The college football world is still reeling after a Texas judge handed down a bombshell ruling that granted Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby a temporary injunction—essentially nullifying an NCAA betting ban. Sorsby had admitted to placing thousands of sports bets, including dozens on his own Indiana Hoosiers team back in 2022. But the chaos didn’t stop there.
In a desperate bid to contain the fallout, Texas Tech’s administration released a sprawling 21-minute video defending their decision to keep Sorsby on the roster. School officials sat around a table, pleading their case to a furious fanbase and a league threatening a scheduling boycott. But according to sources close to the situation, the damage was already done.
Enter TCU Football. The Horned Frogs’ official X account didn’t just respond—they eviscerated Texas Tech with a single, savage meme. Alongside a screenshot of Texas Tech’s lengthy video, TCU posted the classic dismissive text: “I ain’t watching all that I’m happy for u tho or sorry that happened.”
Insiders say the low-effort roast instantly broke the internet, capturing the exhaustion and contempt of rival fanbases who are reportedly fed up with what they see as a corrupt loophole. One unnamed Big 12 source told us, “It was the perfect mic drop. Texas Tech spent 21 minutes trying to justify the unjustifiable, and TCU summed up the entire league’s mood in 20 words.”
The trolling carries an extra layer of bad blood. During Sorsby’s final regular-season game with Cincinnati in November 2025, he gashed TCU’s defense for 282 yards and three touchdowns. Now, with Sorsby reportedly set to miss only the first two games of the 2026 season, the upcoming Horned Frogs-Red Raiders showdown is shaping up to be an internet-fueled grudge match with massive implications for conference integrity.
Rival athletic directors are rumored to be exploring new measures—including a potential boycott of future games against Texas Tech—if the NCAA doesn’t step in. As one league insider put it, “This isn’t just about one player. It’s about whether the rules mean anything anymore.”

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