“Enough of Grandpa Flacco!” Why the Browns Must Start Shedeur Sanders—Before It’s Too Late
The Browns just lost another winnable game, and let’s be honest: it wasn’t because Joe Flacco was terrible. It was because he was exactly what we all expected—a 39-year-old quarterback with a slow release, missed timing, and zero chemistry. The offense felt stuck in oatmeal while the Bengals barely had to try. They just needed to exist long enough for Cleveland to beat itself.
This game wasn’t a total disaster. The defense showed up, the run game flashed, and receivers held onto the ball. But here’s the truth: you cannot win games in the AFC North with a quarterback who moves like he’s got dial-up internet in his cleats. This isn’t 2012. The NFL is younger, faster, and more aggressive than ever. So why are the Browns running out a walking CVS receipt under center while Shedeur Sanders sits on the sideline?
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The Browns Are Wasting Time, Momentum, and Their Future
Every week that Shedeur Sanders stays on the bench while Grandpa Joe throws seven-yard outs on third-and-13, the Browns aren’t just wasting a moment—they’re wasting a chance. They’re wasting momentum, the one thing Cleveland has never been able to sustain for more than two weeks. The formula is tired: bring in a safe veteran, run a neutered playbook, lose by one score, and spend the next week blaming “execution.”
The problem isn’t execution. The problem is vision.

You drafted Shedeur. You hyped him all offseason. You sold the jerseys, posted the Instagram graphics, and leaned into the media buzz. Now, with a middling record and the playoff race slipping away, you’re scared to use the weapon you’ve been polishing all year. Treating a rookie QB like a porcelain doll while the rest of the league throws their young guys into the fire is not how you build a winner.
Around the League, Young QBs Are Thriving—Why Not in Cleveland?
CJ Stroud is thriving in Houston. Anthony Richardson is electric in Indy. Will Levis is slinging for Tennessee. Even Bryce Young is starting to stabilize. Meanwhile, Shedeur—arguably one of the most composed, mechanically sound quarterbacks to come out of college—is running scout team against the practice squad while Joe Flacco gets televised cardio.
Let’s kill the “he’s not ready” narrative. Coaches, trainers, even the ball boys will tell you: Shedeur is prepared. He’s early, he stays late, he knows the playbook inside and out. His game awareness is higher than most guys already playing. His media poise is elite. So why is he still on the bench? Because the Browns are so scared of ruining his confidence that they’d rather ruin the season.
That logic is so backwards, it belongs in a Christopher Nolan movie.

Flacco Isn’t the Bridge—He’s the Roadblock
Flacco isn’t providing a high floor or a low-risk option. He’s giving you nothing. The offense is stagnant, the locker room energy is stale, and the fan base is teetering between despair and memes. Want to change that overnight? Start Shedeur. Even if he struggles, the energy shift alone would be seismic. Fans would show up. The offense would loosen up. The defense would dig in. You’d ignite the entire culture of the team just by saying, “We believe in the kid.”
But the Browns would rather keep duct-taping their quarterback room together with leftover parts from the 2010 Jets.
Time Is Running Out—And So Is Patience
The AFC North is brutal. The Ravens are top-tier, the Bengals are dangerous even off-rhythm, and the Steelers are annoyingly scrappy. There are no easy outs. Every game you wait is one closer to the offseason. What happens if you end the year 8-9 with Shedeur still parked on the sideline? Next year, he’s no longer the exciting rookie—he’s the guy you didn’t trust when it mattered. That label is hard to shake.
You’re not just delaying his development; you’re complicating it. And for what? So you can say you played it safe? Nobody remembers safe. People remember bold. And in Cleveland, you need bold.
The Locker Room Knows—And So Does the League
Players feel it. They know the guy under center isn’t the guy. When you’re busting your tail on defense and the offense walks out with Grandpa Joe for another three-and-out, morale cracks. The solution is right there on the sideline.
And don’t think the rest of the league isn’t watching. Miami, Atlanta, Denver—they’re all keeping tabs. If Shedeur ends up somewhere else and pops off, that’s Cleveland’s failure. That’s their legacy.
The Real Problem: Courage
The Browns don’t have a quarterback problem. They have a courage problem. Until they solve that, it won’t matter who’s under center. You’ve got the guy, the tools, the fan base begging for something different. So stop running from the future. Stop managing Shedeur like a PR asset and start treating him like a football player.
Because the only thing worse than losing games is losing the opportunity to change.
The Bottom Line
Bench Flacco. Start Shedeur. Give the fans hope. Give the team a reason to rally. Give the league a reason to take Cleveland seriously again. Or keep doing what you’re doing—and don’t be surprised when the next time Shedeur Sanders throws a touchdown, he’s wearing another team’s jersey.
Is this the slowest quarterback sabotage in NFL history, or is there still hope the Browns do the right thing before it’s too late? Drop your take in the comments, hit subscribe, and stay tuned. Because if there’s one thing the Browns are good at, it’s giving us something to talk about.