Leaked! Tony Rizzo Confirms Shadur Sanders Will Start for the Browns in Final Four Games
The wait for Shadur Sanders is reportedly over. Cleveland insider Tony Rizzo, who accurately leaked Dillon Gabriel’s starting date, has now revealed that Sanders is guaranteed to start for the Cleveland Browns in the final four games of the season, regardless of the team’s record.
This news comes amid a firestorm of controversy over why Sanders didn’t see the field during the blowout win against the Dolphins, a decision that has polarized fans and media alike.
The Final Four Guarantee is Leaked
Tony Rizzo claims to have been told by two separate sources at the stadium that the Browns front office has a clear plan for the rookie:
- The Lock: “Shadore Chris will start the last four games of the season no matter what.”
- The Schedule: The games are against the Bears, Bills, Steelers, and Bengals.
- The Reason: The organization wants to “see what he’s got” before the season concludes.
This leaked plan suggests the team is committed to evaluating Sanders’ NFL readiness against a mix of opponents (a good defense in the Bears, a decent defense in the Bills, a mid-to-good defense in the Steelers, and a potentially weaker Bengals defense). The trade deadline is also on November 5th, which could complicate the situation if the Browns start winning.
Why Didn’t Shadur Play Against the Dolphins? The “Controversy” Debate
The confirmation of a future starting date has intensified the debate over Coach Kevin Stefanski’s decision to keep Sanders on the bench for the entire blowout win against the Miami Dolphins (31-6 with six minutes left).
The Defense of Stefanski (The Conventional Take)
ESPN Cleveland’s post-game analysis pointed to the traditional reasoning for keeping Sanders on the bench:
- Protecting Gabriel: Stefanski wanted to “let Dylan finish his first win.” Putting the rookie in would shift the spotlight away from Gabriel’s accomplishment.
- Avoiding QB Controversy: If Sanders went in and immediately led a touchdown drive, it would “bring up a quarterback controversy out of nowhere,” which the coaching staff is clearly trying to avoid.
The Critique of Stefanski (The Development Argument)
However, many fans and analysts, including the hosts, felt the decision revealed Stefanski’s lack of commitment to Sanders’ development:
- Wasted Reps: “Garbage time minutes for a backup quarterback is like one of the best things.” It allows a young QB to “get the feel of the game” without high stakes.
- No Priority: The refusal to give Sanders even a few snaps suggests that his development is “very low on the rung for Kevin Stfansky.” If they were serious about his growth, none of the “controversy” concerns should matter.
The “Disrespectful” Take (The Minority View)
A fascinating perspective emerged from the live chat, suggesting that putting Sanders in at the end of a blowout would have been “real disrespectful” because:
- Humiliation: It could be seen as setting him up with the second-string offense (the “twos”) and humiliating him by showing what the team did without him.
Browns Fans and the “Shador Cult” Problem
The hosts called out the deep-seated negativity from a segment of the Browns fanbase towards Sanders, labeling it the “delusional Sanders mafia.”
- Unfair Attacks: The hosts defended Sanders against unfounded critiques (e.g., “His arm is average. He’s not explosively fast. He will be mediocre at best quarterback”) and the ridiculous comparison to Patrick Mahomes.
- The Real Reason for Hate: The hosts assert that the hatred has nothing to do with football skill and everything to do with popularity and shame:
- Browns fans are “dweebs” who don’t want “extra attention” on an “ass factory” team that has been historically terrible.
- They don’t want more people seeing how terrible the coach is and how the franchise has failed at the quarterback position for decades.
- The “magnifying glass” of the Sanders hype exposes the team’s chronic dysfunction.
- The Bottom Line: Browns fans “have no ground to stand on” when criticizing a quarterback. The hosts challenged them to “Name me the best Browns quarterback you’ve watched,” concluding that their focus should be on their coach and not on a player they simply find too popular or “wears chains.”
The hope is that by the time Sanders starts, Stefanski will be gone, or the offense will have a scheme that gives the rookie a chance to succeed, echoing the fact that “Stfansky is not the coach” who believes in him.