Shedeur Sanders’ late-game miscues, including two critical sacks and an intentional grounding penalty, sealed a 23-20 loss to the Bills and amplified the uncertainty surrounding his viability as the Cleveland Browns’ long-term starting quarterback.
The Cleveland Browns’ 2025 season has been a crucible for rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders, and Sunday’s performance against the Buffalo Bills was its most defining test yet. With two opportunities to orchestrate a game-winning drive, Sanders instead delivered a masterclass in late-game mismanagement, taking two costly sacks and committing an intentional grounding penalty that effectively sealed a 23-20 defeat.
The loss drops Cleveland to a dismal 3-12, but the more significant casualty may be the confidence in Sanders as the franchise’s answer under center. In a game where he had a chance to silence doubters, his decisions only amplified the questions that have followed him all season.
A Tale of Two Halves and Costly Turnovers
Sanders’ day began with promise. He completed his first eight passes for 84 yards, including a touchdown strike to tight end Harold Fannin Jr. The early efficiency showcased the arm talent that made him a high draft pick, a detail confirmed by the official game statistics.
However, his ninth pass proved to be a pivotal moment. A throw behind rookie running back Quinshon Judkins caromed off his shoulder pad and into the waiting arms of Bills safety Jordan Poyer. This first interception was more than a turnover; it was a momentum-shifter that hinted at the inconsistency to come.
The Bills, led by the electric running of James Cook, capitalized. Cook, now the league’s leading rusher, averaged a staggering 11.1 yards per carry in the first half, punctuated by a breathtaking 44-yard touchdown scamper where he left multiple Cleveland defenders grasping at air.
Sanders’ second interception was even more damaging. Early in the third quarter, deep in Cleveland territory, his pass was batted at the line by defensive end Joey Bosa and intercepted by defensive tackle DaQuan Jones. The Bills converted the short field into three points, extending their lead to 23-10.
The Crushing Weight of the Fourth Quarter
To his credit, Sanders did not fold. He helped engineer a 14-play, 67-yard drive that chewed 8:01 off the clock, culminating in a field goal that made it a one-score game. The drive was a testament to a surprisingly effective Browns ground game, which racked up 160 yards against a Bills defense that entered ranked 30th against the run.
Andre Szmyt’s 41-yard field goal midway through the fourth quarter cut the Bills’ lead to 23-20, setting the stage for Sanders’ final act.
He had two chances to become a hero. The first opportunity died on a blind-side sack on fourth-and-2 in Browns territory. After a defensive stand gave him another possession with time dwindling, Sanders took another ill-timed sack. Then, while desperately trying to avoid a safety, he committed an intentional grounding penalty just outside his own end zone.
These were not the errors of a player let down by his teammates; they were fundamental failures in situational awareness and clock management from the one player who can least afford them.
Beyond Sanders: A Team Fraught with Adversity
While Sanders’s performance will dominate headlines, the game was also a microcosm of Cleveland’s injury-ravaged season. The Browns lost running back Quinshon Judkins to a broken leg, a significant blow confirmed by the team’s official injury report. Sanders himself briefly left the game with a bloody pinkie finger on his throwing hand, though he did return.
Defensively, Myles Garrett’s pursuit of history added a compelling subplot. He entered the game needing just one sack to tie Michael Strahan and T.J. Watt for the single-season record. He was credited with only half a sack, leaving him achingly close to joining that elite company.
His relentless pressure did, however, contribute to a frightening moment for Buffalo. Late in the first half, a furiously retreating Josh Allen tumbled for a loss of 22 yards and came up limping with a right foot injury. Allen headed to the locker room before halftime, but X-rays were negative, and he returned to finish the game 12-of-19 for 130 passing yards.
The Lingering Question in Cleveland
The final analysis of Shedeur Sanders’ rookie year is complex. The flashes of elite talent are undeniable. His toughness, evidenced by returning from injury, is commendable. But football is a results-oriented business, and the results in crucial moments have been damning.
The Browns’ front office now faces an offseason of profound questions. Does Sanders’ arm talent and pedigree outweigh his concerning decision-making and pocket awareness? Was the supporting cast, battered by injuries, too diminished to properly evaluate him? Or do these late-game failures reveal a ceiling that isn’t high enough for a franchise aspiring to contend?
Sunday’s game against the Bills was supposed to be an audition. Instead, it felt like a rerun of a frustrating season-long theme. For Shedeur Sanders and the Cleveland Browns, the most important drive of the year ended not with a touchdown, but with a thud—and the echoing questions that will define their future.
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