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Top Texas Tech football donor says nobody has ‘authority’ to ‘enforce any rules’ in college sports right now
Texas Tech football was thrust into a national controversy this week when transfer quarterback Brendan Sorsby checked into gambling addiction rehab.
The football program is now facing a new controversy after one of its top donors has attracted a different type of controversy in recent months.
Texas Tech alumnus Cody Campbell, a prominent energy industry billionaire and GOP donor, told Fox News Digital in an interview Friday, three days before news broke of Sorsby’s entrance into gambling addiction treatment, that he had “concern” with consistency and enforcement of what is allowed in college sports and what isn’t.
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“I have concern with consistency and enforcement. I have concern with, you know, the difficulty that schools have in, you know, navigating the rules. I mean, most schools don’t even know what the rules are. It’s, it’s not clear what’s legal and what’s not legal,” Campbell said when asked if he has a concern with the current state of oversight in the NCAA.
“I mean, I think the entire governance model right now in college sports is completely broken and ineffective. Nobody has the authority or ability to enforce any rules right now.”
Campbell did not provide further comment after news of Sorsby’s rehab broke.
Campbell got into a heated debate with Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark earlier this month over the move of a Texas Tech football game to a Friday night, which Campbell publicly called “absurd.” Yormark publicly stated that Campbell “does not run the Big 12” and reminded him that conference decisions are made by officials, not boosters.
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Campbell addressed his relationship with the conference commissioners in the interview Friday with Fox News Digital.
“The commissioners, you know, I get along with some of them better than others,” he said.
“You know, it seems like that some people think that it’s, it might be an advantage for nothing to happen for chaos to, to persist because some conferences have, well, I should say some members of some conferences have benefited from, from the chaos. And so maybe some people don’t want anything to happen.
“I also have a problem with a commissioner or anybody else who doesn’t care about all the benefit that is derived from college sports and is only interested in preserving their own power position or, you know, big salary that they receive.”
Campbell, a Republican who says he is aligned with President Donald Trump’s vision to “save college sports” via NIL and transfer portal regulation, admitted he has been criticized for some of his philosophical beliefs on college sports governance.
Campbell, as the focus of multiple ESPN profile pieces in recent months as a figure who wants to help in the effort to “save college sports,” admits he has also been criticized for his attempted intervention in college sports as a whole as a booster for just a single school.
“I mean, yeah, I mean, of course they have,” Campbell said when asked if he has been criticized for his belief in strict regulation over NIL and the transfer portal.
“But people that say those kinds of things don’t understand that, like, you know, the vast majority of the funding that is going to subsidize these massive deficits, the vast majority of the money that goes to support our universities is coming from taxpayer dollars. Furthermore, most of the institutions we’re talking about here, the vast majority are publicly owned already. They’re not private entities.”
Campbell believes that, unlike the energy industry, college sports are “not a free market.”
“This is not at all the same as a private business like mine, which is owned by private individuals,” Campbell said.
“This is not a free market. This is a, a government-subsidized program essentially that is aimed at providing opportunity, providing social mobility and providing leadership development for the entire country.”
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MORNING GLORY: Dems’ Bernie-backed oyster farmer hands Susan Collins a massive 2026 advantage
“Extreme Makeover” is a brand of reality show that has succeeded both when applied to participants who needed to change their health habits, hygiene and clothing choices, as well as when applied to participants’ homes, which had disrepair or structural issues that needed fixing.
The programs “worked” because the premise is simple: People and domiciles — no matter how messed up — can change, can be made attractive and functional with the right amount of attention, care and craftsmanship.
Now comes a new offshoot: “Extremist Makeover.”
While not yet a reality show on a streaming platform, this reboot is far advanced in development within the Democratic Party.
MICHIGAN DEM REP DECLINES TO SUPPORT PLATNER AFTER RESURFACED RAPE COMMENTS
The Democratic candidate for the United States Senate seat in Maine — currently occupied by perhaps the most moderate, intelligent, trusted, hard-working and admired senator on both sides of the aisle, Sen. Susan Collins — is going to be oysterman Graham Platner.
Platner is not a “liberal.” He’s not a “leftist.” He’s an extremist. Platner is from that land “beyond the fringe” in American politics that occasionally throws up onto the election beaches a candidate from the wacky left or wacky right after an intra-party primary campaign, a nominee who simply doesn’t play within the “10s,” much less the “40s,” of American political football.
