With the NFL regular season coming to a close, the top of the 2025 draft order has been set.

The order is impactful for now-former Colorado stars Shedeur Sanders and Travis Hunter, who are projected to be among the first picks when the draft begins April 24.

Sanders reacted to the order this week on his own podcast, which also featured his older brother, Deion Sanders Jr.

For much of the season, it appeared the New York Giants were in line for the top pick, but when the dust settled, it was the Tennessee Titans who wound up at No. 1. The Cleveland Browns have the second pick, followed by the Giants at No. 3, New England Patriots at No. 4 and Jacksonville Jaguars at No. 5.

Shedeur and Hunter are likely to be selected within the first five picks, with one of them very possible to go No. 1.

“I love it,” Shedeur said of the order. “Honestly, I’ve been doing a lot of thinking. What’s meant to happen is gonna happen. I don’t feel like God would ever put me in a place I’m not supposed to go.”

Tennessee is certainly in the market for a quarterback, with Shedeur and Miami’s Cam Ward being the unquestioned top QB prospects for the draft.

Cleveland and the Giants are also in the market for a quarterback. Several mock drafts this week have Shedeur, Hunter and Ward as the first three players selected, with no clear-cut favorite for the top spot.

Shedeur seems ready to go to whichever teams wants him.

“We made it everywhere that we have went and been successful,” Shedeur said. “I’m happy of the order. Whatever happens happens. I know at the end of the day God is gonna put me on the right team.”

During the podcast, Deion Jr. asked Shedeur what a good rookie season would look like for him in the NFL.

“It’s winning games,” he said. “That’s the best rookie season you can have is winning games. Personal stats and all that, that’s not really what’s important to me anymore. Of course, we’re gonna complete the ball, we’re gonna be able to run the football and do those type of things, but it’s more about winning games.

“That’s what I’m gonna bring to whatever team I go to is knowing I’ve been in this situation, I’ve been in this position before. There’s nothing too much that could faze me that I haven’t seen before.”

In the past eight years, Shedeur has played in 103 games (50 in college, 53 in high school), all of them as a starter and all of them with his father, CU head coach Deion Sanders.

In fact, his father has coached him since youth leagues.

That will change next year, though, when Shedeur and his brother Shilo, a senior safety with the Buffs, head to the NFL and Coach Prime remains in Boulder with the Buffs.

“I definitely know it’s going to be different,” Shedeur said on his podcast.