Deion Sanders Makes Painful Shedeur Sanders Admission
Deion Sanders Makes Painful Shedeur Sanders Admission originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
At long last, Colorado Buffaloes head football coach Deion Sanders went on the record with his true feelings about his son, Shedeur Sanders, falling to the Cleveland Browns in the 2025 NFL Draft.
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More than one month after the Buffaloes' projected first-round QB prospect unexpectedly dropped to the 144th overall pick in the fifth round, Coach Prime admitted to Asante Samuel how it felt to see his son get passed up round after round.
"They want to create these narratives and create these stories and then attach them to a kid that ain't never done nothing wrong," Sanders said on Samuel's "Say What Needs To Be Said" podcast on Friday.
"How did that make you feel?" asked the former New England Patriots and Philadelphia Eagles cornerback.
Cleveland Browns quarterback Shedeur Sanders (left) and his father, Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders (right).Ken Blaze, Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images
"You have no idea, man," the Colorado coach expressed with a twinge of sadness in his voice. "You have no idea."
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Deion specifically referenced the allegations that Shedeur went into pre-draft interviews with NFL teams unprepared, including the rumor that the 23-year-old quarterback wore headphones during a meeting.
Even as Samuel tried to move the conversation onto other topics, Coach Prime took one last chance to publicly share how much pain he felt during Shedeur's draft slide.
"It did hurt, though," he admitted.
Meanwhile, Shedeur is busy proving his worth on the field to his new team during Cleveland's organized team activities (OTAs) this offseason.
"I like everything there is about Shedeur," Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski told ESPN Cleveland of the rookie's off-field demeanor.
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He is in a quarterback battle that includes fellow Browns rookie Dillon Gabriel and NFL veterans Deshaun Watson, Joe Flacco and Kenny Pickett.
Related: Shedeur Sanders' Behavior Makes Impression on Browns QB Joe Flacco
Related: Deion Sanders Had Words After Shedeur's Second Day of Browns Camp
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 1, 2025, where it first appeared.
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It's the most prescribed antibiotic in the United States, used by tens of millions of people every year to treat bacterial infections including pneumonia, stomach ulcers, and strep throat. Yet, it isn't exactly common knowledge that amoxicillin, a relative of penicillin that has been in chronic short supply, has only one manufacturer in the US, or that China controls 80% of the raw materials required for its production. That's a major concern as US President Donald Trump threatens to impose tariffs on pharmaceutical imports, throwing a spotlight on America's dependence on critical drug supplies from abroad. 'Increasing trade hostilities or more protracted conflicts could devastate our access to amoxicillin or the ingredients used to make it should Beijing weaponize its supply chain dominance,' Rick Jackson, founder and CEO of Jackson Healthcare, which owns America's sole amoxicillin manufacturer, told CNN. 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Chinese manufacturers have also benefited from Beijing's policy incentives and subsidies for the pharmaceutical sector since the early 2000s, which led to industry clusters springing up in the country, said Qingpeng Zhang, an associate professor at the University of Hong Kong's LKS Faculty of Medicine. 'These industry clusters, which help drive down overall costs while maintaining quality … ultimately made China an ideal location for the production of generics and APIs within a free trade environment,' he said. Besides lower costs, the environmental impact of drug production also contributed to China's rise in this sector, as the US and European Union often have stricter environmental regulation, according to Ronald Piervincenzi, CEO of USP. Even India, the world's top supplier of generics, relies on China for APIs and other key ingredients. In fact, 70% of India's API imports come from China, according to a 2023 report commissioned by the Indian government. 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In 2015, Chinese leader Xi Jinping unveiled his signature 'Made in China 2025' industrial strategy, which identified biopharma and advanced medical products as key sectors for development in its broader push to reduce the country's reliance on foreign technology. The Covid-19 pandemic further exposed global dependence on China for pharmaceutical supplies – and served as a reminder to Beijing of the strategic advantage that that dominance provides. In a state-run magazine in 2020, Xi said China must consolidate its leadership in its advantageous industries, and 'tighten global industrial chains' dependence on China to build strong countermeasures and deterrent capabilities against deliberate external supply cutoffs.' In 2021, during the height of the epidemic, China's National Development and Reform Commission, the state planner, highlighted APIs as a 'key strength in China's pharmaceutical industry's participation in global competition.' 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