By Paul Spillman, guest columnist
Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby has spared college football a disaster of near biblical proportions by declaring for the NFL supplemental draft and foregoing the final year of college eligibility he recently won in an injunction against the NCAA. That injunction issued by visiting judge Ken Curry in a Lubbock, TX courtroom prevented the NCAA from ruling Sorsby ineligible for the 2026 season for gambling on college football and on his own team.
Sorsby’s decision to enter the supplemental draft diverts a crisis college athletics did not want and was not prepared for. Removing those who gamble on their own team to protect the integrity of competition has been a guiding principle in all of sport for more than a century. By issuing an injunction preventing the NCAA from enforcing that rule the court threatened the integrity of all sports at every level and took dead aim at the NCAA as a rule enforcing body.
The fallout included hypocrites getting exposed, a pissing contest between two state Attorneys General, congressional grandstanding, and nearly every interested party giving themselves an infarction in outrage. Not to mention providing an occasion for a few cheap shots at LSU.
In the immediate aftermath of the injunction Texas Tech booster and main money-man Cody Campbell was quick to defend the Red Raiders and the ruling, even taking a shot at LSU saying if this had happened here no one would care. It’s important to note Campbell is close to Senator Ted Cruz and is the driving force behind the pooling of media rights in college athletics. College football fans may recall during the 2025 season commercials that ran during every college game warning of a coming crisis and the need to address it. Vague and ominous it referred to no specific issue nor was attributed to any group. Those commercials were paid for by Cody Campbell who apparently believed himself to be a savior of college athletics. Until the Sorsby mess exposed his hypocrisy.
But hypocrite boosters weren’t the only self-serving parties to get in on the action. Texas Attorney General and candidate for Senate Ken Paxton sent a letter to the Big 12 conference office shortly after the ruling warning the conference of legal action if it sanctioned Texas Tech. Not to be outdone Oklahoma Attorney General and candidate for governor Gentner Drummond fired off a letter to conference officials the next day threatening legal action if the Big 12 didn’t sanction Texas Tech and laying out the legal argument for the conference’s authority to do so and offering the services of its office against Paxton. This provided as good an example as any of why college athletics should loathe any involvement by any politician of any stripe. Politicians have their own agenda which they are utterly devoted to. Issues like governing college athletics are pieces to be used in pursuing their own agendas, not something to be addressed for its own sake. The issues facing college athletics won’t be solved by politicians because politicians don’t solve problems. They use them to further their own agendas.
That’s especially true of Congressional politicians. Ted Cruz is pushing the Protect College Sports Act as a solution, claiming the bill grants the NCAA an antitrust exemption and thus prevents rulings such as the Sorsby injunction. But Cruz didn’t become a US Senator by being truthful. He knows good and well this injunction does not prevent the NCAA from enforcing a rule due to antitrust violation. The ruling grants the NCAA authority to enforce rules but declared the punishment was too great for the crime, imposing its own two-game suspension on Sorsby instead of permanent ineligibility. That’s not the same as saying the NCAA doesn’t have the authority to enforce rules. Nor would the Protect College Sports Act prevent student athletes from suing to regain eligibility, providing any other judge an opportunity to overrule the NCAA. But few expect a US Senator to give a straight, honest answer to any question.
Nor was Cruz the only yapping dog. Our own Steve Scalise mucked up the debate claiming he could have passed the SCORE act in the House before congressional realignment swept the nation and proved that politics is a blood sport. Scalise made the rounds to right-wing media outlets hitting only the points that drive right-wingers crazy and gaslighting everyone. Scalise said, “One thing that a lot of schools and student athletes told us is they don’t want to be forced into being employees of the school and then ultimately being unionized. And that’s one of the big differences between the House and Senate bill that’s got to get fixed.” In all the debate over legislation, public comments, and this recent scandal not one word has been spoken publicly about unionization. An internet search will bear out that truth.
Other than Texas Tech officials and fans, the general consensus was it would be a disaster for college football had Sorsby suited up this fall. Some schools would have refused to play Texas Tech and the conference would surely have attempted at least to impose sanctions. Curry’s ruling granting Sorsby an injunction provided days-worth of content for talking heads, podcasters, and You Tube content creators and all of it was negative, with a few more shots at LSU. One podcaster noted LSU had pursued Sorsby before he committed to Texas Tech and that details of LSU’s offer to Sorsby had been leaked online. He speculated on the circus LSU would be right now had Sorsby signed with the Tigers, with Lane Kiffin as head coach and the governor inserting himself into the fray. That he’s probably correct gives that cheap shot a little extra “oomph.”
So what happens now? There is tremendous pressure to pass the Protect College Sports Act more so that Congress is seen to be doing something than to actually address the issues. As detailed previously the legislation grants the “voluntary” pooling of media rights if 75% of member institutions vote for it. But if the bill becomes law, it will be the catalyst for the Big Ten, the SEC, Notre Dame, and whoever else wants to come along to break away from the relic that is the NCAA, an organization the courts no longer have any respect for and that has outlived its usefulness. None of those schools are going to share their lucrative media deals with anyone else.
The logic is simple. If Notre Dame, at any time over the last 100 years, had wanted to share media revenue it could have joined the conference of its choice. And still could right this moment. But it hasn’t. It has remained a football independent because it can. Notre Dame is simply not going to share media revenue. Nor will the Big Ten and the SEC agree to an exception for Notre Dame but not for themselves. Those schools will break away, form a super-conference, adapt to the modern world in ways that allow them to enforce rules, and leave the NCAA to die of natural causes.
But all of that is in some future season. Today college athletics is thankful to enter the 2026 academic year with the ugliness of the Sorsby scandal in the rear-view mirror and clear roads ahead. For a week or two, anyway.


