logo
Shedeur Sanders' mom steals spotlight again in latest NFL appearance... days after being slammed for 'embarrassing' behavior

Shedeur Sanders' mom steals spotlight again in latest NFL appearance... days after being slammed for 'embarrassing' behavior

Daily Mail​16 hours ago
Just days after stealing the headlines at her son Shedeur's NFL debut for the Cleveland Browns, Pilar Sanders has returned to the sport - this time for her other son Shilo.
The brothers have both landed in the NFL after playing college ball together at Colorado - coached by their father Deion - last season.
And it appears their mom will be very busy this season as she travels across the country to take in both of their fledgling careers - with plenty of social media posts to boot.
After she was slammed by some for her 'embarrassing' sideline behavior at Shedeur's game last weekend, she returned to the spotlight in a custom dress with Shilo's face on for his Tampa Bay Buccaneers debut.
Posting on social media, she wrote: 'First NFL Game and Yep @shilosanders brangs that BOOM �� Everytime! #proudmom #tampabaybuccaneers #shilosanders #28'
In a series of videos and photos, the 50-year-old - who is separated from the NFL stars' father Deion - showed off her red outfit and vlogged her experience at the game.
Last week, she was ripped by Browns fans after traveling to watch Shedeur - fourth-choice quarterback - make his own first appearance in the pro game.
She watched on from the sidelines on the day and, after the game, shared a video of herself celebrating the occasion. The caption read: 'Aaaaaand you know itttt!!! Momma's always present!'
Some fans, however, were not impressed by Pilar's actions and swiftly made their feelings known by responding in the comments to her Instagram post.
One fan wrote: 'I would be embarrassed if my 60-year-old mom conducted herself like that'. For clarity, Pilar Sanders is 50.
'She acted like a kid,' another said. Meanwhile one user brutally commented: 'She is so annoying'.
One fan, however, did leave a lengthy comment. They said: 'But as a mother pulling up to my son's games, I would conduct myself differently. This is young woman behavior. You are so fine.
Pilar received some heat online for her behavior at Shedeur's game last weekend
Shedeur is fourth-choice quarterback at Cleveland and is battling to make the final roster
'You dont have to be posting pic licking your teeth and wiggling. Im not hating at all, but her sons are so respectful and respected by many in the world, that she should just carry herself showing more class'.
Fans were left stunned by Sanders balling out on his debut in the NFL, with one even calling it 'history-making', and another claiming he has 'proven his doubters wrong'.
Shilo also enjoyed a productive debut, and has turned himself into a fans' favorite in Tampa Bay in a very short space of time.
It is as yet unclear whether he will make the final roster ahead of the season, but he is being tipped to be picked up elsewhere should he fall short in Tampa Bay.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Michigan football hit with record fine and Jim Harbaugh given 10-year penalty for sign-stealing scandal
Michigan football hit with record fine and Jim Harbaugh given 10-year penalty for sign-stealing scandal

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Michigan football hit with record fine and Jim Harbaugh given 10-year penalty for sign-stealing scandal

The NCAA has imposed significant penalties on the University of Michigan, including fines expected to exceed $20m, and a three-game suspension for coach Sherrone Moore, following a protracted sign-stealing scandal that has overshadowed the college football programme for nearly two years. Moore, who had already been issued a self-imposed two-game suspension by Michigan, will now also be banned from the first game of the 2026-27 season, completing his three-game total. He has also been issued a two-year show-cause order, though he will be permitted to fulfil coaching commitments. The financial sanctions are substantial, comprising a $50,000 fine, a 10 per cent fine on the football programme's budget, a 10 per cent fine on Michigan's 2025-26 scholarships, and a penalty equivalent to the anticipated loss of postseason revenue for the 2025 and 2026 seasons. Further restrictions include a 25 per cent reduction in official visits during the upcoming season and a 14-week prohibition on football recruiting communications throughout the probation period. Connor Stalions, a former low-level staffer who orchestrated the scouting and sign-stealing operation, has received an eight-year show-cause order. Jim Harbaugh, the former Michigan coach, faces a 10-year show-cause order, effective from August 2028, following the conclusion of his previous four-year order. Both Stalions and Harbaugh are prohibited from engaging in all athletically related activities. While the NCAA does not explicitly ban sign-stealing, its rules prohibit schools from sending scouts to future opponents' games and using electronic equipment to record another team's signals. The NCAA's investigation, which surfaced early in the 2023 season, alleged that Moore violated rules as an assistant under Harbaugh, including accusations of deleting text messages with Stalions before their recovery. Harbaugh, who departed the Wolverines after their 2023 national championship win to coach the Los Angeles Chargers, previously served a three-game suspension in connection with the Big Ten's investigation into the allegations. Stalions, who did not participate in the NCAA investigation, recently claimed to have known almost every signal used by opponents in seven games over two seasons. Despite Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti's recent suggestion that Michigan's football programme should not face further sanctions, the NCAA has proceeded with these significant penalties. Michigan is set to open its season on 30 August at home against New Mexico State, followed by a match against Oklahoma on 6 September. ___

