Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark made headlines before the first full day of media questions even got rolling in Frisco.
The conference opened 2026 Big 12 Media Days on Tuesday at the Ford Center at The Star, where Yormark spent about 15 minutes laying out his vision for the league. He announced a partnership with Monster Energy that will feature jersey patches and on-field logos, and he also repeated his position on College Football Playoff expansion and sports gambling.
Once the questions started, one exchange quickly turned sharp.
Sean Dillon of Rockin' Pregame asked Yormark about what he described as the league’s treatment of Texas Tech over the past year, and Yormark immediately pushed back.
"Let me come closer, stand up. Ask that question again, and I'm going to give you the answer I want to give you," Yormark told Dillon.
Dillon then repeated his point, bringing up Texas Tech’s fine over tortillas, the ban on tortillas altogether, Oklahoma State’s paddles receiving a noisemaker exemption in 2012, the lawsuit involving Brendan Sorsby, and Cincinnati not being punished.
"Texas Tech got fined for tortillas, and tortillas were banned outright," Dillon repeated. "Oklahoma State has paddles that were given a noisemaker exemption back in 2012.
(Brendan) Sorsby never played a snap for the Red Raiders, and yet there's a lawsuit. Cincinnati has yet to be touched.
You're selling "greater than 12," why should Texas Tech fans believe it?"
Yormark cut him off with a correction.
"No, I didn't say greater than 12, you misquoted me," Yormark responded. "I said we're going forward as 16 strong, and that's my answer to your question, but thank you for that question."
The back-and-forth came against a tense backdrop around Texas Tech, which has become a lightning rod in college athletics. With player pay now fully legal and transfers open, the Red Raiders have leaned hard into the resources available to them. Booster Cody Campbell, a billionaire oil CEO, has used the portal to help build what the source described as a competitive advantage no other Big 12 program has.
The Sorsby issue Dillon referenced was another flashpoint. The Big 12 sued Texas Tech in June over efforts to avoid the NCAA punishment expected for Sorsby because of his gambling habits. That situation also led to threats from other Big 12 athletic directors that they would not play Texas Tech if Sorsby stayed on the roster.
Yormark’s friction with Texas Tech and Campbell is not new. In April, the two sides clashed on social media after the league scheduled Texas Tech’s game against Houston for a Friday night, a slot that matters deeply to Texas high school football. Yormark told Campbell that he does not run the Big 12, and Campbell answered by reviving the tortilla-throwing tradition the conference had banned in October 2025.
In Other News...
Houston Is Sending A Big 12 Message Fans Can't Ignore
Houstons climb under Willie Fritz has already changed the tone around the program, and the 2025 finish only sharpened it. After going from 4-8 to 10-3 and knocking off LSU in its bowl game, the Cougars arrived at Big 12 media days with a different kind of confidence, one rooted less in surprise and more in expectation. The schedule ahead is viewed as manageable enough to keep the conversation pointed toward bigger things, and Houston has every reason to believe it belongs in that mix.
Kentrell Webb, one of the leaders in the secondary, made it clear the standard inside the building has shifted with the results. The message is not about settling for another nice season or waiting for respect to arrive later. It is about the Big 12 title, and the Cougars know the path will likely be shaped by the leagues biggest checkpoints, with Texas Tech and Utah looming as the games that could define how far this push really goes. [Read more 🡒]
Willie Fritz Finally Clarified Houstons Quarterback Tension
Houstons quarterback picture has been one of the more interesting subplots around the program, especially with senior Conner Weigman in the room and freshman Keisean Henderson arriving with the kind of pedigree that naturally invites attention. Willie Fritz helped clear up at least part of the discussion by confirming the Cougars are moving forward with a veteran at the top of the depth chart, while also making it clear Henderson is not just a name to stash away for the future.
The more intriguing part is how Houston plans to use Henderson as he settles in. Fritz said the freshman could still have a role in specific packages or situations, which gives the Cougars a chance to tap into his athleticism without asking him to carry the full load right away. For a team trying to balance present stability with long-term upside, that kind of arrangement could matter just as much as the headline answer at quarterback. [Read more 🡒]
