Texas Tech’s 2026 outlook gets narrowed fast when you get to the one player the Red Raiders can least afford to lose: Will Hammond.
The sophomore quarterback out of Austin, Texas, has moved into the center of everything after the final demise of Brendan Sorsby’s bid to be Texas Tech’s quarterback of record in 2026. When Sorsby was still penciled in as the starter, Hammond represented strong depth behind him.
Now the picture has changed. Hammond is the presumptive starter, the depth chart behind him is more uncertain, and his health matters even more than it did before.
That comes with real pressure. Hammond is no longer just a promising piece in the room; he is the guy, and Texas Tech’s ceiling now leans heavily on whether he can handle that responsibility while staying on the field.
The biggest issue is obvious: his knee. Hammond suffered a season-ending knee injury in the middle of the 2025 campaign, and his availability for the start of this season is still unknown.
Best case, he’s under center in Week 1. Worst case, he misses the entire non-conference slate and maybe even a game or two of Big XII play.
Even if he gets back earlier than expected, there’s no guarantee he’ll be sharp right away. Rust is part of the equation, and it could take time before he’s playing at his highest level.
Texas Tech may still be good enough to beat most opponents if Hammond is limited or if a backup has to step in, but the safety net is much thinner now. One bad night suddenly looks a lot more dangerous. The chance of a costly loss rises with every layer of uncertainty around the quarterback spot.
And there’s another layer here: even if Hammond is fully healthy, nobody really knows yet how good he’ll be when the games start counting for real. Texas Tech clearly pushed hard to bring in Sorsby and keep him, and that kind of move says the staff believed it needed a quarterback upgrade to chase a natty. That doesn’t automatically mean they doubted Hammond, but it also doesn’t read like a vote of total confidence.
So the preseason talk will come, and it will probably be loud. People will say Hammond is looking great, or that he’s expected to be the second coming of Mahomes, forgive a slight exaggeration.
But the real answer won’t show up until he’s in a tight conference game with a playoff berth on the line. That moment is coming.
And when it does, Hammond will either gitter dunn or Texas Tech will be staring at a disappointing season.
In Other News...
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Mihailo Petrovics entry into the transfer portal has quickly drawn attention from several high-major programs looking for help in the backcourt, and Texas Tech is among the schools reportedly keeping a close eye on the Illinois guard. After a freshman season with limited playing time, Petrovic is being viewed as the kind of depth piece that can give a roster another ball-handler and some insurance across a long season.
For Texas Tech, the question is less about whether Petrovic can help in a general sense and more about how quickly he could carve out a lane with the backcourt additions already in place. That makes the fit a little more complicated than it looks on paper, even as the Red Raiders remain part of a crowded race for a player whose next stop will likely depend as much on opportunity as on interest. [Read more 🡒]
Brendan Sorsby's Football Future Just Took Another Brutal Turn
Brendan Sorsbys path back to football has taken another sharp turn, and it puts the former Texas Tech quarterback in a strange holding pattern after the NCAA permanently ruled him ineligible for college football. His appeal was dismissed, leaving him without a college route while the league has made clear it is not treating his situation like a typical transition to the pros.
Sorsby now says he is focused on preparing for the 2027 NFL Draft, while also acknowledging he is working through the fallout from a gambling problem. The NCAA ruling stemmed from violations that included betting on his own team while at Indiana and other prohibited wagers, and although the NFL says it will not punish him for known prior misconduct, it can still review that conduct if there are future issues. [Read more 🡒]
