Brendan Sorsby roller coaster takes new twist as he becomes eligible for 2027 NFL Draft
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Skip to main content NFLBrendan Sorsby roller coaster takes new twist as he becomes eligible for 2027 NFL Draft
By Spencer Brod Published June 30, 2026, 6:33 p.m. ETSee more of our coverage in your search results.
Add The New York Post on GoogleThe Brendan Sorsby gambling scandal saga has taken a new turn.
The NFL, NFLPA and Sorsby have reached a settlement resolving any claims stemming from the league’s decision to not hold a supplemental draft, making Brendan Sorsby eligible for the 2027 NFL Draft, NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reported Tuesday.
“We have confirmed with the NFLPA and Brendan Sorsby that there will be no further litigation regarding his entry into the NFL — and that instead, Mr. Sorsby will focus on his preparation for entry into the League via the 2027 NFL Draft,” a memo to NFL teams about Sorsby said.
“For purposes of League and CBA rules, Mr. Sorsby will be considered a ‘Draft-Eligible’ player for the 2027 NFL Draft. Mr. Sorsby will not be eligible to sign an NFL Player Contract until the completion of the 2027 NFL Draft.”

Sorsby, in a statement shared with multiple outlets, said he’s looking forward to next year and that he owns up to his “gambling problems.”
“There has been a lot of news about me out there and I want to share this statement to make sure things are clear. I accept 100% responsibility for my actions,” he wrote. “I did not have control of my gambling problem and it took getting caught for me to realize that, but it was truly the best thing that could’ve happened to me. Because of this, I have been able get the help I need and fully focus on my recovery.”
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The news comes after the NFL declined to hold a supplemental draft this year, which Sorsby planned to enter after leaving Texas Tech amid a complicated, back-and-forth eligibility situation in the NCAA.
NFL Network reported that the league’s decision not hold a supplemental draft was due to the inability to investigate Sorsby’s gambling issues in a timely manner.
Prior to that, the NCAA denied the Texas Tech quarterback’s request to be reinstated on May 26 before he was deemed eligible to play on June 8 by a Texas judge.
Sorsby, who spent four seasons between Indiana and Cincinnati, admitted to betting around $90,000 on college football games and, in some cases, on his own team.
Last week, the Canadian Football League barred Sorsby from playing in its ranks this year.

Through four collegiate seasons, Sorsby tossed 60 touchdowns to 18 interceptions while throwing for 7,208 yards.
Sorsby had a career-best year with Cincinnati in 2025, throwing 18 touchdowns to just five interceptions while the Bearcats went 7-6.
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Texas A&M Battling Texas for SEC Pitcher in Transfer Portal
Texas A&M Battling Texas for SEC Pitcher in Transfer Portal
How can Texas A&M secure the commitment of RHP Marcos Paz?Trey Bohne|
After an improved sophomore season under head coach Michael Earley, Texas A&M is likely to lose key contributors to the MLB Draft, including weekend arms like Weston Moss and Shane Sdao.
In 2026, the Aggies struggled on the mound, allowing a Southeastern Conference-high 90 home runs, while posting a 5.24 team ERA. Despite one of the nation’s most explosive batting lineups, Earley had no choice but to revamp his coaching staff ahead of the 2027 season.
Earley's latest hire, Barry Enright, arrives in College Station with extensive MLB experience that has quickly transformed A&M into a premier destination for veteran arms. As the Aggies look to rebuild their rotation, Enright’s resume may already be paying off in the transfer portal.
Texas A&M in Mix for LSU Transfer Marcos Paz

