Gabriel hugging Sanders's addition to Browns' competition


Berea, Ohio – The selection of the Cleveland Browns of the Dillon Gabriel Marshal in the third round of the NFL Draft was a generalized surprise for a player linked as a selection of day 3, but the team was quickly eclipsed by the team that took Sheders in the fifth round in the end of its shocking fall.

Sanders has caught the headlines inside and outside Cleveland from the national team, but Gabriel said he is hugging the addition of the rookie fellow to a field marshal full of people.

“I love it,” Gabriel said on Saturday before the second practice of the Browns' rookie mini -family. “I love what it is. I think only for both [Pickett]José [Flacco] And even enemhand [Watson]Only a lot of boys who played a lot of ball that we can all learn from each other. “

Meanwhile, Sanders said on Saturday that his approach is not to show that no one is wrong after the impressive fall in the Draft.

“I'm just me against me,” Sanders said. “I can't control any other decision besides that. So I try to be my best I at all times … My work here is not to show that people are wrong. I'm demonstrating well.”

The first day of the rookie minicamp, Sanders and Gabriel divided practice representatives, with Gabriel taking the first handful of snapshots in the team exercises, although coach Kevin Stefanski minimized the practice order. Stefanski added that the work of rookies in mini -competition is competition and instruction and that the battle of Marshal of the Campo in the coming months would be an “evaluation that covers everything.”

Sanders and Gabriel are making the transition to professionals after long and successful university careers. Sanders was a four -year -old at FCS Jackson State before following his father, Deion, Colorado. Gabriel was a six -year -old who did 63 openings during seasons in Oregon, Oklahoma and UCF.

Despite a field marshal room with many contestants for the initial work, Gabriel said he wants to address each practice as if he were the headline.

“I only know one way to prepare,” Gabriel said. “I just know a way of working, and that is like the headline. I have played a lot of ball and I have a lot of experience, so I'm going to use that for my advantage … I think every day I approach is as if I were looking for that representative, and I live it like that.”

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