NCAA Inquiry Opens New Chapter in Brendan Sorsby Saga

The Brendan Sorsby controversy is not going away anytime soon.

The NCAA has sent a formal letter of inquiry to the University of Cincinnati regarding former quarterback Brendan Sorsby’s time with the Bearcats, opening a new phase in one of the most complicated gambling-related cases college football has seen in years. According to multiple reports, the NCAA wants additional information about what Cincinnati knew regarding Sorsby’s sports wagering activities while he was enrolled at the school.

A letter of inquiry is a standard step in the NCAA enforcement process and does not automatically indicate violations occurred. However, it signals that investigators believe there are questions that still need answers.

Sorsby became the center of national attention after the NCAA ruled him permanently ineligible following an investigation that found he placed more than $90,000 in impermissible sports wagers during his college career. Reports indicate that at least some of those bets occurred while he was at Cincinnati, including wagers on college athletics. Investigators have stated they found no evidence that Sorsby wagered on Cincinnati football games.

The case sparked months of legal battles involving Sorsby, the NCAA, Texas Tech, the Big 12 Conference, and Cincinnati. What initially appeared to be a straightforward eligibility case evolved into one of the most closely watched disputes in modern college athletics as questions emerged about enforcement, NIL agreements, and institutional responsibility.

Cincinnati has maintained that no athletic department officials or staff members were aware of any impermissible gambling activity. The university reiterated that position after reports of the NCAA inquiry surfaced, stating it has cooperated with investigators throughout the process.

At Big 12 Media Days, Cincinnati coach Scott Satterfield declined to comment on the reported inquiry, while NCAA officials have also remained silent on the specifics of any ongoing investigation.

For Cincinnati, the inquiry creates another unwanted headline as the program attempts to move forward. For the NCAA, it represents an effort to determine whether warning signs were missed and whether anyone within the program knew more than has previously been disclosed. And for college football, it serves as another reminder that gambling remains one of the sport’s most sensitive issues.

The Sorsby story has already altered careers, triggered lawsuits, and ignited debates about NCAA authority. Now, with Cincinnati officially under scrutiny, the fallout may not be over yet.

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Landon Kardian