Ravens Had Planned To Draft Shedeur Sanders In Round 5

Ravens Had Planned To Draft Shedeur Sanders In Round 5
Pro Football Rumors Pro Football Rumors

The modern draft’s most stunning freefall has parked Shedeur Sanders in Cleveland, which circled back to the polarizing quarterback prospect via a fifth-round trade-up. That move prompted teams to ask the Browns about Dillon Gabriel, who became tied to Cleveland in Round 3.

Trading neither Gabriel or Sanders, the Browns have both backing up Joe Flacco after sending Kenny Pickett to the Raiders. Gabriel sits as the Browns’ backup, with Sanders in the third-string spot. This is certainly not what Sanders had in mind when he prepared his pre-draft plan, but he is squarely on the developmental track for an organization that will be closely tied to another QB investment come 2026.

[RELATED: Inside Browns’ Complex Plan At Quarterback]

Before the Browns made a value-based play for Sanders at No. 144, the Ravens lurked as a team set to stop the ex-Colorado starter’s draft-weekend plunge. Baltimore was prepared to draft Sanders at No. 141, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports, but received word the QB was uninterested in joining a team with Lamar Jackson entrenched as the starter.

It appears Sanders’ camp informed the Ravens he did not want to be drafted by Baltimore, per Schefter. That led to the Ravens drafting Alabama A&M tackle Carson Vinson. The Browns then traded up (via the Seahawks) for Sanders, who had once lingered as a potential first-round option for QB-needy Cleveland. A disastrous Sanders pre-draft process nixed that, but he did join a team without a long-term starter, whereas the Ravens will be a Jackson-centered team for many years to come.

Sanders would have hit the developmental track in Baltimore, only with no real roadmap to a starting role with that franchise. Jackson, 28, has become one of the NFL’s best players. Replacing an injured Flacco midway through the 2018 season, Jackson never gave the job back and is almost definitely on his way to the Hall of Fame. His three first-team All-Pro nods trail only Peyton Manning (seven) and Aaron Rodgers (four) for post-merger QBs, and the Ravens remain a perennial Super Bowl contender because of their historically talented dual threat.

The Ravens signed Cooper Rush to a two-year, $6.2MM deal in March. Sanders had gone from a player expected to be at worst a second-round pick to one not exactly in position to be calling his shots by Round 5. But the Ravens appear to have agreed to avoid drafting a player who did not want to be part of a plan that brought a QB2 ceiling. That may be Sanders’ NFL future anyway, but he did not voice known objections to landing in Cleveland, where a rare four-man quarterback competition ensued. Of course, Sanders did not exactly factor in prominently in this battle.

Gabriel played ahead of Sanders throughout the Browns’ offseason, as rumors indicated teams viewed the latter as behind the curve in terms of football intel. Sanders is believed to have made strides here, but he made the rare jump — due to Pickett and Gabriel injuries — to...