Ron Harper, the five-time NBA champion best known for his stints with Michael Jordan’sBulls and Kobe Bryant’s Lakers, has inserted himself into one of the NFL’s more contentious rookie sagas.
Harper took to social media to address the skirmish brewing around Cleveland Browns first-year Shedeur Sanders, declaring that the rookie quarterback had been mistreated by the Browns.
Shedeur Sanders confident in Browns roster spot
“No NFL team owners and coaches want them,” he said.
Harper’s comments-crisp and unmistakable-add a splash of notoriety to Sanders’ preseason struggles. Harper, having played at the game’s highest echelons, is no stranger to locker-room politics, and his remark underscores how divisive Sanders’ treatment by the Browns has become.
Sanders struggles to impress
Sanders, a fifth-round pick whose NFL debut has sparked polarized reactions, has faced underwhelming preseason performances, most notably against the Los Angeles Rams, where he went 3-for-6 for just 14 yards and was sacked five times.
Despite making Cleveland’s initial 53-man roster, Sanders remains fourth on the depth chart behind established names like Joe Flacco, Kenny Pickett, and fellow rookie Dillon Gabriel.
Fans and analysts alike questioned head coach Kevin Stefanski’s decision to pull Sanders during a critical two-minute drill late in the Rams game. Hall of Famers like Derek Carr and Kurt Warner publicly voiced their dismay, suspecting Sanders wasn’t getting the reps he needed to develop.
Yet Stefanski brushed off the criticism: “I’m committed to his development just like all of our rookies. We’ll continue to focus on getting our guys better,” he emphasized.
Fast-forward to roster reduction and quarterback hierarchy reshuffles: the Browns have since traded depth for clarity, cutting Tyler Huntley and firming up that Sanders stays in the mix-albeit on the fringe.
Despite the growing noise, Cleveland radio host Ken Carman defended the organization in no uncertain terms: “They are doing everything they can to provide the fairest shot possible for him. They are not trying to sabotage or break Shedeur Sanders.”
From draft bombshell to preseason firestorm
Sanders’ road to the NFL was anything but smooth. Widely projected as an early-round pick, he tumbled to the fifth round-a fall attributed to a cocktail of critical evaluations: concerns about arm strength, NFL readiness, off-field demeanor, and the influence of his media-savvy father, Deion Sanders.
Some draft insiders even alleged the NFL wanted to “make an example” of him by suppressing his stock. But skeptics dismissed these theories as conspiratorial, pointing to the league’s bottom-line reliance on marketable stars.
Now, in Cleveland, the rookie is fighting perception as much as opposition. Sanders’ rough outings were met with sharply negative feedback, including nicknames like “Shedont Sanders,” while other fans heralded him as an emerging QB1. His lone standout came earlier in preseason, completing 14-of-23 passes for two touchdowns in a win over the Panthers.
Ron Harper’s candid critique, however unfiltered, amplifies the spotlight on Sanders. It underscores a deepening debate: Does the Browns’ coaching staff genuinely believe in Sanders’ upside-or are they managing optics ahead of a defining rookie year?