Shedeur Sanders Defies the Odds, Graduates College One Year After NFL Draft Gamble

May 5, 2026

Shedeur Sanders seems unable to avoid being the center of attention. Just like his father, Deion Sanders, he acts as a magnet for notice— drawing both admiration and controversy.

The glare has followed the young scholar-athlete throughout his life, yet this occasion wasn’t about football. It marked a milestone every parent hopes to witness: watching a child step into the real world after graduation.

After hanging up his college jersey the prior year, Deion’s youngest son returned to the University of Colorado in cap and gown.

Shedeur Sanders’ graduation should have been a straightforward triumph, but it soon sparked another round of social media debate about the route to his success. (Photo: @shedeursanders/Instagram)

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Shedeur walked across Folsom Field to receive his sociology degree, after stints at Colorado and Jackson State. For a quarterback entering the NFL, the moment was notable, drawing both praise and scrutiny.

In a string of Instagram posts, he chronicled the day with gratitude and his trademark assurance.

In one image, he mirrored one of his father’s most iconic pregame rituals — only this time replacing the football uniform with a neatly arranged cap, gown, and cleats. The caption read: “Thank you, God.”

In a clip posted by the school’s athletics department, Sanders stood among his classmates and said, “What’s up? We at graduation… It’s called excellence, man. It’s excellence.”

But what should have been a straightforward celebration didn’t stay that way for long.

Within hours, fans and critics flooded the school’s X account with reactions ranging from genuine support to thinly veiled shade.

“A graduate in Sociology with a 3.9 GPA — congrats to the young man for finishing,” one user wrote.

Another added, “Congrats to my guy!! Got to be smart not only on the field but off it too for the present & ur future after football!!”

Not everyone was clapping, though. “Good for him! He’s going to need that degree soon!” one commenter posted, while another went further: “He’ll need it when everyone figures out he can’t play QB.”

Others pushed back. “Good for him. It’s sad so many people wanna see this kid fail… if Primetime was your Dad, you’d have some ego too,” one supporter wrote.

The debate was fueled by comments from Deion Sanders earlier this month, when he discussed how modern college athletes balance academics.

“You did it son and I’m truly Proud of u,” Deion wrote on Instagram. “To EARN a degree from @cubuffs is an accomplishment of commitment and something u focused on and achieved it with a multitude of distractions. @shedeursanders.”

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Danielle Brooks

I am a staff writer at New York Beacon, where I focus on culture, entrepreneurship, and the emerging voices redefining Black America. My work highlights innovators, artists, and founders whose stories often unfold beyond mainstream headlines but shape communities in meaningful ways. Through precise reporting and thoughtful storytelling, I aim to document progress, challenge narratives, and contribute to a stronger Black press tradition.