Brendan Sorsby was one of the priciest transfer portal additions this offseason, and expectations were high after the quarterback arrived at Texas Tech. However, the situation has quickly turned chaotic following the revelation of his gambling addiction.
How Brendan Sorsby’s Case Could Reshape NCAA Gambling Violations
Following an agreed-upon stipulation of facts among Texas Tech, the NCAA, and Sorsby, the university officially declared the quarterback ineligible to compete. However, the school seems to be balancing both sides carefully, as the Red Raiders said they plan to “quickly initiate the reinstatement process” with the NCAA in hopes of getting him cleared for the 2026 season.
While Texas Tech said that its priority remains supporting Sorsby’s health and well-being, analyst JD Pickell explained why allowing Sorsby to play college football in 2026 could hurt the sport’s transparency.
“If you allow Brendan Sorsby to play on the grounds of, ‘Hey, I got a mental health issue, I got an addiction, I went to rehab for it, can I play next season?’ If you say ‘yes’ to that, the floodgates are all the way open,” Pickell said. “I’ve said this before, I don’t even have an issue with Brendan Sorsby betting on Nathan’s hot dog eating contest… It’s sad because he very clearly has a problem. That is sad.”
Sorsby has already retained sports attorney Jeffrey Kessler and filed a lawsuit seeking a court injunction to regain his eligibility for 2026. The filing acknowledged that he placed thousands of bets over four years, including small wagers on Indiana football games in 2022 while he was redshirting there. According to the filing, he only bet to “feel more connected” to his teammates.
NCAA sports wagering rules remain extremely strict, as any student-athlete caught betting on their own team or other sports at their school faces a permanent loss of collegiate eligibility.
Meanwhile, Sorsby’s filing also states he suffers from a “clinically diagnosed” gambling disorder, which is classified as a mental health condition. He has been enrolled in a residential treatment program for gambling addiction since April, but relieving him due to mental health concerns doesn’t bode well with many.
“I just can’t in good faith say Brendan Sorsby goes play college football next season as much as I’d like that to be the case, as much as I’d love to see that next year,” Pickell said. “You just can’t set that precedent because there will be another Brendan Sorsby in the future where this happens, and if that’s what the president said, what’s stopping them from just pleading mental health issues?”
Sorsby had a phenomenal season at Cincinnati last year, securing an 88.2 score in the PFSN College Football QB Impact Metric, ranking No. 10 in the nation.
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