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Episode Description
The battle over Brendan Sorsby’s football career has rapidly shifted from the gridiron to a high-stakes Lubbock County courtroom. After Texas Tech officially ruled its prized $5 million transfer quarterback ineligible following an NCAA investigation into sports wagering, Sorsby’s legal team launched an aggressive counter-offensive. Led by prominent antitrust attorney Jeffrey Kessler, Sorsby filed a lawsuit and an emergency injunction against the NCAA on May 18, 2026, aimed at restoring his eligibility for the upcoming fall season.
The Legal Argument: Addiction vs. Integrity
The crux of Sorsby's lawsuit challenges the core of the NCAA’s enforcement model. Sorsby, who voluntarily entered a residential rehab facility in late April, has been clinically diagnosed with a gambling disorder. His legal team argues that the NCAA is violating its duty of student-athlete well-being by weaponizing a recognized mental health condition, especially while the association actively profits from sports betting partnerships.
The NCAA has dug in, stating that betting on one's own team directly threatens the integrity of the game. According to a sworn affidavit, Sorsby admitted to placing small bets between $5 and $50 on Indiana football in 2022 while on the Hoosiers' scouting roster. However, his lawyers emphasize that he only ever bet for Indiana to win, never used inside information, and never manipulated a game. Beyond those early wagers, Sorsby’s voluminous betting history—reportedly totaling over 10,000 wagers across multiple states—did not involve his own teams.
The Clock is Ticking
The trajectory of the case took a sudden turn on Wednesday when Texas Tech alumnus Judge Phillip Hays recused himself without giving a reason, momentarily halting the home-court advantage Sorsby enjoyed by filing in Lubbock.
Sorsby is demanding a preliminary injunction hearing by June 15. The mid-June timeline is critical; if the courts don't grant him immediate relief to rejoin the Red Raiders, Sorsby faces a June 22 deadline to declare for the NFL Supplemental Draft. He is currently stuck in an impossible bind: forfeit his college career or risk missing a full year of competitive football entirely while the NCAA drags its feet.
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