β€˜Is There Proof Of Anything?’ β€” Deion Sanders Jr. Calls Out the Anonymous Sources Bashing His Brother, Shedeur

Cleveland Browns QB Shedeur Sanders is defended by his brother, who demands proof behind anonymous NFL Draft critiques about his preparation and attitude.

The Sanders family isn’t staying quiet. In the wake of a barrage of anonymous criticism surrounding Shedeur Sanders’ pre-draft interviews and perceived attitude, Deion Sanders Jr. β€” older brother of the Cleveland Browns’ rookie quarterback β€” is pushing back. His defense came in response to a viral report shared by the MLFootball account on X, which claimed that Shedeur showed up to an interview with a top-7 team unprepared after being asked to study the team’s playbook.


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Deion Sanders Jr. Demands Receipts: β€˜Not One Person Has Openly Said Anything’

The allegation, initially reported by Fox Sports’ Henry McKenna, was just one of several accounts painting Sanders as overly confident, unprepared, and lacking self-awareness during the draft process. But to Deion Jr., the story doesn’t hold water. And he’s demanding accountability from those continuing to speak without putting a name behind the claims.

β€œIs there proof of anything?” Deion Sanders Jr. wrote on X. β€œI’ve seen no proof of anything that has been said. Not one person has openly came out & said anything… & for some reason stories keep running from β€˜anonymous people.’”

The post came shortly after MLFootball shared the now widely circulated summary of McKenna’s report, which alleged that Shedeur not only failed to study a requested playbook ahead of his team interview, but also spent the session grilling team leadership instead.

McKenna’s piece painted a complex portrait describing Sanders as a “good person” with a polarizing personality, comparing his celebrity to that of Johnny Manziel β€” but with none of the red flags related to substance abuse or partying. Still, it was Sanders’ attitude and approach that reportedly rubbed NFL executives the wrong way.

β€œHe’s the biggest celebrity since Johnny Manziel to enter the draft,” one league source told Fox. β€œBut people didn’t like the personality.”

That personality included a penchant for flashy watches β€” a staple of Sanders’ public image β€” and an unapologetic confidence in his ability to lead. But according to multiple unnamed sources, Sanders’ refusal to approach interviews conventionally, combined with his decision to meet only with the top 7 teams, backfired.

“At some of those [combine] meetings with certain teams that maybe Shedeur Sanders didn’t really want to go to … I was told that he more or less sandbagged in those interviews,” said CBS Sports insider Jonathan Jones.

The criticisms didn’t stop at the interviews. Despite attending the East-West Shrine Bowl (the first of the major showcase events forΒ NFL Draft-eligible prospects held in January), Sanders chose not to play β€” a decision that, while not uncommon for high-profile NFL Draft prospects, raised questions about his commitment. And as the draft wore on, teams passed on Sanders repeatedly, reportedly due to concerns about his β€œprofessionalism, preparation and self-awareness.”

Now with the Browns as a fifth-round pick β€” behind Oregon’s Dillon Gabriel, who Cleveland took in the third β€” Sanders finds himself in an uphill battle not only to prove his value on the field, but to rewrite the narrative off it. And if his brother’s defense is any indication, the Sanders family isn’t letting anonymous voices define that story without a fight.

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