Deion Sanders Jr. takes on his important role alongside Coach Prime as Shedeur and Shilo try to move on

SPORTIVO
Article arrow_drop_down

Deion Sanders Jr, the eldest son of Deion ‘Coach Prime’ Sanders, has emerged as a pivotal figure in the Sanders household at a time when the football dynasty is undergoing seismic change.

With brothers Shedeur and Shilo now pursuing careers in the NFL, Deion Jr. has chosen to remain as the steadying force behind the scenes – especially during their father’s formidable health struggle.

Deion Sanders Jr. might make brother Shedeur Sanders mad by showing love to Travis Hunter

In an emotional appearance on the July 17 episode of the DukesTheScoop podcast, Deion Jr. shared how formative challenges – witnessing his father endure two divorces, cancer treatment, and multiple surgeries – have shaped him.

He reflected on how learning to “cut off” toxic relationships, a skill he attributes to his father, became essential for his growth.

“I just have a great heart, bro. And it’s a heart that, growing up or due to different situations in life, you get your heart broken, you get people betrayed…” Deion Jr said. “Sometimes you get mad at God… Why don’t I just, like my dad, even he has the ability to just cut somebody off instantly, not talk to them,” he said, visibly emotional.

Led by the higher powers

Guided by his faith and dedication to family, Deion Jr. explained how he now sees life as a mission of service: “I realized a long time ago, the life I live is not really my own. It’s not for me. It’s like I came to serve and not be served, bro. That’s what the Bible says.”

Despite possessing athletic ability and a background in football, like his brothers, family loyalty ultimately shaped his decision to prioritize their well-being.

When Deion Sr was quietly battling bladder cancer – initially kept largely out of the public eye – his son stayed at his side throughout nearly two months of recovery.

As his father recovered at their Texas ranch, Deion Jr. recounted, “My dad was at the hospital, bro… I was just in Colorado by myself. I can’t really tell anybody the reason you’re out there.”

As the Buffaloes enter a new era without Shedeur at quarterback and Shilo on the roster, Deion Jr. has organically adopted a leadership role – not on the field, but within the family and media.

He halted major expansion plans for Well Off Media – a platform he built covering Colorado’s program and beyond – to support his father and provide stability during uncertain times. Despite gaining credentials to cover multiple NFL franchises, he chose to stay in Colorado.

“I’ll probably go up there like once or twice… I’m not gonna lie to you, dude… I’ll probably just be in Colorado most of the time,” he added.

How has Deion Sanders reacted to the gesture?

His sacrifice has not gone unnoticed. Deion Sr., in a rare moment of recognition, referred to his eldest as “the MVP of all my kids.” With Shedeur now playing for the Cleveland Browns and Shilo with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Sanders Jr. has filled the space they left behind – assuming both caretaker and emotional anchor.

Recent reports confirmed that Coach Prime is now cancerfree following surgery to remove his bladder. He has stated he is “100 percent back” and ready to resume coaching the Colorado Buffaloes this season.

Despite enormous personal and professional trials – from health crises including toe amputations and blood clots to two divorces – Deion Sanders Sr. has demonstrated a resilience that his son Deion Jr. admires and is striving to emulate.

So while Coach Prime rebuilds the Colorado program, Deion Sanders Jr. occupies a vital niche. He is the stabilizing presence at home; the emotional glue during crisis; and increasingly, the voice behind the family legacy. Rather than chase football glory or personal fame, his choice to serve his family – and stay by his father’s side – underscores a different kind of leadership.

As Shedeur and Shilo move forward into their professional athletic careers, Deion Jr. remains rooted-choosing devotion over ambition, loyalty over limelight, and embodying the resilience his father has long modelled.

This news was originally published on this post .

About the author

About the author call_made

SPORTIVO

More posts

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2009 Yankees Are No. 4

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2009 Yankees land in this spot? From the point of view of the Yankees, 2009 was a long time coming. New York had last won a World Series in 2000, and had lost in both 2001 and 2003 — there was also that whole letting the Red Sox come back from down 3-0 in the 2004 American League Championship Series thing to contend with. For most teams, a nine-year wait isn’t significant, especially not for a franchise that was constantly in the thick of things in the intervening years. For the Yankees, though, after racking up championships in 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000, nine years felt like an eternity, especially with the rival Red Sox winning in 2004 and 2007 in between. The 2009 season put a stop to the waiting, […]

