
Listen now
Listen in the appEpisode context
Listen here or keep browsing the show and related sport coverage from here.
Who actually runs college sports in 2026?
For decades, the answer was simple: the NCAA.
Today? Not so much.
In this solo episode, Grant House breaks down the rapidly evolving power struggle shaping the future of college athletics through the lens of the Brendan Sorsby case, where a Texas court allowed the Texas Tech quarterback to regain eligibility after the NCAA ruled him ineligible for gambling violations.
But this episode isn't just about one athlete.
It's about the growing tension between the NCAA, conferences, universities, state governments, courts, and athletes themselves. From NIL and the transfer portal to revenue sharing and legal challenges like House v. NCAA, college sports is entering a new era where authority is no longer concentrated in one organization.
Topics discussed:
The Brendan Sorsby eligibility case
Why the Big 12 entered the legal battle
NCAA authority vs. court intervention
The impact of NIL and athlete compensation
The future of athlete rights and representation
Lessons from House v. NCAA
Whether college sports needs a commissioner or players association
What this means for athletes, fans, coaches, and administrators
As both a Team USA athlete and lead plaintiff in House v. NCAA, Grant offers a unique perspective on the changing landscape of college sports and the questions that will define its future.
The biggest question isn't whether Brendan Sorsby should play. The biggest question is: who gets to decide?
#CollegeSports #NIL #NCAA #TexasTech #BrendanSorsby #HousevNCAA #AthleteAdvocacy #TransferPortal #CollegeFootball #SportsBusiness #SportsLaw #NameImageLikeness #StudentAthletes #GrantHouse #HouseOfImpactPodcast
Next listen
All from Swim Bros Podcast →
Next listen
EP 98-Athlete Discussion on the Enhanced Games
Listen guide
"EP 99: Is this the biggest story in the NCAA for 2026_" is an episode of Swim Bros Podcast. Runtime 24 min. Published June 18, 2026. Hit play above to stream it here, or open the free Spot Sports app for background play and offline downloads.