Shedeur Sanders‘ name continues to make headlines, even when the subject is far from football. The 144th overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft was recently fined $269 in court costs and penalties after being cited for driving 91 mph in a 65 mph zone.
The infraction resulted in two speeding tickets and set off a wave of commentary across sports media. While some critics point to the incident as evidence of recklessness or entitlement, one veteran voice sees something else entirely.
Skip Bayless, the longtime sports broadcaster and former Fox Sports host, shared his take on Sanders’ situation during a new episode of his YouTube show. For Bayless, the traffic tickets weren’t a red flag but rather a reminder and the urgency a young professional needs to succeed.
“I was horrified. I got two speeding tickets… I put hand-written signs all over my car saying ‘slow down,'” Bayless said. “I couldn’t afford to get another, what if I lost my license and I couldn’t drive? Horrified. I didn’t grow up with money, I couldn’t go back to money. And it drove me to win that job downtown at the Miami Herald’s sports section,” he recalled.
A teachable moment, not a character flaw
Bayless took the opportunity to frame the moment as a possible turning point for the 23-year-old Sanders, urging him to use it as motivation rather than letting it become a distraction.
“Shedeur, you gotta be driven, man. This is it, this is your shot,” Bayless said.
While Sanders grew up in the spotlight, Bayless emphasized that privilege doesn’t guarantee longevity. What matters now is how Sanders responds to adversity.
Bayless knows the feeling. In his early 20s, he was scrambling to launch his career when a setback nearly cost him everything.
“This reminded me of my first year out of college… Times were tough, it was hard to get a job… Sports Center called me three days before graduation and said, ‘Hey. You can’t come back.’ They’d already offered me a job, I was an intern the summer before,” he said.
That phone call could’ve derailed his career, but instead, it sparked a new opportunity.
“He told me… ‘You’re better than this, you don’t want to get stuck here.’ He saved me. Frank Boggs, great columnist,” he added.
Boggs ultimately connected Bayless with a position at the Miami Herald, but it wasn’t handed to him. Much like Sanders now battling for a role in the NFL, Bayless had to compete.
“The sports editor at the Miami Herald informed me that he had also hired ‘a kid out of his arch rival school,'” he noted.
“The winner was to receive ‘a slot to come down town and work at the big paper.'”
Bayless, facing personal and professional pressure, described it as “sink or swim.”
Read the full article here