After a standalone season at LSU, right-handed pitcher Marcos Paz has generated high-level interest from prestigious SEC programs such as Texas, A&M and Georgia, per reports from Matt Moscona of LouisianaSports.net.
Out of Hebron High School in Carrollton, Texas, Paz ranked No. 3 in Texas and No. 22 in the nation according to Perfect Game Best High School RHPs.
Before his freshman season at LSU, Paz received high praise, ranking No. 33 among Perfect Game’s 2026 Top 100 College Freshmen and No. 7 according to Prep Baseball Report.
Despite a 1-4 record in 2026, Paz recorded 40 strikeouts and allowed only 5 home runs over 29.1 innings, offering developmental upside with four years of eligibility remaining.
The Carrollton native faced A&M on April 18, securing three strikeouts over the course of two innings. Though the Tigers fell 7-2, Paz brought down three straight Aggies in the eighth inning, allowing only a single hit by Jake Duer in the ninth.
With a commitment, Paz has the opportunity to represent the next generation of A&M pitchers in the MLB — but he’s not locked down yet.
Luckily for A&M, Nolan Cain is back in Aggieland.
Cain previously spent three seasons with A&M from 2022-2024, lifting the Aggies to a pair of College World Series appearances, including the program’s first College World Series Finals appearance in 2024.
Heading into 2027, Cain joins Enright and Earley as A&M's associate head coach and recruiting coordinator, forming one of the nation's strongest combinations of recruiting and professional experience in College Station. Though Paz’ commitment remains to be seen, the Aggies have positioned themselves as a serious contender for one of the SEC's most promising young arms.
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Published 32 minutes ago
TREY BOHNEBorn and raised in Aggieland, Trey Bohne is a homegrown journalist for Texas A&M Aggies on SI. He is a junior communications major, minoring in Journalism at Texas A&M University. He is also a writer for A&M’s student newspaper, The Battalion, where he has experience covering football, baseball, softball, track, tennis, men’s and women’s basketball and soccer. Across both of his writing platforms, Trey constantly asks the age-old question: how does this affect Lebron’s legacy?
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Erling Haaland, a striker so good he doesn’t even need to touch the ball
FIFA World
Cup 2026
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France Beat SwedenNorway AdvancesBracketPlayers to WatchAnalysisErling Haaland, a striker so good he doesn’t even need to touch the ball

Erling Haaland is Norway's strike warrior Julian Finney - FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images
By Stuart James and Liam TharmeJune 30, 2026 8:38 pm EDT UpdatedIt had to be him.
Even during that curious period in the first half when you had to remind yourself that he was still on the pitch, there was a sense of inevitability that Erling Haaland would end up leaving his mark on Norway’s first World Cup knockout match since 1998.
Goals are the currency that Haaland trades in and his stock couldn’t be any higher in that respect. He is, quite simply, a sure thing when it comes to putting the ball in the back of the net.
Haaland has scored in each of his last 13 competitive appearances for Norway, including five in three matches at his first World Cup and the winner against Ivory Coast today. The broader numbers are astonishing: 60 goals in 53 caps for Norway. To put that record into perspective, it’s the best goals-per-game ratio of any player who has scored 50 or more for their country in the last century.
A bit more context? How about the fact that Haaland reached 60 international goals in 69 fewer appearances than Lionel Messi and 77 fewer than Cristiano Ronaldo?

But it’s not just about the goals. It’s the way he scores, too.
Haaland doesn’t do dribbling, stepovers or drop his shoulder. An elastico? He’d probably tie his hair back with that. He doesn’t shift the ball out of his feet to create half a yard of space before shooting. Haaland doesn’t take a touch full stop. He just pulls the trigger.
All five of his goals at the World Cup have been one-touch finishes. In fact, each and every one of his 14 shots registered across the games against Iraq, Senegal and Ivory Coast has been a first-time effort on goal.

