Brendan Sorsby scandal best thing for college football, ESPN analyst says USA Today - News Jun 10, 2026 Jun 10, 2026 Updated 47 mins ago 0 Shenandoah boys tennis sends five to state FBI Director Gives Update On Nancy Guthrie Case, Doubles Down On Claims Police Delayed Federal Help Senate bill targets sports betting ads aimed at children 'You are an example to me' - Cobolli's emotional message to Arnaldi Clarinda, Shenandoah girls golf regional final individual qualifiers Seth Jarvis scores in overtime, Carolina beat Vegas to tie Stanley Cup Finals Ukraine war and risk of stagnation hang over St Petersburg economic conference America250 vs. Freedom 250: is there a difference, and does it matter? Jeff Passan Drops Sneaky Dodgers Trade Report... Air raid sirens trigger panic for Kyiv child who survived blast Steilacoom ferry terminal Pride flag draws angry emails, town cites state lease Inflation Heats Up at Highest Rate in Three Years How Stephen Colbert Took a Parting Shot at CBS During His Last 'Late Show' Episode Prefer us on Google Learn More ESPN analyst Jordan Rodgers says the Brendan Sorsby scandal could be the best thing to happen to college football. Here's why. As featured on College football is chaos, greed and dysfunction – and still king | Opinion The nonstop negativity and weekly chaos would kill just about any other sport. Latest video US and Iranian attacks dent ceasefire, Iranian sources say talks intensify US ramps up 2026 FIFA World Cup security with counter-drone tech, airport-style screenings 2026 World Cup Rule Changes You Need to Know Bank Iowa celebrates 50 years Taylor Swift among celebs at stars studded MSG for Game 4 of NBA Finals Inflation Heats Up at Highest Rate in Three Years Brendan Sorsby scandal best thing for college football, ESPN analyst says Platner survives scandal, Mace gets routed in primary night shakeup Facebook Twitter Bluesky WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save 0 Comments
College football is chaos, greed and dysfunction – and still king | Opinion The nonstop negativity and weekly chaos would kill just about any other sport.Â