Big 12 Media Days gave the league plenty to chew on, but the biggest takeaways weren’t all about the players and coaches on the stage in Frisco. Some of the loudest moments came from how people handled the Brendan Sorsby fallout, who embraced the spotlight, and which parts of the event still feel built more for television than for anyone trying to learn something.
Joey McGuire came out of the week looking sharp. The Texas Tech coach knew the questions were coming, and he didn’t duck any of them.
That mattered. After the way Tech handled the Sorsby situation from a PR standpoint, McGuire spent the week doing real damage control by answering everything directly, whether the questions were blunt or came at him sideways.
He talked through what he might have done differently and acknowledged that other schools are eventually going to have to deal with the same kind of issue. For anyone who has covered him since he took over at Texas Tech, it was also familiar territory: McGuire being McGuire.
Willie Fritz also left Frisco in a strong spot. On Tuesday, McGuire practically became Fritz’s own hype man while the conversation kept circling back to the Sorsby mess, but there was also real respect for the Houston coach from the national media.
Houston hasn’t had that kind of attention since joining the Big 12, and winning is a big reason why. Fritz’s path deserves more credit than it usually gets.
He’s gone from the juco ranks to the power conference level and has piled up 261 wins, including his time at Brenham College, where he won a juco national title. His mention of his first media days in the Southwest Junior College Football Conference at Navarro College in 1993 was a good reminder of how long he’s been in this business.
Between the praise from McGuire, West Virginia coach Rich Rodriguez and the national contingent, Fritz looked like a coach building Houston toward something bigger.
The Arizona schools also came away with a boost. Of the four corners programs that entered the league three years ago, Arizona and Arizona State have leaned into the Big 12 more than anybody else.
Both got plenty of attention across the two days. Kenny Dillingham was everywhere, working both the podium and the breakouts, and he handled himself like one of the most quotable coaches in the conference.
He also made it clear he understands the balance between confidence and reality. He knows his team can contend, but he’s not calling them “the team.”
He likes the chase, and he didn’t act bothered by the London trip in September. He welcomed it.
Arizona had a strong showing too. Brent Brennan and the Wildcats leaned into the expectations that come with Year 3 in the league after a 9-4 season.
Noah Fifita drew the attention you’d expect, and he kept steering the conversation toward the team instead of himself. Brennan even delivered one of the week’s more memorable lines: “Noah Fifita doesn’t just kick ass on Saturdays, he kicks ass every day of the week.”
The season still has to play out, but both Arizona programs walked away with a nice PR bounce heading into fall workouts.
Not everyone had such a smooth week. Brett Yormark took a hit in the Texas Tech conversation after Sean Dillon’s question was clearly meant to provoke a response about how aggrieved the Red Raiders fan base feels over the Brendan Sorsby situation.
Yormark had options. He could have brushed it off, redirected it or answered in a way that cooled things down.
Instead, he walked across the stage, told Dillon to stand up and ask it again, and then fired back with a short answer that said almost nothing. It was a rare miss for a commissioner who usually knows exactly what to say.
He had a month to prepare, and this one got away from him. Yormark was right to keep Sorsby from playing in the conference this year because of the liability it posed to the integrity of the league, but he didn’t handle Tech’s frustration well and didn’t acknowledge the fan base’s feelings the way he should have.
The stage itself also took a beating. The made-for-TV podium sessions didn’t offer much for anyone hoping to get real football insight.
The questions felt thin and wandered away from the game far too often. The breakout sessions, though, were a different story.
The way the league staggered them this year made it easier to talk to more coaches and players than usual, and that was the part of media days that actually delivered. If the Big 12 ever wants to lean more toward the basketball-style format, with a moderator like ESPN’s Kevin Connors guiding the conversation and media questions mixed in, that would probably be a better use of everyone’s time.
As for Cincinnati, the NCAA’s letter of inquiry tied to Sorsby arrived earlier this week, but that doesn’t mean the Bearcats did anything wrong. It just means the NCAA wants more details.
Scott Satterfield didn’t have much to say about it on Wednesday, and that’s about where things stand for now. The process is just getting started, and this part of the story is going to take time.
In Other News...
Willie Fritz Has Houston Chasing A Different Kind Of Recruit
Willie Fritz has spent his first stretch at Houston reshaping more than just the on-field product. The programs recruiting profile has climbed with it, drawing commitments from higher-rated prospects and giving the Cougars a different kind of momentum as they try to establish themselves in the Big 12. The 2026 class has become part of that conversation, with names like Paris Melvin Jr. and Jeremiah Bushnell adding to the sense that Houston is no longer selling only potential.
What stands out is how much this has changed the way the Cougars are being viewed on the recruiting trail. Fritzs approach has helped Houston land a class with more national attention, and the buzz around Keisean Henderson has only amplified that shift. For a program trying to build staying power in a crowded league, the real question now is whether this new recruiting footing can keep turning into the kind of roster depth that lasts beyond one cycle. [Read more 🡒]
Willie Fritz May Have Found Houstons Real Blueprint For Staying Power
Willie Fritz spent part of Big 12 Media Days talking less about splashy recruiting wins and more about the kind of roster he wants to build at Houston. For a coach trying to steady a program that has been through a lot of change, the message was simple enough: fit matters, and the right players can matter more than the most obvious talent on paper.
That approach has already shown up in the Cougars climb from a four-win season to a 10-win finish, with transfers and recruits helping give Fritz the kind of foundation he has been chasing since arriving. The next test is whether that formula can hold up when the expectations get heavier, because Houston is no longer just trying to get back on track, it is starting to look toward a much bigger goal in the Big 12. [Read more 🡒]
Cincinnati Still Looms As Houstons Most Frustrating Big 12 Test
Since joining the Big 12 in 2023, Houston has spent plenty of time sorting out who its real conference rivals are, and Cincinnati has already made a strong case for staying near the top of that list. The two programs carried over a familiar edge from their American Athletic Conference days, and the Cougars have still not found a way to get past the Bearcats in recent meetings.
Houstons 2025 roster reset and bowl-winning finish changed the outlook around the program, and the Cougars should enter the next matchup with more depth and a better overall profile. Even so, Cincinnati remains one of those opponents that can drag a good season back into a familiar kind of frustration, especially with the Bearcats leaning on defensive transfer help and trying to stay competitive in a league where every hidden weakness gets exposed quickly. [Read more 🡒]