Call it economical. Call it efficient. Call it instinct. Call it ruthless. Call it keeping the game simple. Call it whatever you want, but Haaland is the most natural out-and-out goalscorer of his generation. Whether he’s playing for Manchester City, or for a country that has a population of less than six million people, doesn’t change that in the slightest.
“He has something that maybe you can’t train so much – the sniff for goals, the feeling that the ball will land at your feet, or in that movement, and I think that is his biggest strength,” Norway’s head coach Stale Solbakken said on the eve of the Ivory Coast game. But he then proceeded to reel off a list of other qualities, including his physicality: Solbakken attributed that, with a smile, to Haaland’s mother, an elite track and field athlete, rather than his father, who played alongside Solbakken for Norway in the 1990s.
Either way, the sporting genes were strong in the Haaland family. The end result is the best footballer the country has ever produced and a player unlike any other in the modern game.
“He’s unique, he’s one of a kind and we’re so lucky to have him,” Kristian Thorstvedt told The Athletic after Norway’s 2-1 win which set up a last-16 tie against Brazil. “I’ve known him for so many years and he’s the same guy he’s always been outside the pitch, and he’s got the same mentality he’s always had on the pitch. He’s phenomenal.”
Watching Haaland for the first time must be a strange experience for the uninitiated. There are times when it feels as though anything other than goalscoring is largely irrelevant to him.
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After 140 seconds against Ivory Coast, Haaland connected with a header. Then he walked a lot, jogged a bit and sprinted occasionally to press an Ivory Coast defender.
The ball? Haaland didn’t come into contact with it again for another 27 minutes and 54 seconds. There’s a lot you could do in that time, including run 10,000 metres if your name is Joshua Cheptegei.
Essentially, a football match was taking place around him, which is increasingly typical of the role of the modern centre forward: stay high, occupy the centre-backs, leave space for others, and don’t run outside the width of the penalty area.
Mikel Oyarzabal knows the drill well. The Real Sociedad striker failed to touch the ball in the opening half an hour of Spain’s World Cup group game against Cape Verde.
Except the difference is that Oyarzabal isn’t Haaland – an instantly recognisable superstar of the game.
Indeed, if you were among the 69,665 people at the AT&T Stadium in Dallas on Tuesday and new to the sport, you could have been forgiven for wondering in that first 30 minutes – maybe even the opening hour, actually – what all the fuss is about with this 6ft 5in, 207lb blond-haired pony-tailed striker.
What does he actually do?
Well, for a start, he made four clearances, which was reflective of the fact that he had more touches in his own penalty area (seven) than in the Ivory Coast box (five).

“He’s important with our set pieces being the man heading the ball out,” Thorstvedt said. “And we know he will always be in front of the goal (at the other end) when we need it.”
Norway did need it here, too. Amad Diallo’s equaliser, after Antonio Nusa had given Norway a first-half lead, had threatened to shift the momentum of the match in Ivory Coast’s favour. Haaland, though, had other ideas. Patrick Berg’s run and cross drew three Ivory Coast players to the ball, leaving Haaland in so much space that he could afford to make a poor connection with his shot and still get the winner.
Erling Haaland has scored with 7.25% of his touches at the 2026 World Cup; among players to have at least 60 touches at a single World Cup (since 1966), no player has scored with a greater proportion. pic.twitter.com/DrmbxAeuFB
— Opta Analyst (@OptaAnalyst) June 30, 2026
“He is the greatest goalscorer in the world, there’s no doubt about that,” Solbakken added. “Today he wasn’t that involved but you know if gets that chance… he scored the winning goal again. His stats are out of this world for the national team.”
But there’s something else, too – something that shines through to anyone who has seen Haaland play at this World Cup, even the opposition managers. “When you watch him, you really feel he’s very proud to play for his country,” Emerse Fae, the Ivory Coast coach, said.
You could see that in the ear-to-ear grin on Haaland’s face when Martin Odegaard was banging the drum in front of the Norway fans after the final whistle and the matchwinner, sitting side by side with his teammates, was proudly ‘rowing’ his country towards the last-16 of the World Cup.
“It’s nice to see that it means so much to all of Norway,” Haaland said. “I think this will change Norway forever.”
Jul 1, 2026Connections: Sports Edition
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Tagged To: Erling HaalandFIFA Men's World CupInternational FootballPremier LeagueSoccer