Cam Ward. Jaxson Dart. Tyler Shough. Jalen Milroe. Dillon Gabriel. Thatās five quarterbacks who landed a new job before heralded Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders was finally snagged by the Cleveland Browns in the fifth round of the 2025 NFL Draft.
Sandersā draft board drop became the story of the weekend, shocking NFL reporters, insiders and sports fans across the country, considering he was projected to be a top-five overall pick in this yearās draft by many scouts for his elite accuracy and decision-making in college, only for al 32 teams to decide otherwise.
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And now, everyone is trying to figure out why…and all signs point to his pops, Deion āCoach Primeā Sanders.
Sandersā Hall of Fame father has been running his mouth for the longest. The head coach at Jackson State and University of Colorado made headlines for repeatedly hinting that he would veto certain teams from drafting his son.
āI know where I want them to go,ā Deion said in an interview with the āMillion Dollaz Worth of Gameā podcast last year. āThereās certain cities where it aināt going to happen.ā
Deion also told Tamron Hall, āThere are teams I wonāt allow him to play for.ā
While thereās no solid reporting yet to indicate whether Coach Prime went through with the threat, itās plausible that some teams didnāt want to deal with an Eli Manning situation. Thatās when, days before the 2004 draft, Manningās agent told the San Diego Chargers he wouldnāt play for them if drafted first overall.
The Chargers drafted him anyway, but traded Manning to the Giants an hour later. Itās a rare situation in the NFL that front offices have been leery about ever since.
Prime also must hold accountability for insulating his sonās career. He has been the only coach Sanders has had through his football life. In the NFL, that wonāt be the case. Complicating matters, itās reported that some teams, like the Giants, had concerns about Sandersā ability to take critique because of that.
Other concerns have been raised about Sandersā behavior in interviews with team personnel. NFL Networkās Tom Pelissero recounted a longtime NFL assistant describing him as having āhorrible body languageā in the āworst formal interview Iāve ever been in in my life.ā
Factor in Sandersā refusal to meet with certain teams, skipping workouts and combines, and opting out of showcases like the Senior Bowl, and it creates a messy and complicated picture for why he dropped to 144th overall. Rightly or wrongly, Deion Sanders is a part of that.
Itās tough to fault a guy for sticking up for his kid, especially given the context around the stigmas of Black fatherhood. For Black America, āThe Prime Effectā is about more than flashy jewelry and swagger. Itās about a fatherās radical love for his children and determination to put it all on the line for their success.
Reminiscent of teams like the Georgetown Hoyas and the Michigan āFab Fiveā of the 1980s and 1990s, Colorado football became Black Americaās favorite team to watch because of what it meant outside the field of play. Amid hate and doubt, Deion coaching his son to greatness was a statement on the power of a Black manās presence in a childās life.
Prime put all his chips in on his son being viewed as a generational talent that teams wouldnāt mind flouting the process for. Unfortunately, thatās just not how the NFL works. And Sanders, while talented, wasnāt viewed by scouts as talented enough to jump through extra hoops.
Deion Sanders should have immense pride in getting both his sons drafted into the NFL. Heās an example of the power of strong Black fatherhood. While his sonās NFL dreams were delayed, they are anything but denied. Prime will continue to be a strong guiding force for his sonās career, but a small step back may be best for his son to thrive.
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