The extremists luck out in the primary for a variety of oddball reasons, and then their parties pretend to be surprised when their oddball nominees get thumped in the general election.
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So, I predict, it will turn out with Mr. Platner, whose many, er, idiosyncrasies have been tumbling into public view for a couple of months now.
Platner’s most famous “eccentricity” thus far is his “Totenkopf” tattoo of the death’s head worn proudly during the Nazi era by Hitler’s Schutzstaffel (SS), particularly by the SS-Totenkopfverbaende, one of the original three branches of the SS, along with the Allgemeine SS and the Waffen SS. The SS-Totenkopfverbaende were guards at the concentration-extermination camps. Of many vile symbols of that regime, this is the equal of any of them when it comes to projecting evil purpose and deadly, arbitrary killing. Asking for that tattoo is a deliberate choice. Keeping it for years and years is another.
So, too, are the many Reddit posts Mr. Platner has made over his life, which cover the waterfront of bigotries and what we used to quaintly call “hate speech,” but which Democrats now call either “opportunities to grow,” or, more truthfully, auditions.
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Sen. Collins has faced leftist Democrats before in past elections. In her most recent campaign, in 2020, Democrats nominated the very left-wing Speaker of the Maine House, Sara Gideon. Despite being outspent by more than 2-to-1 (pro-Gideon spending was just shy of $48 million, while Collins’ war chest was $23 million) and being behind in nearly every single major poll from start to finish, Collins won her race by nine points, even though then-candidate Joe Biden beat President Donald Trump by the same margin. So nearly 20% of Mainers in 2020 switched from voting for a Democrat at the top of the ticket to a Republican on the next line in the Senate race.
That’s not just because Collins is genuinely liked and admired across Maine, which she is. Collins is also the powerful Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, and thus in a position to help Mainers across the board, from every employee at Bath Iron Works, to every lobsterman or fisherman beset by ridiculous federal regulations, and every year-round Mainer beset by soaring heating costs in the winter because of Democrats obstructing pipeline permitting that would significantly lower the cost of getting energy to the Pine Tree State.
And it’s also not just because Collins is so widely respected that she is on the Senate’s Intelligence Committee, where only the most trusted senators from both parties serve, superintending the nation’s most secretive programs.
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It is also because Collins is a superb politician, always out and about across her state asking Mainers for their vote.
Collins is from “the County,” the enormous and farthest-north Aroostook County, which is as authentically Maine as one can get. Collins is also the equal of any example of a gracious and welcoming elected official who understands that the job of senator is to serve her constituents, not grandstand on far-left podcasts.
Collins and Platner could not be more different. It is possible that “normal” and welcoming Maine wants a radical, verbal bomb-throwing extremist as its next senator. But I don’t think so.
It’s rare to have a Susan Collins represent your state from positions of power and influence and do so with class and humility. To trade that in for a death’s skull and online bigotry doesn’t seem like a bet Mainers are going to make, no matter how many millions of dollars the Antifa-adjacent pour into the race from the far-left spread across the country.
Hugh Hewitt is a Fox News contributor and host of “The Hugh Hewitt Show” heard weekday afternoons from 3 PM to 6 PM ET on the Salem Radio Network, and simulcast on Salem News Channel. Hugh drives Americans home on the East Coast and to lunch on the West Coast on over 400 affiliates nationwide, and on all the streaming platforms where SNC can be seen. He is a frequent guest on the Fox News Channel’s news roundtable, hosted by Bret Baier weekdays at 6pm ET. A son of Ohio and a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Michigan Law School, Hewitt has been a Professor of Law at Chapman University’s Fowler School of Law since 1996 where he teaches Constitutional Law. Hewitt launched his eponymous radio show from Los Angeles in 1990. Hewitt has frequently appeared on every major national news television network, hosted television shows for PBS and MSNBC, written for every major American paper, has authored a dozen books and moderated a score of Republican candidate debates, most recently the November 2023 Republican presidential debate in Miami and four Republican presidential debates in the 2015-16 cycle. Hewitt focuses his radio show and his column on the Constitution, national security, American politics and the Cleveland Browns and Guardians. Hewitt has interviewed tens of thousands of guests from Democrats Hillary Clinton and John Kerry to Republican Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump over his 40 years in broadcasting. This column previews the lead story that will drive his radio/ TV show today.
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