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Another quarterback competition after what Shedeur Sanders did at the end of last season just feels disrespectful. He stepped into a tough situation, stabilized the Browns’ offense, showed poise under pressure, and gave the team real momentum when things were falling apart. That stretch wasn’t meaningless — it was proof he can lead. Competition is normal in the NFL, but when a quarterback earns trust through performance, constantly resetting the depth chart sends the wrong message. It creates doubt instead of stability. If the Browns want real growth and continuity, they should build around what Sanders started — not question it again.
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By Schantell WhartonAnother quarterback competition after what Shedeur Sanders did at the end of last season just feels disrespectful. He stepped into a tough situation, stabilized the Browns’ offense, showed poise under pressure, and gave the team real momentum when things were falling apart. That stretch wasn’t meaningless — it was proof he can lead. Competition is normal in the NFL, but when a quarterback earns trust through performance, constantly resetting the depth chart sends the wrong message. It creates doubt instead of stability. If the Browns want real growth and continuity, they should build around what Sanders started — not question it again.
Support the show