Shedeur Sanders made history on Sunday at the Las Vegas Raiders, becoming the first Cleveland Browns quarterback to win in his first career start since the franchise's reactivation in 1999. But according to him, what he showed on the field was not the utmost of his capabilities.After last week's 23-16 loss to the Baltimore Ravens, coach Kevin Stefanski revealed that the rookie's snaps in that game were his first with the starters ever since being drafted in the fifth round in April, as per ESPN. During his post-game interview, he made a snide allusion to those remarks when discussing his strong performance relative to the amount of preparation he received for the role:“It’s some things I wish I could get back, but man, a win is crazy. It’s amazing. Off of one week of practice, you know what I mean? This one week of practice. Imagine what a full offseason looked like. It get dangerous. ... So I’m just truly thankful that everything happened.”Shedeur Sanders, who completed 11 of 20 attempts for 209 yards and a touchdown against an interception, later claimed not to have felt any nerves in that same interview.Shedeur Sanders gets candid on wanting to prove Raiders wrong for skipping himIn the lead-up to the draft, the Raiders had been heavily linked to Shedeur Sanders. It made sense at the time; they were a quarterback-needy team with the sixth overall pick, and he was a celebrity who could better expand his brand in a world-famous place like Las Vegas than the likes of Cleveland.However, general manager John Spytek initially chose to address the ground game by drafting Ashton Jeanty - then he turned around two days after that by drafting Cam Miller in the sixth round. This led to some narratives claiming that Shedeur Sanders' performance was a way to stick it to one of the teams that had snubbed him in the draft.But he downplayed those notions during his post-game press conference:“I was a fifth-round pick. I got skipped by everybody at least five times.”The Browns' next game will be against the San Francisco 49ers on November 30. Kickoff is at 1 p.m. ET on CBS.