Browns Forced to Decide Shedeur Sanders’ Future as Kevin Stefanski Regrets Dillon Gabriel Draft

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“My story is going to be similar [to Brady’s]. I was a late-round draft pick, but we’re here now, so none of that stuff matters.Shedeur Sanders isn’t just talking—he’s manifesting. The Cleveland Browns fifth-round pick, who slid to pick No. 144 despite a college résumé dripping with 14,327 passing yards, 134 TDs, and a 70.1% completion rate, has already turned the Dawg Pound’s skepticism into swagger. And if the similarity to Tom Brady’s NFL journey—and the 23-year-old’s confidence—is anything to go by, then the Browns have an important decision to make.

One minicamp source put it bluntly: “It wasn’t even close” between Sanders and third-rounder Dillon Gabriel. While Sanders left “jaws on the ground,” Gabriel had observers with their “head in their hands.” Think Brady Quinn vs. Derek Anderson vibes, but with way more glitter. Cleveland hasn’t seen a quarterback this audacious since Baker Mayfield planted flags in opposing end zones. But Sanders isn’t here to replicate Baker’s bravado—he’s channeling TB12’s underdog ethos

Shedeur Sanders recently said he believes his career story is “going to be similar” to that of Tom Brady’s.

Several sources with boots on the ground in Berea believe it “wasn’t even close” in terms of the competition between Sanders and Dillon Gabriel at rookie minicamp.… pic.twitter.com/mY8NBPcjaV

— NFL Rookie Watch (@NFLRookieWatxh) May 15, 2025

Drafted significantly spots lower than his college stats suggested, Sanders wears No. 12 like a promise, not a tribute. Brady himself texted him post-draft: “Use it as motivation. You’re gonna get your chances. Go take advantage of it.” The kid’s response? A strong rookie minicamp showing that the naysayers shook. After all, you don’t expect less from a quarterback who posted a 74.0% completion rate at Colorado, 37 TDs, and a swagger that’s less Factory of Sadness and more Lab of Unfinished Legends.

A rookie minicamp that started with Dillion Gabriel taking the competitive drills during practice also saw Sanders standing tall in both 11-on-11 and 7-on-7 work. However, what took social media by storm was a video posted by the X account @Scuba_Steve26 where the rookie QB was seen connecting on an 81.5-yard throw. And to put things into perspective, that effort would break the record of Baker Mayfield, who threw 70.5 Hail Mary against the Baltimore Ravens back in 2o20.

Now Cleveland’s QB room reads like a Hall of Fame flashback—Otto Graham’s 23,584 yds and 174–135 mark, Bernie Kosar’s 21,904 yds and 116–81 flair, Brian Sipe’s 23,713 yds with that ’80 MVP glow—then Joe Flacco’s 45,697 yds and Super Bowl swagger meet Kenny Pickett’s young NFL cred. And right alongside them, the rookies: Gabriel with his record-shattering totals and Sanders with a 158.4 PR, a cannon arm, and NIL dollars north of $6 M.

Meanwhile, Kevin Stefanski’s poker face is slipping. Drafting Gabriel in the third round (No. 94) felt like a safe bet—after all, the dude’s 18,722 passing yards and 155 TDs in College scream prolific. But minicamp revealed a stark truth: Gabriel’s NCAA-record 190 total touchdowns haven’t translated to NFL-ready poise. Scouts whisper he’s “overthinking,” while Sanders operates like he’s still running Colorado’s 43–35 double-OT thriller against Colorado State. Stefanski’s regret? It’s written on the playbook.

Stefanski’s gamble & Gabriel’s ghosts

The Browns’ QB room is now a high-stakes drama. Joe Flacco, the 40-year-old Super Bowl XLVII MVP, is the grizzled mentor with a howitzer arm. Then there’s Kenny Pickett, the Steelers castoff, and Gabriel, whose near $6 million rookie deal feels heavier by the day. But Sanders? He’s the wildcard flipping the script. One team insider claims the QB1 battle will “quickly boil down” to Flacco and Sanders—a duel between old-school grit and new-school flair.

Cleveland’s quarterback history is a graveyard of “almosts.” Otto Graham’s seven titles, Bernie Kosar’s ’80s magic, Brian Sipe’s Kardiac Kids—all legends, yet none with Sanders’ college pedigree. His 4,134-yard senior year at Colorado wasn’t just stats; it was art. Breaking school records while signing Nike deals? That’s Deion-level swag meets Mahomesian moxie. Here’s a side-by-side look at some of Cleveland’s all-time great signal-callers alongside the new kids in town.

QBEra/LevelGPYDSTD–INTCOMP %PR
Otto Graham Browns (’46–’55) 126 23,584 174–135 55.8% 86.6
Bernie Kosar Browns (’85–’93) 120 21,904 116–81 58.8% 81.8
Brian Sipe Browns (’74–’83) 125 23,713 154–149 56.5% 74.8
Joe Flacco NFL ’08–’24 196 45,697 257–162 61.7% 84.4
Kenny Pickett NFL ’22–’24 30 4,765 20–15 62.4% 79.3
Dillon Gabriel College (’19–’24) 64 18,722 155–32 65.2% 160.9
Shedeur Sanders College (’21–’24) 50 14,327 134–27 70.1% 158.4

Key takeaways:

Otto, Bernie, and Brian built Cleveland’s early DNA with gritty, guns-a-blazing seasons—low comp % by today’s standards, but back then, you threw downfield like you meant it.

Flacco stacked up huge yardage and TDs over 17 NFL seasons, hoisting a Super Bowl trophy along the way.

Pickett’s young NFL career shows promise: a near-80s passer rating and mid-60s comp % in his first two years.

Gabriel rewrote FBS record books—2nd all-time in passing yards, co-leader in TDs—and brings that prolific arm to the QB room.

Sanders dazzled at JSU and Colorado with a 70 % completion clip, absurd passer rating north of 150, and a cannon that left scouts slack-jawed.

If Gabriel’s the cautionary tale, Sanders is the anthem. And Cleveland? They’re ready to sing. So buckle up, Dawg Pound. This isn’t a rebuild; it’s a revolution. And Shedeur Sanders? He’s got the pen.

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