Browns rookie QB Shedeur Sanders ticketed after police say he drove 101 mph in Cleveland suburb
Cleveland Browns quarterback Shedeur Sanders (12) sits on the field after practice at NFL football minicamp in Berea, Ohio, Wednesday, June 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)
Cleveland Browns quarterback Shedeur Sanders (12) sits on the field after practice at NFL football minicamp in Berea, Ohio, Wednesday, June 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)
STRONGSVILLE, Ohio (AP) — Browns rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders is accused of driving a pickup truck 101 mph (163 kilometers per hour) on a suburban Cleveland interstate earlier this week.
The Strongsville Police Department stopped Sanders at about 12:30 a.m. Tuesday in a 60 mph (97 kilometers per hour) zone on Interstate 71 near the Ohio Turnpike, according to a report provided to local media.
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Sanders, 23, could pay a $250 fine to waive the fourth-degree misdemeanor case, according to police.
The Browns did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Sanders, the son of Hall of Fame player Deion Sanders, was drafted in the fifth round (144th overall) of the NFL draft this spring, even though many projections had him going in the first round. He played under his father at the University of Colorado.
Sanders is competing against three other quarterbacks with the Browns. They wrapped up minicamp last week and will open training camp in late July.
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Rangers manager Warburton dealt with it in a rational way. 'I spoke to Nathan. I said to him, 'We're winning the game, this is Rangers, and that means it's a cup final for the opposition, so understand the reaction. They're at home, they're getting beaten, everyone's there watching, you come on as a young Tottenham boy and you're doing a rainbow flick'. 'I said, 'I love the fact you've got the courage to try something, I love the fact you go out and entertain the fans. If you're doing it for a purpose and it comes off and we create something from it, great. If you try it for a reason and it doesn't come off, I understand. But make sure there's a purpose to what you're doing. The moment you disrespect an opponent, then there's a different tone to the conversation'. 'And he said, 'I was genuinely trying to beat the guy. It's what I would do in training'.' Occasionally, a player will realise that they've overstepped the mark with their showboating. In 2005, Wycombe Wanderers' Nathan Tyson got down on all fours to head a ball over the line after the Wrexham goalkeeper had misjudged the bounce. Watched by several Premier League scouts at the time, Tyson instantly regretted his actions and feared he would, in his words, come across as a 'cocky nugget'. Advertisement 'I don't know what came over me,' he said. 'It was so pub-football-like. I feel sorry for the goalkeeper. He was a young lad, and I never meant to rub his nose in it. It was just intended as a bit of fun, and I would never do it again.' Kerlon's seal dribble, which involved him running along with the ball balanced on his forehead, was anything but a one-off. It was a move that he had perfected at a young age in Brazil through hours and hours of training with his father, and almost impossible to stop him once that ball was bobbing up and down on his brow. But it was not, Kerlon says, a party trick that he pulled out just for the sake of it. 'I think it was a solution I had available to me, a way of getting out of a tricky situation,' he told The Athletic last year. 'I never walked out onto the field planning to do it. It was just something that would happen naturally.' Kerlon ran into problems — literally. He was kicked, tripped and, in the Belo Horizonte derby in September 2007, hit with such force and so crudely by the Atletico Mineiro full-back Coelho, that he was fortunate not to suffer a serious injury. The fallout in the days and weeks that followed was evidence of how divisive showboating, or a piece of unique individual skill, can be — even in a country with Brazil's football history. 'If I was in Coelho's shoes, I would have clattered Kerlon,' Luiz Alberto, the captain of rival club Fluminense, said. 'It's disrespectful to his opponents. They are professionals too. I would find some way to get the ball from him. I would use capoeira (an Afro-Brazilian martial art) moves if I had to. I would take the ball, his head and everything else.' Others, including the future Brazil manager Dorival Junior, Atletico midfielder Maicosuel ('You have to have ability to do that') and readers of Placar magazine, came out in support of Kerlon. 'It brings people to the stadium in the same way Garrincha's feints once did,' Cassio Mauricio wrote in a letter that was published. 'People sometimes see it as a slur,' Lee Trundle says, sounding mildly annoyed. 