How NFL supplemental draft could work for Texas Tech QB Brendan Sorsby in gambling investigation originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby is being investigated by the NCAA for gambling.
That's the news that emerged Monday, when the Red Raiders announced that Sorsby is taking an indefinite leave of absence to figure out a gambling addiction.
This clearly has wide-ranging implications on a number of levels, but one of the narratives that NFL analysts have already begun to discuss is the supplemental draft.
Sorsby, if he had played out the 2026 season at Texas Tech as planned, would've had a chance at being a first-round pick, or at least a QB drafted at some point in the early to middle rounds.
Now, it's not clear what the next steps might be for Sorsby in college football.
Multiple football writers have already suggested on social media that Sorsby should enter the supplemental draft for the NFL.
Wait wait wait wait is Brendan Sorsby suddenly going to be a supplemental draft pick...THIS year?! https://t.co/wN5KfAnX82
This doesn't seem impossible, either. There's a bit of precedent here.
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Essentially, a player who would've been eligible to be drafted anyway submits to the NFL to put their name into the supplemental draft.
At that point, teams are given a list of players on the board, and they have a bit of a reverse bidding process.
One team could say they'd spend a fifth-round pick on Sorsby. Another could say they'd use a fourth-rounder.
If the fourth-round pick was the earliest bid, that team would get Sorsby for that cost while forfeiting that round pick in the following year's traditional draft.
Given that Brendan Sorsby is facing a possible full season loss of eligibility, you wonder if he will consider entering the NFL supplemental draft (if there is one). He did consider the draft prior to leaving Cincinnati. Also of note: Bearcats are suing Sorsby for $1 million…
If Sorsby went down this path, there'd be some precedent.
Former Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor entered the NFL supplemental draft after being handed a five-game suspension by the NCAA.
The Oakland Raiders used a third-round pick on him in 2011.
Of note to Sorsby -- Pryor still had to serve his NCAA-given suspension in the NFL. The league didn't have to do it, but chose to give Pryor an identical length punishment to what the NCAA had already ruled.
Pryor had been caught up in the Buckeyes' memorabilia-for-cash scandal.