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2007 Red Sox Are No. 5

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2007 Red Sox land in this spot? It took two years for the mega-trade that brought Josh Beckett and Mike Lowell to the Red Sox to pay off as hoped, but it’s difficult to argue with the results once it finally did. Acquired in November of 2005, Beckett was expected to be the replacement for Pedro Martinez in the Boston rotation that never surfaced that summer, but instead he posted a 5.01 ERA in 2006, leaving Curt Schilling as the lone ace on the squad again. In 2007, though, Beckett was exactly what the Red Sox wanted: he led AL pitchers in wins above replacement, ranked first in the majors in wins with 20 and posted a 3.27 ERA over 200 innings. Lowell was actually his usual quality self in […]

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2020 Dodgers Are No. 6

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2020 Dodgers land in this spot? The Dodgers, save Mookie Betts, were not a team full of stars having star-caliber seasons. Betts led the majors in wins above replacement, putting up nearly four of them in just 60 games in an absurd display at the plate and in the field. Other than that, what the Dodgers won with was volume. Justin Turner did not have his very best season. Corey Seager has had better ones, too. It didn’t matter, because almost every regular was firing on more than enough cylinders to propel Los Angeles to the best winning percentage of any World Series winner of the century. Betts wasn’t actually the Dodgers’ best hitter in 2020: that was catcher Will Smith, who hit .289/.401/.579 in 37 games. Smith finished one […]

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2002 Angels Are No. 7

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2002 Angels land in this spot? It’s easy to dismiss the excellence of the 2002 Angels based on their top two players. Darin Erstad hit just .283/.313/.389 at a time when the "Moneyball" Athletics were praised for a focus on on-base percentage. David Eckstein, all 5-foot-6 of him, hit just 8 homers in 2002: 26 players hit at least 30 that season, including Angels’ leader Troy Glaus. Power and patience were the rules of the day, but the Angels were built differently. Erstad was not an offensive force: he was merely a superhuman-level defender in center, while offense was in the midst of its historic peak. Per Baseball Reference’s accounting, Erstad was worth 6.3 wins above replacement, the most on the Angels — his 4.2 defensive WAR represent the 12th-most ever. […]

trending_flat
Favorite ‘Dogs: Back Ole Miss vs. OU; Jaxson Dart, Giants at Eagles

We are approaching the halfway mark of the NFL season, and we're coming off a weekend that didn't see too many upsets. The Bengals won Thursday night as 5-point underdogs against the Steelers, but all the heavily favored teams took care of business on Sunday with outright wins. What does this weekend have in store for us? Let’s take a look at a couple of potential upsets, one in college football and one in the NFL.This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.No. 8 Mississippi @ No. 13 Oklahoma This is a huge SEC game with massive playoff implications, and the loser will be left with that second, dreaded loss of the season. That also means the loser will have little to […]

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2013 Red Sox Are No. 8

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2013 Red Sox land in this spot? The 2013 Red Sox were Ben Cherington’s first team as general manager. Not in the sense of it was the first year that he was Boston’s GM, but in that he had full control over who would even be part of the roster. The massive disappointments and payroll of 2011 and 2012, leftover from the Theo Epstein era, were no more once Cherington shipped a quarter-billion in future contracts to the Dodgers in August of 2012, freeing him up to bring in Mike Napoli, Stephen Drew, Ryan Dempster, Shane Victorino, Koji Uehara, David Ross and Jonny Gomes. All of them save Dempster performed at the high-end of expectations: when paired with Dustin Pedroia doing his usual excellent combination of high-on-base offense and even […]

Related

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2009 Yankees Are No. 4

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2009 Yankees land in this spot? From the point of view of the Yankees, 2009 was a long time coming. New York had last won a World Series in 2000, and had lost in both 2001 and 2003 — there was also that whole letting the Red Sox come back from down 3-0 in the 2004 American League Championship Series thing to contend with. For most teams, a nine-year wait isn’t significant, especially not for a franchise that was constantly in the thick of things in the intervening years. For the Yankees, though, after racking up championships in 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000, nine years felt like an eternity, especially with the rival Red Sox winning in 2004 and 2007 in between. The 2009 season put a stop to the waiting, […]

