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BREAKING: Todd Monken & Mike Bajakian Just CONFIRMED the Truth About Shedeur Sanders!

Look at your watches. Look at the calendars on your walls. The whistle has blown. The gates have latched shut. And the Cleveland Browns have officially dispersed. The clock has struck midnight on the mandatory mini camp. And as of this moment, we are staring down the barrel of a six-week void, a dead zone where the fields are empty.

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But the implications of what just transpired are screaming for our attention. We have hit the break. And while most people are looking toward the beach or the golf course, we need to have a very serious, very uncomfortable conversation about what happened on those practice fields over the last few days because the propaganda machine is spinning.

The narratives are being polished. And if you aren’t paying close attention to the actual words coming out of the mouths of the men in charge, you are going to miss the most significant shift this franchise has seen in years. We need to talk about reality versus delusion. We need to talk about the difference between a player who is operating a machine and a player who is trying to remember where he left the keys to one.

I have watched the tape. I have listened to the press conferences and I have analyzed the transcripts from coach Todd Monkin and QB coach Mike and what I am seeing is a collision between technical excellence and emotional sentimentality. If you strip away the jersey numbers and the names on the back and you just look at the mechanics of the game, >> what is it? 10 or 12 weeks, whatever it’s been, he’s done a great job of of defining his footwork, playing with a base, uh, learning the offense, working his butt off to, you know, to

really master his craft. And it’s been fun to watch Sean. He’s done a really good job. He’s gone like that. He’s getting through progressions, getting through progressions faster. Uh, and his feet are matching that that that mindset. >> Todd, just to put a bow on this, uh, since we didn’t get to talk to you yesterday, now mini camp is officially over.

Last time we talked to you, you said chances are you will not have your quarterback. >> Yeah, I don’t see that. >> So, you’re just going to go into the summer break, status quo, and come back. >> We’ll start off all camp just like we’ve been doing. We’ll alternate those guys. Will you ever will you have a run with me by uh having the pads on which push into the second week of training camp? >> That’d be great.

I don’t know if I will, but I’d love to. I’d love to have it now. We just do. >> Todd, what has stood out to you about Shor’s body at work? I know we talked about the progress that he made, but you know, he’s put a cap on a workout program kind of encapsulate uh the growth that you see. >> Well, I just think he’s doing a better job.

I think he’s being more decisive now. It’s easy to say we’re not in pads. It just feels like he’s making quicker decisions. The ball’s coming out of his hands, which he’s going to have to do. Not that he doesn’t have playmaking ability cuz he does. But his ability to process quicker and get the ball out of his hands and eliminate lost yardage plays is going to be huge for us to be able to stack plays and score, which is ultimately the number one thing to do.

But is that the point of waiting for pads to >> to determine your one, two, three? >> 100%. >> It’s hard to really say. >> It’s hard to say. And >> you know, I mean, whether it would have been a little legit pressure, it wouldn’t have been. Would he have had all that time, I don’t know. There’s still a lot to see quarterbacks and the old line, especially once we put the pads on.

I mean, you know, >> is there any negative since you wanted your quarterback now? Is there any negative that heading into training camp, at least at the beginning, you don’t have? >> Well, I don’t see it that way. It would be if I didn’t think either one of them were capable of of starting. I It would feel different if I didn’t feel like their progression hadn’t gotten to this point where I think they both can start and play winning football.

I’m convinced of it and I I’d say it I’d say it if I didn’t. I mean I I’m just I can’t decide now because I think both have earned the opportunity to continue to compete once we put the pads on. thought was saying yesterday he was talking about the difference in system and he said there’s a lot more more responsibility on the quarterback in this you know kind of paraphrasing a little bit but the responsibility placed on the quarterback play [clears throat] you know what they’re asked to do is different um I you would think that would be the case in any system but can

you maybe dissect maybe a little bit of what he’s talking about in terms of what you ask your quarterbacks to do that might be a while. I don’t know that. I mean, what you ask your quarterback to do is a byproduct of what they’re capable of doing and how much ownership they want in QB control, right? Some guys want them, some guys don’t, some guys don’t want.

>> It becomes clear that we are witnessing a revelation in the form of Shedor Sanders. Let’s start with the concept that is going to define this entire off season. It’s a phrase that Todd Monkin used and it’s a phrase that should be studied by anyone who wants to understand the psychology of an elite signal caller.

He said Shedor Sanders wants that smoke. Let that sink in for a second. Let it marinate. He wants that smoke. On the surface, it sounds like standard football jargon, a coach praising a player’s competitive fire. But when you peel back the layers, when you look at the film that Monkin is referencing, it exposes a fundamental truth about who is currently in command of this offense. You watch the footage.

You watch Shudder Sanders walk up to that line of scrimmage. He isn’t just standing there waiting for the play to happen to him. He is hunting. You see him making signals to the wide receivers, pointing out the subtle shifts in the secondary and having the sheer processing speed to change the pass progression before the ball is even snapped.

This is what Monin means by the smoke. >> Cuz when they take that control or they change a play or they change a protection, it falls on them right now. They’re the ones that have to explain why they did what they did. Not everybody wants that. Our guys want that, which is cool because again, no, not everybody wants that. Not everybody wants to be that diligent and work at it to where when the moment comes up, they’re capable at the line of scrimmage of getting us into a premium play.

And all of our guys are capable of that, which >> he is talking about a quarterback who isn’t afraid to take the wheel of a high-speed vehicle in heavy traffic. He is talking about the mental fortitude to see a defense trying to disguise a look and having the audacity to say, “I see exactly what you’re doing and I’m going to punish you for it.

” This isn’t just development. It is an assertion of dominance. While others are trying to learn the playbook, Shadir Sanders is rewriting it at the line of scrimmage. Now, we have to address the QB tracker. I’m going to be honest with you. I’m not a fan of these daily stat counts in mini camp.

They are often stripped of context and used to create false narratives. But since the media is obsessed with them, let’s look at the facts. Let’s look at the actual numbers from mandatory mini camp number three because they tell a story of surgical precision that the box score alone cannot capture. Shadur Sanders went 10 of 13. He had no touchdowns. He had no interceptions.

And to the casual fan, that might look like a pedestrian day, but you have to understand the objective. Todd Monin wasn’t asking for the long game today. He wasn’t looking for the 60-yard highlight reel throw that makes the evening news. Today was about the short game. It was about quick screens. It was about quick outs.

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