Big 12 Football Media Days arrive this week in Frisco, Texas, and with them comes the first real checkpoint of the college football season. All 16 teams will spend two days talking through offseason changes, roster upgrades and what they expect when the fall kicks off. The schedule is packed, but a few storylines stand above the rest.
At the top of the list is Texas Tech, and that’s not going away anytime soon. Joey McGuire and the Red Raiders are the center of attention for plenty of reasons: they won the Big 12 last year, reached the College Football Playoff and keep recruiting at an elite level.
But the Brendan Sorsby saga, which wrapped up in the last couple of weeks, only adds more heat to the room. McGuire is going to get the toughest questions of the week, from how firmly he defends Tech’s handling of the situation to what he says about the future of sports gambling in college athletics.
How he navigates all of that will be one of the defining scenes in Frisco.
The spotlight will also be bright on the conference’s four new head coaches making their media days debut: K-State’s Collin Klein, Iowa State’s Jimmy Rogers, Oklahoma State’s Eric Morris and Utah’s Morgan Scalley. Two have already been head coaches, two have worked as top-level coordinators, but all four are stepping into a new level of scrutiny.
This is the first time they’ll face the full media crush that comes with the job, and there’s usually at least one awkward moment when a first-time podium appearance gets rolling. The bigger question is which of them will end up having the best first season on the sideline.
There’s another layer of intrigue around the coaches in Waco and Cincinnati. Dave Aranda and Scott Satterfield are sitting on what look like the two hottest seats in the league.
Aranda is back for 2026, and the Mack Rhoades resignation likely helped keep him in place. Still, both coaches need a strong season - and probably a few eye-catching upsets - if they want to feel good about their chances of being back in 2027.
That pressure will be obvious this week, especially in The Star.
Quarterback buzz is always a major part of media days, and this year’s group of returning passers should be worth watching closely. BYU’s Bear Bachmeier, Colorado’s Julian Lewis, Houston’s Conner Weigman, Arizona’s Noah Fifita, K-State’s Avery Johnson and Utah’s Devon Dampier are all set to be in Frisco.
Some are established veterans, including Dampier, Weigman and Fifita, while others like Bachmeier and Lewis are still building off their freshman seasons. The way they carry themselves, and the way they look physically and emotionally, can tell you plenty about what might be coming this fall.
Then there’s Brett Yormark, who steps into the middle of one of the most unsettled stretches in college sports history. The Big 12 commissioner is expected to address the Protect College Sports Act pending in Congress, the NCAA’s power, the future of college sports on television, the NCAA Tournament’s upcoming expansion and the ongoing debate over whether the College Football Playoff should grow to 16 or 24 teams.
He’ll also have to deal with the Brendan Sorsby drama. Whatever Yormark says in Frisco could shape conversations around college sports for weeks.
In Other News...
Egor Demin Is Starting To Look Like BYUs Next Real NBA Hit
Egor Demin is already starting to look like more than a former BYU standout trying to find his footing in the NBA. The Brooklyn Nets surprising No. 8 overall pick in 2025 opened summer league with a strong showing against Sacramento, finishing with 23 points and seven rebounds while shooting 8-of-15, a performance that fit the kind of steady growth Brooklyn hoped to see after a rookie year interrupted by injury.
Even in a 79-76 loss, Demins night stood out as a positive sign for a player who appeared in only 52 games last season but still flashed enough skill to make the Nets believe in his long-term upside. Now the bigger question is how quickly that progress turns into a more defined role, because Brooklyn has already seen enough to know Demin can help, and the next step is finding out just how far that can go. [Read more 🡒]
BYUs Massive Preseason Honor Haul Says Everything About This Program
Thirteen BYU football players landing on Athlon Sports 2026 Preseason All-Big 12 Team is the kind of recognition that usually says as much about a program as it does about any one roster. The Cougars are coming off a run of success that has put them in a different conversation, and the honors reflect that depth across the lineup, from the backfield to the defense.
LJ Martin, Bruce Mitchell, Faletau Satuala and Cade Uluave were among the headline names, while Evan Johnson also earned first-team recognition and Bear Bachmeiers rise continued to draw notice after his freshman breakout. Uluaves path is especially notable after arriving from Cal, and the broader haul leaves BYU looking like a team with proven pieces and plenty of national respect, even before a snap is played. [Read more 🡒]
