Friday, La Recruue des Browns began Friday, giving the club its first opportunity to see the recruits of 2025 on the field – including the choice of fifth round Sheder Sanders.
While Sanders and QB third round Dillon Gabriel are expected to contact the media on Saturday, director general Andrew Berry spoke of former Colorado QB in an interview with Ken Carman and Anthony Lima on 92.3 The fan in Cleveland on Friday morning.
During the segment, Berry said on several occasions that Sanders focuses on two things: doing the team and winning a role. And it’s the same for all recruits, even if Sanders is more popular as a fifth round choice than anyone in the club’s draft class.
“I know that it leads to a lot of conversations and interest in the media and outside – and it is understandable,” said Berry. “But for us, we are still talking about the elimination of external problems. It doesn’t really matter in terms of work, how we are preparing. And in terms of sheDer, His great thing is to do the team and win a role.
“Listening to outside noise does nothing to help accomplish them.”
Berry noted that the Browns have structured their mini-recruit mini-camp a little differently so that Sanders and Gabriel can draw quality repetitions. But Berry added that this is more than the two recruits can withdraw from the next four months, that head coach Kevin Stefanski and the offensive coordinator Tommy Rees built a plan.
“We usually took four quarters to the camp,” said Berry. “Now, the distribution of representatives had always been a little different because we had a clearer or at least rooted starter. And therefore this year, obviously, is a little different. But I think they have done a very good work of intersane programming and I think that the plans we have for the training camp and the pre-season, there will be a lot of exceeding to assess these four passers-by.”
The Browns also have Joe Facco and Kenny Pickett as healthy quarters on their list, so it will be interesting to see how they will end up distributing representatives throughout the off -season program and the training camp.
But when asked what specific elements the Browns wanted to challenge Sanders, Berry gave the whole class of first -year players.
“Yes, I would say that it is less to challenge it specifically and more on our recruits in general,” said Berry. “They must all quickly set up the learning curve. They are in a new system, they are in a new environment, they learn new skills somehow at work. And I will look like Kevin, but it is to make the team, nobody here has done the team yet.