The Second Look: Breaking Down Shedeur Sanders’ First Start
The Cleveland Browns have had so many quarterbacks over the last three decades that “next man up” has become more punchline than plan. First‑rounders, veterans on their last legs, mid‑round flyers — they’ve all taken a turn behind center. Very few have changed anything.
So when Shedeur Sanders jogged onto the field in Las Vegas for his first NFL start, it was easy to roll your eyes and lump him in with the rest of the list.
Instead, he did something no Browns quarterback had done in 30 years:
He won his first start.
Cleveland beat the Raiders 24–10, and Sanders became the first Browns rookie quarterback to win his starting debut since Eric Zeier in 1995, ending a brutal 0–17 run by Browns QBs in their first career start. He’s the 45th starting quarterback the franchise has rolled out since 1994, and finally one of them stepped into that role and walked away with a W.
If you just look at the surface‑level stuff, it feels like a clean little story: 209 yards, a couple of chunk plays, a stress‑free road win, and some fun father‑son moments with Deion in the stands.
But once you dig into the film and the numbers, it’s a lot more complex than that — a mix of encouraging signs and rough edges, with just a little more bad than some of his biggest supporters might want to admit, and still plenty of things you can point to and be optimistic.
From Cold Splash to Breakthrough
A week before Vegas, this story looked a lot different.
Sanders was a fifth‑round pick, 144th overall, buried behind Joe Flacco, Kenny Pickett, and third‑round rookie Dillon Gabriel on the depth chart. He barely got meaningful reps with the starters in the summer. He was supposed to be a long‑term project, not the guy steering the season.
Then bodies started dropping.
By Week 11 against Baltimore, the Browns had burned through options and turned to Sanders in relief. It went about how you’d expect for a cold rookie thrown into the teeth of a Ravens defense: 4‑of‑16, 47 yards, one interception, one fumble, and zero points with him on the field. It was ugly. Not career‑ending ugly, but definitely a real welcome to the league moment.
That made this full week of practice, his own game plan, and some level of buy‑in from Kevin Stefanski and the staff so important.
The Browns came in at 2–8 and on a three‑game skid. Nobody was expecting a magical turnaround. They just needed competence. They needed someone who wouldn’t lose the game.
Sanders did that.
Efficient on Paper, Weird Under the Hood
His stat line for the night was fine: 11‑of‑20, 209 yards, 1 touchdown, 1 interception, 1 sack, and a passer rating just under 90.
Pretty normal. Nothing wild. Nothing that jumps off the page. If you only saw those numbers on the ticker, you’d probably assume he played one of those steady, low‑risk games coaches pray for when they roll a young quarterback out there — a few nice throws, a few misses, maybe a mistake or two, but nothing that burns the house down.
But the truth of his night was a lot more layered than that.
Most of those yards came on two big plays, and everything around those explosives was more about managing the moment than lighting up the stat sheet. That’s not a knock; it’s just the reality of how the Browns approached this game. They weren’t asking Sanders to play hero ball. They were asking him to survive the down‑to‑down stuff, take what was there, and let the defense carry the weight.
And for a first start? That’s usually the assignment.
Two Plays That Carried the Night
The first big one came early, and it set the tone for the night. Third‑and‑8, the Raiders crank up the pressure, and suddenly Cleveland has seven rushers coming at six blockers. That’s usually the kind of math that gets a rookie folded in half.
But Sanders handled it like someone who’s been in that spot before. He felt the extra bodies, rolled to his right, kept his eyes downfield, and bought just enough space to get the throw off. The ball found fellow rookie Isaiah Bond in stride for 52 yards, and Sanders took a legit shot right after releasing it.
That’s a grown‑man throw. You’re outnumbered, you’re moving, the pocket is basically dissolving around you, and you still put it on your guy like that. That’s the kind of play that makes teammates sit up a little straighter in the huddle.
Then came the other highlight — his first career touchdown. The design wasn’t incredibly flashy. It was a simple swing screen to Dylan Sampson, the kind of call you make to help a rookie find a rhythm. But the execution? Exactly what you want. Raiders brought pressure again, and Sanders didn’t drift, didn’t hesitate, didn’t try to freelance. He caught it, trusted the timing, fired it with some umph into Sampson’s chest, and let his guy do the rest. Sixty‑six yards later, the Browns were in the end zone.
Those two plays make his night look cleaner on paper than it actually was, but they also show why Cleveland is so intrigued. They weren’t cheap yards. They were the result of him reading it right, handling pressure, and delivering the ball on time.
With that being said, those moments also did a pretty good job of masking all the down‑to‑down stuff that wasn’t quite as smooth.
The First Drive, the Bad Decision, and the Learning Curve
Let’s talk about the rookie stuff, because it showed up early.
Right out of the gate, Sanders got cute. He tried to use late eyes on a downfield shot — looking right down the middle of the field until right before he released it down the sideline. The ball sailed too far for Jerry Jeudy, and it felt like a guy trying to jump straight to the advanced quarterbacking tricks before fully owning the basics.
On the very next meaningful opportunity, he made the mistake every scout was woried they would see too often at this level: overconfidence in his arm.
