Texas Tech Quarterback Brendan Sorsby Set To Enter Program For Gambling Addiction
College football is a beautiful, chaotic circus. Between the transfer portal madness and the wild west of NIL money, it is easy to forget that the guys inside the helmets are just college kids dealing with real-world problems. That is exactly what happened this week when Texas Tech announced that star quarterback, Brendan Sorsby, is stepping away from the game.
He isn’t dealing with a torn ACL or a nagging shoulder injury. Instead, Sorsby is checking into a residential treatment program to battle a gambling addiction.
A Transfer Portal Star Hits the Brakes
If you follow college football, you know the name Sorsby. He was supposed to be the undisputed guy in Lubbock this fall. After lighting up the scoreboard at Cincinnati last year, he hit the transfer portal and immediately became the crown jewel of the offseason.
Texas Tech backed up the Brink’s truck, reportedly bringing him in on a massive deal that made him one of the highest-paid players in the sport. He was even getting early buzz as a 2027 NFL Draft prospect. But beneath the highlight tapes and the multi-million dollar expectations, the young signal-caller was fighting a brutal off-field battle.
The Indiana Bets and the NCAA Rulebook
Naturally, the NCAA is now heavily involved. According to multiple reports, Sorsby placed thousands of bets using a sports gambling app. We aren’t talking about massive, mob-style game-fixing wagers here. Sources say it was a steady, relentless flurry of small bets over a long period. However, the major catch is that some of those bets trace back to 2022, when Sorsby was a true freshman backup at Indiana.
He allegedly bet on the Hoosiers to win. While there is absolutely zero evidence that he tried to manipulate the outcome of any games, betting on your own team is the ultimate cardinal sin in the NCAA rulebook. According to the guidelines, wagering on your own school’s games typically carries a permanent loss of eligibility.
To add more fuel to a messy offseason fire, his former team, Cincinnati, recently sued Sorsby for a $1 million breach of contract after he left for Texas Tech. It has been a whirlwind few months, to say the least.
What’s Next For Texas Tech?
So, where does this leave the Red Raiders? Honestly, they are scrambling. Sorsby was the designated savior for an offense that desperately needed his dual-threat ability. With projected backup Will Hammond still recovering from a torn ACL, the quarterback room in Lubbock is suddenly looking incredibly thin. But right now, depth charts simply don’t matter.
The entire focus is on Sorsby and his road to recovery. Whether he ever takes another snap in college football is a complicated question for the future. For today, the only victory that matters is his health.
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