Gabriel embracing the addition of Sanders to the Browns QB competition

Berea, Ohio – The selection of Cleveland’s Browns of the Dillon Gabriel quarter in the third round of the NFL draft was a general surprise for a fixed player as a choice of day 3 – but he quickly overshadowed by the team who took Sheder Sanders in the fifth round to finish his shocking fall.
Sanders has made the headlines inside and outside Cleveland since the choice, but Gabriel said that he was kissing his compatriot to a congested quarter room.
“I love it,” said Gabriel on Saturday before the second recruit minicamp practice of the Browns. “I love it because of who he is. I think just for the two of us, you can learn from each other, but it’s not only both in the room. At least for the moment. But he has entered the year, Kenny [Pickett]Joe [Flacco] And even Deshaun [Watson]Just a bunch of guys who played a bunch of ball that we can all learn from each other. “”
Sanders, on the other hand, said on Saturday that his goal was not to prove that anyone wrong after the superb fall in the draft.
“It’s just me against me,” said Sanders. “I cannot control any other decision apart from that. So I’m just trying to be my best me at all times. … My work here is not to prove that people are wrong. I am doing well.”
On the first day of the Minicamp recruit, Sanders and Gabriel shared training representatives, Gabriel taking the first handful of shots in team exercises, although coach Kevin Stefanski has minimized the training order. Stefanski added that the work of recruits in Minicamp is competition and teaching and that the battle of the quarter in the coming months would be a “global evaluation”.
Sanders and Gabriel go to pros after a long and successful university career. Sanders was a four -year -old player at FCS Jackson State before following his father, Deion, Colorado. Gabriel was a six -year -old who made 63 departures during stays at Oregon, Oklahoma and UCF.
Despite a quarter room with many leaving contenders, Gabriel said he wanted to approach each practice as if he is the starter.
“I only know one way of preparing myself,” said Gabriel. “I only know one way of working, and it’s like the starter. I played a bunch of ball and I have a lot of experience, so I will use it to my advantage. … I think every day I approach, it’s as if I was going to look for this representative, and I saw it like that.”




