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via Imago

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In September 1989, Deion Sanders didn’t just make his NFL debut – he made history. On only his second career punt return, the 22-year-old turned a muffed catch into a highlight reel sprint that left Rams defenders dizzy. He weaved, cut back, juked twice, and flew into the end zone on the dirt of Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium. The Falcons lost 31-21, but the play was pure “Prime Time.” That same week, he’d hit a home run for the Yankees, becoming the first person in history – per Guinness World Records – to homer in MLB and score an NFL touchdown in the same week.

So, that’s the standard Shedeur Sanders’ father set. The speed, flair, and moment-making. And now, 36 years later, Deion’s watching his son take his first NFL snaps…and he admits it feels different. Because under the NFL preseason lights, one good night makes a rookie’s career, and one dreadful night puts you on the transaction wire.

For Shedeur, this opener isn’t just a warm-up. It’s an audition – with his dad, Deion Sanders, locked in on every snap. And for Coach Prime, it’s not just exciting. It’s strange. “We’ve already spoken like 3 times today…it’s going to be strange for both of us,” Deion Sanders admitted. It’s not just strange as a dad, but strange as a man whose own debut still lives in highlight montages.

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The Browns’ fifth-round pick gets the first-team snaps against the Panthers in Week 1 of the preseason. It’s the perfect stage to prove why he was once viewed as a top-10 talent after a monster final season at Colorado under his father’s coaching – 4,134 passing yards (fourth nationally) and 37 touchdowns (second only to top draft pick Cam Ward).

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Head coach Kevin Stefanski says only Tyler Huntley will share QB duties. Kenny Pickett and Dillon Gabriel are sidelined with hamstring injuries. Joe Flacco? Still around, but not taking this one. Most regulars are sitting out, so this is a night for the backups, the bubble guys, and one rookie quarterback with everything to gain. Translation: Shedeur is going to get a lot of snaps, irrespective of the fact that the guy was throwing to equipment guys just a few weeks ago.

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But the rookie isn’t exactly walking into an ideal setup. He won’t have Jerry Jeudy. Jeudy’ been the Browns’ big-play threat who can turn a routine slant into a highlight. Or Cedric Tillman, the dependable chain-mover who makes contested catches look easy. And without his starting offensive line, those safety blankets disappear even faster. Instead, the #12 works with backups. He has adjusted to raw timing… And he has faced quicker defensive pressure than he’s used to. It’s a trial by fire. But it’s the kind of game that either rattles a rookie or reveals exactly what his mindset is made of.

Inside Shedeur Sanders’ NFL debut mindset

If the “strange” feelings are about a father watching his son step into the fire, the ‘true mindset’ is about how Shedeur is handling it. And according to Deion, it’s exactly what you’d want from a rookie quarterback. “He’s approaching it like a [regular-season] game,” he said. “He’s thankful and appreciative of the opportunity.”

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What’s your perspective on:

Can Shedeur Sanders live up to the Sanders legacy, or is the pressure too much?

Have an interesting take?

That mindset isn’t an accident. Early Friday (Aug. 8), Deion Sanders posted a message on X about seizing your big break: “Everyone has wants and craves that big break! With the right chance, you might not be stuck where you are today. A break is like those childhood fantasies…The perfect chance can flip your world upside down.” Whether it was aimed directly at Shedeur or not, the connection is obvious. This is his perfect chance.

Shedeur’s brother, Shilo Sanders, is also making his NFL entrance this week with the Buccaneers. But the Sanders household knows the league doesn’t hand out jobs based on last names. You earn it snap by snap. Shedeur starts now – making his preseason debut without his top weapons but with plenty of opportunity to grab. Strange for both? Sure. But if he’s got his dad’s DNA, he knows how to turn a debut into a moment people still talk about decades later.

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Can Shedeur Sanders live up to the Sanders legacy, or is the pressure too much?

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