The drama surrounding Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby refuses to die down. Now, powerhouse sports attorney Tom Mars, who recently represented Trinidad Chambliss against the NCAA, has weighed in and shared his honest opinion.
Tom Mars Dismantles Brendan Sorsby’s Legal Defense
Sorsby is currently preparing for a high-stakes temporary injunction hearing in Lubbock County District Court, and his legal team, led by Jeffrey Kessler, has constructed a defense centered heavily on mental health.
The cornerstone of his lawsuit argues that his wagers were the byproduct of medical addiction, an affliction the NCAA should accommodate rather than punish with a lifetime ban. However, to Mars, the defense’s reliance on clinical addiction completely crumbles under the weight of the newly revealed, deeply damning case analytics.
“The way I see it, the biggest flaw in Branden Sorsby’s already specious legal argument is that his gambling addiction doesn’t explain why he bet on his own team,” Mars wrote on his X account. “He could have placed a bet on 1,000 other things. That was a conscious decision that can’t be blamed on his addiction.”
The NCAA’s hardline stance rests on competitive integrity. While a severe gambling compulsion can realistically explain the $90,000 in overall volume, it utterly fails to explain the insider nature of the 40 distinct prop and game bets placed specifically on his own Indiana Hoosiers teammates.
What makes Sorsby’s uphill battle even steeper, and Mars’ conscious decision critique so potent, is the calculated evasion detailed by investigators. Sorsby actively worked to hide the trail.
After leaving Cincinnati for Lubbock in January, Sorsby signed an explicit NCAA compliance form acknowledging sports wagering restrictions. Despite this, while residing in Texas, where sports gambling remains strictly illegal, court records show he funneled approximately $5,000 through Venmo or Zelle to out-of-state proxies to continue placing wagers on his behalf.
Kessler and Texas Tech are fighting to salvage a multimillion-dollar season, offering to compromise on a two-game suspension. In addition, Sorsby recently completed a 35-day residential rehab program for a clinically diagnosed gambling and anxiety disorder. But with legal icons like Mars openly dismantling the logic of the defense, the NCAA’s bright-line rule on insider betting looks increasingly impenetrable.
But if the court agrees with Mars that betting on your own locker room is a conscious choice rather than a clinical symptom, Sorsby’s lavish Texas Tech debut will be over before it ever begins.
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