Las Vegas is the team that could’ve drafted him, the matchup has even more emotional weight. Facing a Team Brady helps own – and the shadow that comes with it.
It’s impossible to ignore the symbolism: Shedeur Sanders, the son of an NFL legend and one of the most marketed college players ever, will make his starting debut against a franchise tied to the greatest quarterback in NFL history. Brady is exactly the kind of player Shedeur grew up studying, the type of standard every young quarterback is measured against. Now Sanders gets to face a team linked to Brady – and one that intentionally passed on drafting him.

