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Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby is entering the NFL supplemental draft, bringing one of the league's least-used player acquisition tools back into focus amid an eligibility fight tied to sports betting.
The supplemental draft is typically used for players who lose college eligibility after the deadline to declare for the regular NFL draft. It began in 1977 and usually takes place during the summer, though it has become rare for players to be selected. The last player taken was safety Jalen Thompson, whom the Arizona Cardinals selected in the fifth round of the 2019 NFL Draft. The supplemental draft was held in 2023, but no players were selected.
Sorsby's path to the NFL changed after legal wrangling with the NCAA and Big 12 over his remaining college eligibility. The NCAA and Big 12 have challenged a temporary injunction that would allow Sorsby to play for Texas Tech during the 2026 season after gambling-related violations, including wagers made while he was at Indiana. Sorsby has admitted to betting on college and professional sports, including bets involving Indiana football when he was a redshirt scout-team quarterback, though he did not bet on games in which he played. He also entered treatment for a gambling addiction.
Sorsby's case is unusual because his talent could force teams to consider spending future draft capital. He was one of the country's most productive dual-threat quarterbacks in 2025, throwing for 2,800 yards and 27 touchdowns while rushing for 580 yards and nine scores. From a football standpoint, his size, mobility, arm talent, and ability to create outside structure make him one of the most intriguing supplemental draft prospects in years.
The process differs from the regular draft. Teams are placed into groups based on the previous season's records, and the order is determined through a weighted lottery. Teams then submit bids by round. If a team wins a player with, for example, a fourth-round bid, that team gives up its fourth-round pick in the following NFL draft.
The risk is just as obvious. Teams will have to weigh Sorsby's upside against the gambling investigation, the legal battle, and the maturity questions that will follow him into the draft process. The supplemental draft has produced notable NFL players, including Cris Carter, Bernie Kosar, Josh Gordon, and Ahmad Brooks, but Sorsby's situation carries a different kind of scrutiny because of the league's and college football's increased focus on gambling integrity.
For Sorsby, the decision moves the conversation from college eligibility to NFL evaluation. For teams, it creates a rare summer decision at the sport's most important position: whether a quarterback with legitimate long-term tools is worth sacrificing a future draft pick despite significant off-field concerns.
This article originally appeared on Ravens Wire: Texas Tech QB Brendan Sorsby entering NFL supplemental draft
Continue reading...
The supplemental draft is typically used for players who lose college eligibility after the deadline to declare for the regular NFL draft. It began in 1977 and usually takes place during the summer, though it has become rare for players to be selected. The last player taken was safety Jalen Thompson, whom the Arizona Cardinals selected in the fifth round of the 2019 NFL Draft. The supplemental draft was held in 2023, but no players were selected.
Sorsby's path to the NFL changed after legal wrangling with the NCAA and Big 12 over his remaining college eligibility. The NCAA and Big 12 have challenged a temporary injunction that would allow Sorsby to play for Texas Tech during the 2026 season after gambling-related violations, including wagers made while he was at Indiana. Sorsby has admitted to betting on college and professional sports, including bets involving Indiana football when he was a redshirt scout-team quarterback, though he did not bet on games in which he played. He also entered treatment for a gambling addiction.
Star QB Brendan Sorsby is applying to enter the NFL Supplemental Draft, sources tell NFL Network.
After legal wrangling about his NCAA eligibility, Sorsby — regarded as a first-round talent — now could be the highest-drafted supplemental pick in decades. pic.twitter.com/ltK1SiWZr4
— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) June 16, 2026
Sorsby's case is unusual because his talent could force teams to consider spending future draft capital. He was one of the country's most productive dual-threat quarterbacks in 2025, throwing for 2,800 yards and 27 touchdowns while rushing for 580 yards and nine scores. From a football standpoint, his size, mobility, arm talent, and ability to create outside structure make him one of the most intriguing supplemental draft prospects in years.
The process differs from the regular draft. Teams are placed into groups based on the previous season's records, and the order is determined through a weighted lottery. Teams then submit bids by round. If a team wins a player with, for example, a fourth-round bid, that team gives up its fourth-round pick in the following NFL draft.
The risk is just as obvious. Teams will have to weigh Sorsby's upside against the gambling investigation, the legal battle, and the maturity questions that will follow him into the draft process. The supplemental draft has produced notable NFL players, including Cris Carter, Bernie Kosar, Josh Gordon, and Ahmad Brooks, but Sorsby's situation carries a different kind of scrutiny because of the league's and college football's increased focus on gambling integrity.
For Sorsby, the decision moves the conversation from college eligibility to NFL evaluation. For teams, it creates a rare summer decision at the sport's most important position: whether a quarterback with legitimate long-term tools is worth sacrificing a future draft pick despite significant off-field concerns.
This article originally appeared on Ravens Wire: Texas Tech QB Brendan Sorsby entering NFL supplemental draft
Continue reading...