York football fan to fly plane to Cornwall for match
York football fan to fly plane to Cornwall for match

BBC News

time26 minutes ago

  • BBC News

York football fan to fly plane to Cornwall for match

A football fan from Yorkshire is planning a 600-mile (about 970km) round trip to Cornwall to watch his home team's opening league City fan David Bower is aiming to pilot a four-seater Piper Warrior to Newquay Airport on Saturday morning, before making the onward journey to newly-promoted Truro match will be Truro City's first ever in the National League, the fifth tier of English Bower said he was unsure how he and his brother - who is flying with him - would make their way from the airport to the ground, but would sort it out on the day. He said: "I am a runner, it's about 15 miles so it would probably take about two hours, but my brother wouldn't want to do that - we'll probably take a taxi or get the bus."Mr Bower has had a pilot's licence for about 30 years and has flown to three previous York City games, though the furthest he had previously flown was Exeter. Mr Bower said he "couldn't believe it" when he saw York's opening fixture, as Truro's manager John Askey previously managed York, adding "he was well liked".Mr Bower predicted York should beat Truro as they were a "fluid attacking side" that played a "really nice style of football".However he said he was "really pleased" Truro, whose players include ex-York City striker Sam Sanders, were promoted last season and felt they should "do alright"."Truro are the unknown entity, aren't they, so I hope they do well - apart from Saturday."

Hateful anti-white posts of woke writer for prestigious Conde Nast magazine
Hateful anti-white posts of woke writer for prestigious Conde Nast magazine

Daily Mail​

time26 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Hateful anti-white posts of woke writer for prestigious Conde Nast magazine

A staff writer for The New Yorker has sparked backlash over a slew of shocking anti-white tweets. Doreen St. Felix, a journalist who has also written for Vogue and Time Magazine, swiftly deleted her social media after X users brought up her tweets about how 'whiteness fills me with a lot of hate.' In other tweets, she wrote that 'whiteness must be abolished', that she 'would be heartbroken if I had kids with a white guy' and that white people's lack of hygiene once started a plague. 'I hate white men,' the 33 year-old Haitian-American writer said in yet another post, which was first highlighted by conservative journalist Chris Rufo. 'You all are the worst. Go nurse your f***ing Oedipal complexes and leave the earth to the browns and the women.' St. Felix found her corrosive missives in the spotlight after writing for the Conde Nast-owned magazine about the controversy surrounding actress Sydney Sweeney 's American Eagle jeans campaign. The article slammed Sweeney's fans for 'wanting to recruit her as a kind of Aryan princess', and said there were plenty of reasons' not to like the actress's advert. Social media users flooded the New Yorker's X post on the article with St Felix's tweets, with one responding: 'She doesn't seem very neutral...' 'I think it may not be about the jeans,' another said, with screenshots of the writer's inflammatory tweets, some of which date back a decade. In one of the resurfaced posts, St Felix admitted that she 'writes like no white is watching.' St Felix's fascination with the Earth before whites continued in other posts, with one saying that 'we lived in perfect harmony w/ the earth pre whiteness.' 'All humans are not the reason the earth is in peril,' she wrote. 'White capitalism is.' Despite her disdain for capitalism, St Felix appears to benefit from its fruits. Her address listed as a $1.3 million home in a gated Brooklyn community which faces a pretty marina. In another post from 2015, she said that 'it's really gonna suck when we have a white president again.' 'White people, who literally started a plague because they couldn't wash their asses, need never say they taught black people hygiene,' she said in another. In one confusing take, St Felix said that 'middle class white people think hospitals are places to go when you're sick - that the police are who you go to when you need safety.' St Felix deleted her social media after the tweets resurfaced, and she could not be reached for comment. Daily Mail has contacted Conde Nast and the New Yorker for reaction to St Felix's missives. St Felix has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 2017, and is a regular contributor to the weekly column Critics Notebook, according to her New Yorker profile. She was previously editor-at-large at Lenny Letter, a newsletter by actress Lena Dunham, and was a culture writer at MTV News. In 2016, the year after many of her tweets about white people were sent, she was named on Forbes' '30 Under 30' media list. In 2017, she was a finalist for a National Magazine Award for Columns and Commentary, and, in 2019, she won in the same category.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store