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2007 Red Sox Are No. 5

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2007 Red Sox land in this spot? It took two years for the mega-trade that brought Josh Beckett and Mike Lowell to the Red Sox to pay off as hoped, but it’s difficult to argue with the results once it finally did. Acquired in November of 2005, Beckett was expected to be the replacement for Pedro Martinez in the Boston rotation that never surfaced that summer, but instead he posted a 5.01 ERA in 2006, leaving Curt Schilling as the lone ace on the squad again. In 2007, though, Beckett was exactly what the Red Sox wanted: he led AL pitchers in wins above replacement, ranked first in the majors in wins with 20 and posted a 3.27 ERA over 200 innings. Lowell was actually his usual quality self in […]

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2020 Dodgers Are No. 6

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2020 Dodgers land in this spot? The Dodgers, save Mookie Betts, were not a team full of stars having star-caliber seasons. Betts led the majors in wins above replacement, putting up nearly four of them in just 60 games in an absurd display at the plate and in the field. Other than that, what the Dodgers won with was volume. Justin Turner did not have his very best season. Corey Seager has had better ones, too. It didn’t matter, because almost every regular was firing on more than enough cylinders to propel Los Angeles to the best winning percentage of any World Series winner of the century. Betts wasn’t actually the Dodgers’ best hitter in 2020: that was catcher Will Smith, who hit .289/.401/.579 in 37 games. Smith finished one […]

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2002 Angels Are No. 7

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2002 Angels land in this spot? It’s easy to dismiss the excellence of the 2002 Angels based on their top two players. Darin Erstad hit just .283/.313/.389 at a time when the "Moneyball" Athletics were praised for a focus on on-base percentage. David Eckstein, all 5-foot-6 of him, hit just 8 homers in 2002: 26 players hit at least 30 that season, including Angels’ leader Troy Glaus. Power and patience were the rules of the day, but the Angels were built differently. Erstad was not an offensive force: he was merely a superhuman-level defender in center, while offense was in the midst of its historic peak. Per Baseball Reference’s accounting, Erstad was worth 6.3 wins above replacement, the most on the Angels — his 4.2 defensive WAR represent the 12th-most ever. […]

trending_flat
Favorite ‘Dogs: Back Ole Miss vs. OU; Jaxson Dart, Giants at Eagles

We are approaching the halfway mark of the NFL season, and we're coming off a weekend that didn't see too many upsets. The Bengals won Thursday night as 5-point underdogs against the Steelers, but all the heavily favored teams took care of business on Sunday with outright wins. What does this weekend have in store for us? Let’s take a look at a couple of potential upsets, one in college football and one in the NFL.This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.No. 8 Mississippi @ No. 13 Oklahoma This is a huge SEC game with massive playoff implications, and the loser will be left with that second, dreaded loss of the season. That also means the loser will have little to […]

trending_flat
21st Century World Series Champions, Ranked: 2013 Red Sox Are No. 8

Among the 25 World Series champions since 2000, how did the 2013 Red Sox land in this spot? The 2013 Red Sox were Ben Cherington’s first team as general manager. Not in the sense of it was the first year that he was Boston’s GM, but in that he had full control over who would even be part of the roster. The massive disappointments and payroll of 2011 and 2012, leftover from the Theo Epstein era, were no more once Cherington shipped a quarter-billion in future contracts to the Dodgers in August of 2012, freeing him up to bring in Mike Napoli, Stephen Drew, Ryan Dempster, Shane Victorino, Koji Uehara, David Ross and Jonny Gomes. All of them save Dempster performed at the high-end of expectations: when paired with Dustin Pedroia doing his usual excellent combination of high-on-base offense and even […]

Be the first to leave a comment

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sportivo bridges the gap between talent and opportunity.

About SPORTIVO

Sportivo Network is a dedicated social platform for sports enthusiasts, athletes, and scouts. Whether you’re an aspiring athlete looking for opportunities, a coach searching for talent, or simply a sports lover wanting to connect with like-minded people, Sportivo is your go-to network. With features like direct messaging, profile showcasing, and talent scouting, Sportivo bridges the gap between talent and opportunity. Here, you can share your achievements, interact with professionals, and open doors to the next level in your sports journey. Join Sportivo Network – because every great athlete deserves to be discovered!
Copyright © 2025 SPORTIVO News. and SPORTIVO Network. All rights reserved.

Login to enjoy full advantages

Please login or subscribe to continue.

Go Premium!

Enjoy the full advantage of the premium access.

Stop following

Unfollow Cancel

Cancel subscription

Are you sure you want to cancel your subscription? You will lose your Premium access and stored playlists.

Go back Confirm cancellation