The interception wasn’t just a random miss. It was him betting he could squeeze a ball into a small window a tick late. The pocket was pretty clean. The timing wasn’t. He understood the read, he just tried to do a little too much with what he’s working with physically. Plainly, he doesn’t have the zip to be trying those tight windows with the speed of NFL defenses.
That’s the tightrope with Sanders. The confidence is real — he’s not out there scared — but his arm is closer to “good enough” than “special.” When he leans into the gunslinger mentality, you see both sides of it immediately.
The important part is what happened after that pick: he settled down.
He didn’t go into a shell, but he also didn’t keep forcing hero balls. The staff leaned into more screens, quick game, and easy answers, and he bought into it instead of trying to prove a point with every dropback.
Command at the Line: The Quietly Impressive Stuff
One of the first things that really stood out on the rewatch had nothing to do with the ball coming out of his hand — it was how comfortable he looked running the whole operation.
You don’t always get that with rookies. A lot of young quarterbacks look like they’re trying to defuse a bomb before the snap. Sanders didn’t give off that vibe. He wasn’t frantic, he wasn’t wide‑eyed, and he wasn’t waiting for someone else to tell him what to do. He looked like a guy who understood the assignment.
The way he handled the line of scrimmage said a lot. Checking plays, flipping protections, pointing things out to receivers — you could tell he was seeing the picture clearly enough to at least get everyone on the same page. The confidence to operate like that is a real trait. It’s one thing to know the playbook; it’s another to look like you belong while running it.
And that big 52‑yard shot to Bond? That whole thing starts with him diagnosing pressure. Seven rushers, six blockers. That’s a terrible equation for a quarterback, but he didn’t blink. He recognized he was hot, adjusted, slid away from the free rusher, and still let one rip knowing he was about to get crushed. Those are the little details you don’t see in a box score or even a highlight reel.
When you’re trying to figure out if a rookie has a real chance to stick in this league, it’s the stuff between the big plays that matters. The poise. The communication. The feel for where the trouble is coming from. Sanders checked more of those boxes than you’d expect from someone making their first start — especially one who was picked in the fifth round.
Accuracy and Floating Checkdowns
Now, it wasn’t all glowing.
If you go throw by throw, you start to see the real picture — and it’s a mix of good signs and a rookie quarterback being a rookie quarterback. There were snaps where his receivers weren’t doing him any favors, but there were also plenty where he had a clean-ish look and just didn’t see it at the right time. The accuracy wasn’t awful, but it wasn’t consistently sharp either. Some of that is timing with new guys; some of it is simply learning how small the windows really are at this level.
The checkdowns were another part of that story. The decisions were right — he wasn’t forcing hero throws or ignoring the easy yards sitting right there underneath. For a first start, that’s a legitimately good sign. But the actual throws? I kept catching myself wishing he’d give them a little more life.
There’s a difference between dumping it off and actually giving your running back a chance to make someone miss. A few of those balls floated just enough for the Raiders’ defense to rally and close space. He wasn’t wrong in what he chose — he just made his guys’ jobs a little harder than necessary.
And that circles back to the bigger conversation about his arm. He absolutely has enough juice to play in the league — you don’t drop a 50‑yard strike on the move if you’re lacking arm talent. But there’s a clear distinction between quarterbacks with a functional NFL arm and quarterbacks who can consistently fire late, outside, or into tight windows without sweating it. Sanders is still learning where he fits on that spectrum.
Living With the Limitations
If we’re being honest, there’s a hard ceiling on what this first start tells us.
The arm talent is good, not great. You can see it on a few reps where tighter windows present themselves and he just doesn’t seem willing to test them. On his lone sack, there were routes developing with small, contested windows. Instead of pulling the trigger, he held onto it and went down.
Normally you’d prefer a sack over a reckless throw, but there’s a fine line. Some of that is rookie caution; some of it is knowing exactly how much juice you have and not wanting to leave a ball hanging in harm’s way.
My overall takeaway from that rewatch was pretty simple: He was fine.
And I don’t mean that as a backhanded compliment. For a Browns rookie in his first start, “fine” with some real flashes is a meaningful step forward — especially when you factor in how many guys in this jersey haven’t even cleared that bar.
The upside is there. The limitations are real. His long‑term success is going to depend heavily on what he has around him and how well he and the staff figure out the right way to play to his strengths.
The key thing going forward is whether he can find that balance where he’s decisive without forcing balls his arm can’t support. That’s where a lot of mid‑tier quarterbacks live. The ones who make it figure out how to marry their physical toolbox with their mental processing so they’re consistently playing within their strengths.
The Defense Turned the Game Into a Test Drive
Any conversation about this game that doesn’t talk about the Browns defense is missing the point.
They destroyed the Raiders.
Ten sacks. Constant pressure. The kind of performance that lets your offense exhale and play conservative without feeling like you’re wasting an opportunity.
When a defense is wrecking drives like that, the smart move is exactly what the Browns did: manage the quarterback’s workload. Don’t pretend this is a shootout. Don’t ask your rookie to drop back 40 times and trade haymakers with the other sideline. Let your pass rush be the bully, ask your QB to hit the layups and a couple of threes, then go home with the win.
All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.
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