The NCAA Cannot Stop a Player Who Bet on His Own Team From Playing. That Tells You Everything
The NCAA Cannot Stop a Player Who Bet on His Own Team From Playing. That Tells You Everything.
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Brendan Sorsby is a quarterback at Texas Tech. He was caught betting on his own team and other teams. The NCAA banned him. That should be the end of the story. Betting on your own team is not a gray area. It is the one rule that every sport — college, professional, every level — treats as completely non-negotiable. The NFL has been crystal clear about this. Players have been banned for life in other sports for exactly this.
The NCAA did the right thing. They enforced the rule.
And then a judge in Lubbock, Texas — the city where Texas Tech is located — granted an injunction and said Sorsby can play anyway. He will serve a two game suspension against Abilene Christian and Oregon State, both non-conference games, and then he is back under center in week three.
The NCAA banned him. A judge overruled them. And the NCAA could do nothing about it.
Trey and David Rumsey of Front Office Sports break down what this actually means — and why this is not really about Brendan Sorsby at all.
This Is the NCAA's Fault
Five years ago NIL arrived and the NCAA wanted no part of governing it. They stepped back and let schools, conferences, and players figure it out on their own. Coaches — including Nick Saban, someone many people believe could have been an effective commissioner for college football — have been saying for years that it is the wild wild west out there and nobody is in charge of anything.
Now that lack of governance has metastasized into something even more serious. The NCAA cannot enforce a gambling ban — the most fundamental integrity rule in all of sports — because a single judge in the same city as the school in question can simply override it. There is no clear chain of authority. There is no consistent process. There is just whatever court happens to hear the appeal and whatever that judge decides.
The Reaction Has Been Universal
David Rumsey was at the Big 12 spring meetings just weeks before this ruling came down. At the time, almost nobody was talking about the Sorsby case. Joey McGuire, Texas Tech's head coach, addressed it briefly and expressed support for his player — but the broader sentiment across the conference was that Sorsby was simply out of luck. He would serve his ban, head to the NFL supplemental draft, and that would be that. Nobody felt like his future was being ruined. He has the talent to play professionally regardless.
Then the ruling came down and the reaction across the Big 12, the SEC, and the Big Ten was immediate and universal. Athletic directors, coaches, presidents — all expressing the same stunned reaction. And now there is real discussion about other Big 12 schools refusing to play Texas Tech in any sport if this ruling stands.
Could Schools Actually Boycott Texas Tech
David Rumsey thinks the odds are high — at least within the Big 12. Texas Tech's non-conference schedule this year is Abilene Christian and Oregon State, so SEC and Big Ten schools have limited direct leverage in the short term. But within the Big 12, where Texas Tech needs conference opponents to function, a boycott would be a real and serious problem.
The NCAA has already filed an appeal of the injunction. Nobody seems to know how many times an appeal can be appealed. But given the universal reaction across college athletics, it seems unlikely this ruling stands as is.
The Self-Reporting Problem
Here is the part that should make every athletic director in the country furious. For decades, programs that self-reported violations to the NCAA did so because they believed in a system of accountability — even when self-reporting hurt them competitively. Schools voluntarily took hits to their programs because they trusted the process.
If a school can simply find a sympathetic judge and get an NCAA ruling overturned through the court system, every school that ever self-reported anything looks, in retrospect, like they made a unilateral decision to disadvantage themselves for nothing. The NCAA's authority depended on schools believing the rules applied equally to everyone. That belief is now in serious question.
The Bigger Picture
This is not really a story about one quarterback at Texas Tech. It is a story about an organization that abdicated its responsibility to govern college athletics during the NIL transition, and is now discovering that the consequences of that abdication extend far beyond name image and likeness deals. If the NCAA cannot enforce a gambling ban — arguably the single most important integrity rule in all of sports — what exactly can it enforce?
College administrators have been asking Congress for help for five years. David Rumsey does not believe federal legislation is coming, regardless of where the current bill stands. Which means college athletics may simply continue operating with no real governing authority — case by case, court by court, with outcomes determined less by rules and more by which judge happens to be assigned and where they went to school.
The NCAA does plenty of fine work in lacrosse, swimming, and other Olympic sports. But in the two sports that actually generate the money — football and basketball — there is, in Trey's words, nobody running the ship. The Brendan Sorsby case is just the latest and most alarming proof of that. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com
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