Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby has officially applied for the NFL Supplemental Draft [1, 2, 3].
The move represents a strategic pivot for Sorsby, as it allows him to bypass ongoing collegiate hurdles and enter the professional ranks. By applying for the supplemental draft, he effectively ends a protracted dispute regarding his NCAA eligibility [4, 1].
Tom Pelissero of NFL Network said Sorsby has officially applied for the draft [1]. The transition follows a period of uncertainty regarding his status with the college governing body. An unnamed NFL executive said the college issue involves eligibility, the NCAA, and enforcement [3].
Sorsby's decision to leave the collegiate system comes after attempts to resolve his standing with the NCAA. The supplemental draft is typically used by players who missed the regular draft window or faced eligibility issues that prevented them from entering the standard process [1, 2].
Staff at Fansided said Sorsby did the right thing by ending his NCAA eligibility fight and applying for the NFL Supplemental Draft [4]. The move clears the path for NFL teams to potentially acquire the quarterback through the league's specific supplemental allocation process [2].
Reports on the development surfaced Tuesday, June 16, 2026 [1, 2]. Sorsby now awaits the league's processing of his application to determine which professional teams may bid for his rights.
“Brendan Sorsby has officially applied for the NFL's supplemental draft.”
Sorsby's application signals a surrender in his legal or administrative battle with the NCAA in exchange for professional certainty. By opting into the supplemental draft, he removes the risk of remaining ineligible for college play while providing a structured mechanism for NFL teams to sign him, effectively trading his collegiate amateur status for a professional career path.


