Admin
I made the decision to start taking Youssouf to various football camps (and also introduce him to the hellsite that is X/Twitter because apparently football coaches only use X/Twitter while Instagram is more popular for basketball). These camps are all $60 to attend and I’m guessing there is some sort of rule about that. We decided to do SMU (this past Sunday), TCU on Friday, and Texas Tech on Sunday. As an aside, if any of you want to mention to McGuire or Blanchard to be on the lookout for Yoyo, that would be great. I also intend on running on Monday morning somewhere in Lubbock.
SMU camp! pic.twitter.com/0v8zoHgFcB
— Youssouf Jungman (@YoussoufJungman) May 31, 2026
On the Gridiron
Dave Campbell’s Texas Football announced that head coach Joey McGuire, general manager James Blanchard, athletic director Kirby Hocutt, chairman of the Board of Regents Cody Campbell, and linebacker Ben Roberts would be gracing the cover.
Introducing the main cover of the 2026 edition of Dave Campbell’s Texas Football magazine, featuring Texas Tech’s Joey McGuire, Cody Campbell, James Blanchard, Kirby Hocutt & Ben Roberts! 🏈🌵#WreckEm | @optimum
Story, including how to secure your copy, below ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/zFaefC9fol
— Dave Campbell’s — TexasFootball.com (@dctf) June 1, 2026
Mike Leach was named to the 2027 ballot for the National Football Foundation College Football Hall of Fame. Absolutely deserved.
Open for Business’ John Kurtz has as good of a summary and take-down of the SEC and tier complaining about the Big 12:
Yet the SEC thinks the Big 12 got too much love. Did they want CFP Executive Director Rich Clark to retroactively strip BYU’s Pop-Tarts Bowl championship trophy away?
It makes absolutely no sense. It’s the tantrum of a child that clearly goes deeper than the incident that sparked it.
So, why is this actually happening? Why is the SEC acting like it’s a felony to take away its binky?
Because it’s been a generation since the SEC was this down on its luck, and nobody involved knows how to handle it.
The SEC was the rightful ruler of college football for two decades. Even the biggest SEC haters couldn’t deny the superiority of a conference that won four times as many national championships as any other league from 2007 to 2023.
Texas Tech received the commitment from 2027 defensive tackle Khyren Haywood.
Player: Khyren Haywood
Height: 6’1″
Weight: 260
High School: Denton Guyer
Hometown: Denton, TX
Offers: Colorado, Kansas State, Arizona, Arizona State, Arkansas, Baylor, California, Florida State, Houston, Kansas, LSU, Mississippi State, Oklahoma State, Ole Miss, Oregon, Pittsburgh, Purdue, Stanford, Syracuse, TCU, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tch, UCLA, USC, Utah, Washington, Northwestern, SMU, Memphis, North Texas, UTSA, Washington State, Sacramento State, Tulane
Stats: 61 tackles, 24.5 tackles for a loss, 11.5 sacks, 1 interception
Recruiting Services: On3 87.55 3-star | 24/7 Sports 86 3-star | ESPN 81 4-star
Last but not least Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby had his injunction hearing against the NCAA yesterday. I have not had time to digest everything, but lucky for you, you can read Lubbock Avalanche-Journal’s Don Williams and ESPN’s Max Olson and their summaries. This is from the Olson article:
The decision will be up to judge Ken Curry, a retired judge from Tarrant County. Curry asked for additional documentation and is expected to render a decision in the upcoming days. Sorsby’s attorneys asked for a decision by June 15 so that Sorsby can decide on entering the NFL supplemental draft by June 22.
Jeffrey Kessler, Sorsby’s lead attorney, argued in the hearing that the NCAA ignored its own rules by not considering Sorsby’s wellbeing in its decision, describing his gambling history as a mental health and addiction issue that the NCAA is required to support and not punish.
NCAA attorney Taylor Askew said that the organization did consider Sorsby’s mental health in its process of deeming him permanently ineligible and that those challenges do not excuse his gambling or the consequences of his actions.
