Following a disrespectful jab made during the 2025 ESPY Awards by Shane Gillis, Shedeur Sanders responded in a way that required no words, no interviews, and no public confrontation by letting his work speak for itself.
The former Colorado Buffaloes star, now playing quarterback for the Cleveland Browns in the NFL, releasing a striking, high-quality training video on Instagram less than 24 hours after the taunt aired before the United States.
Known for pushing boundaries with his humor the comedian, questioned the legitimacy of Sanders‘ jersey retirement live on air during a segment at the nationally televised ceremony.
“Shedeur Sanders had his jersey number retired at Colorado this year,” Gillis jested. “People are saying it’s because of nepotism…
“It’s not. He went 13-12 over his career & he almost won the Alamo Bowl. Definitely not nepotism?”
The remark, a dig at both his record and his relationship with his father, who is the Colorado head coach, drew awkward laughs; including from athletes like Lamar Jackson in attendance. But for those familiar with Shedeur‘s career, the jab fell flat.
And the 23-year-old didn’t respond publicly. Instead, he released a video montage showing grueling training, intense focus, and unwavering determination. In it, he’s seen sprinting, throwing, lifting, shot in dramatic, cinematic detail.
Overlaid were the only words he needed as Sanders said, “No excuses, puttin’ in the work. Do what I gotta do. ‘Bout to be time to be legendary. Whenever that time is.”
The timing, message, and production made clear that this was his answer to Gillis-and one that couldn’t be dismissed as easily as a punchline as he looks to establish himself alongside his professional peers.
Why Shane Gillis was wrong to criticize Sheduer Sanders
Critics pointing to Sanders‘ 13-12 collegiate record often overlook the context in which it was built. Talent is definitely present as he threw for 4,134 yards and 37 touchdowns-leading the Big 12 in both categories.
That same season, he was named Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year and won the prestigious Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award, given to the nation’s top senior quarterback. He was projected as a first rounder in the 2025 NFL Draft.
While Gillis mocked, the numbers and accolades suggest otherwise. The jersey hanging in the rafters isn’t a reward for wins alone. It represents what both of the Sanders, along with Travis Hunter, did together for a struggling program.
Before their arrival, Colorado had gone 1-11 and with Shedeur under center, the program was thrust back into national relevance – managing to make it to the Alamo Bowl. It was just the Buffaloes’ third bowl game since 2007.
The idea that his success was a product of nepotism ignores both the statistical dominance and leadership Sanders displayed and it’s no surprise the Browns drafted him.
There, Sanders finds himself buried deep in a crowded quarterback room and with a genuine shot at winning the starting spot ahead of Joe Flacco, Kenny Pickett and Dillon Gabriel. This time, Deion isn’t around so what will Gillis say if Shedeur accomplishes that?
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