Texas Tech Forced To Answer For Offseason Fallout At Media Days

As Texas Tech navigates controversy at media days, optimism rises with star quarterback healing and strong conference predictions.

FRISCO, Texas - Texas Tech didn’t try to skate past the Brendan Sorsby fallout when it finally got its turn at Big 12 media days on Tuesday. The topic was waiting there, and the Red Raiders answered it head-on.

Head coach Joey McGuire was asked whether the controversy “came at a cost to your reputation or those things, or did you have to do any restoration in that regard?” His response started with, “That's a good question,” and he went on to talk about the people around the program who were pulled into the mess.

“The thing for me that through all of this, my president and my AD, who are good friends of mine, who believed in me, who hired me, they went through a lot,” he said. “If you look as a whole, there were not a lot of coaches that said really a whole lot. There were some funny jabs taken by some coaches, but there weren't a lot of coaches that just really came out and said a lot of different things.

“For my peers, I got a lot of support. Eric Morris, the first day any news broke, called me and said, 'Hey, man, I'm just doing a well check.'

He's a good friend of mine. Kalani (Sitake), a great friend of mine, said the same thing.

Kenny Dillingham made a joke in a group text and called me and said, 'You know I was kidding.' I said, 'Kenny, dude, I get it, man.'

For me, my peers, I had so much support from my peers.

“And it was tough to see (AD) Kirby (Hocutt) and President Schovanec have to go through that. I hate that for them.

The thing that we really try to focus on is the Red Raiders and our alumni base and our boosters. Whenever I've talked to them -- answered any emails, texts, or anything like that -- those are the ones that I was concerned about to make sure they understand where we were coming from.”

The conference office took a very different route. Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark opened the event with his annual address, and when the first question after that nearly 1,700-word statement turned to the Texas Tech rift, he shut it down quickly.

“Today is not the time to address that issue,” he said. “Today is about celebrating the upcoming football season and celebrating our 16 schools, but I appreciate the question, so thank you.”

The subject didn’t disappear after that. The media pressed for eight more questions before the exchange turned strange and ended up empty with a reporter who covers Texas Tech.

All of it came against a backdrop that still has Texas Tech positioned as the Big 12 favorite. On Monday, the Red Raiders were listed with seven preseason all-conference players and the preseason defensive player of the year. There’s also growing optimism that injured quarterback Will Hammond will be ready for the start of the season.

So while the offseason’s loudest story has followed Texas Tech into Frisco, the program’s message was clear: it isn’t ducking the issue, and it isn’t letting it define what comes next.

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