'Football, especially now, is played in a way where everything's possession. And, for me, it's boring. For me, showboating is expressing yourself as a player. So I don't see it as a bad thing. 'When I did the one where I rolled it around my shoulders and Peter Jackson (the opposition manager who was in charge of Huddersfield Town at the time) said, 'He's disrespecting players'… well, how are you disrespecting a player? If you do a two-footed tackle on someone, no one will come out and say, 'He's disrespected that player'. For me, that's worse than rolling the ball around your shoulders or nutmegging someone.' Advertisement Trundle never played in the Premier League. He spent the majority of his career in the lower leagues of English football with Wrexham and Swansea City. For a period in the 2000s, though, he was known as the 'Showboat King' in the UK, certainly on the hugely popular television show Soccer AM, where his flicks and tricks and outrageous goals gained him a cult following that continues to this day. We can't ignore the ballers of the #EFL 😤 Take it away Lee Trundle 🔥 #EFLMen — Sky Bet (@SkyBet) September 11, 2024 Trundle is still playing semi-professionally in Wales at the age of 48 and scoring jaw-dropping goals. Last week, he was taking part in the Baller League in front of Will Smith. 'I like to express myself and I like to have fun on the pitch,' Trundle says, smiling. Aside from the broken nose that he suffered in a six-a-side game as a 17-year-old after putting the ball through the legs of a player who had threatened to punch him if he nutmegged him again (Trundle, being Trundle, also said 'Shut them' as the ball disappeared one side and came out the other), he was never on the receiving end of any physical retribution in a proper match for his showboating. 'On a professional pitch, players will say stuff, but when are they ever going to do it?' Trundle adds. Indeed, the reaction of players and fans to showboating is, to an extent, a reflection of the football culture in that country. Xavi, for example, made some interesting remarks about his former Barcelona team-mate Neymar's rainbow flick against Athletic Club after he had moved to the Qatari club Al Sadd. 'Those things in Brazil are accepted, but not so much (in Spain),' Xavi told Sport. 'He (Neymar) should reflect on it because he's an extraordinary guy, a hard worker and humble. But he has this Brazilian trait, which sees such things as part of the show. (In Spain), it looks like a lack of respect.' Advertisement Warburton, who is currently the sporting director and head of soccer for Sporting Club Jacksonville in the United Soccer League, nods in agreement. 'That's a major point (about the culture),' he says. 'One of the reasons I responded so quickly to your message (asking to talk about Oduwa and showboating) is that over here, in the States, people see something like that as being magical. 'I watched a game the other day where the team were defending a goal and the defender cleared it with an overhead kick, like a scissor kick, and the crowd went nuts. They were really like, 'Wow!', and they applauded it. It's a different audience.' In truth, most football supporters around the world enjoy a bit of showboating and all the more so if the main protagonist is playing for our team. Celtic fans still talk about the day Lubomir Moravcik controlled a ball with his backside against Heart of Midlothian, while Newcastle United supporters of a certain age will always smile when they think about Kenny Wharton sitting on the ball against Luton Town to get his own back for the humiliation they had suffered in a 4-0 defeat at Kenilworth Road earlier in the season. Go back a bit further to 1972 and Don Revie's Leeds United were playing exhibition football against Southampton, in much the same way as PSV did against Liverpool more than fifty years later. 'It's almost cruel,' Barry Davies, the BBC commentator, famously said as Johnny Giles produced a rabona in the middle of a 39-pass sequence. On This Day 1972 #lufc'To say that Leeds are playing with Southampton is the understatement of the season''Oh look at that, it's almost Cruel!'Barry Davies great commentary on the great Leeds United.#lufc #lufc100 @LUFC @TheSquareBall — LEEDS UNITED MEMORIES (@LUFCHistory) March 4, 2020 Showboating, in other words, has been around for a long time, and it's hard to escape the feeling that the good outweighs the bad, especially in an era when football increasingly looks the same. 'You don't want to kill that entertainment value,' Warburton adds. 'If the kids see a trick, buy into that skill, go and get a football and start copying it, that can't be a bad thing. We want players to be brave and to try things with a ball.' (Illustration: Kelsea Petersen; Ana Maria Ortero / AP Photo, Anthony Wallace / Getty, Sebastian Frej / Getty)