An obtained letter from Larry Ferazani, General Counsel of the NFL Management Council.
Dear Mr. Sorsby:
We are in receipt of your Petition for Special Eligibility, dated June 16, 2026 (“Petition”). As announced earlier today, the League has elected not to conduct a Supplemental Draft this year.
Under our Collective Bargaining Agreement, the League retains sole discretion to determine whether it is appropriate to conduct a Supplemental Draft in any given year. The League has not conducted such a draft for several years and, prior to your submission, the League had no plans to do so this year, as no other player has sought entry. Your Petition—filed three business days before the deadline, without any supporting information or documentation, and only after abandoning your recent litigation efforts to avoid NCAA sanctions—does not provide a basis for the League to alter those plans. The issues presented by your Petition are too significant, and too closely tied to the League’s core integrity interests, to permit meaningful review within the timeline presented.
The sole reasons identified in your Petition for seeking entry into the Supplemental Draft are that you have been “declared ineligible” by the NCAA, have “exhausted all of [your] avenues to continue in the NCAA,” and “want to now play in the NFL.” The Petition provides no information regarding the basis for, or timing of, the NCAA’s decision. Public sources, however, indicate that in May 2026 the NCAA issued a determination declaring you permanently ineligible from participation in college athletics, based on a sustained pattern of improper gambling activity during your collegiate career at three different universities.
The League does not have the complete record of the NCAA’s investigation, and you did not provide any such materials with your Petition. Available information nonetheless indicates that, over the course of your collegiate career, you knowingly engaged in repeated and significant violations of NCAA rules designed to preserve the integrity of athletic competition. Reported conduct includes placing wagers on your own team and teammates and, to avoid detection, establishing or funding accounts in the names of intermediaries who placed bets on your behalf. There are also reports that you may have violated state criminal law.
Your Petition does not address these matters. Nor does it demonstrate accountability for your conduct or indicate whether, or how, you would adhere to the League’s rules and policies governing the integrity of competition. Instead, even after receiving notice of the NCAA’s decision rescinding your college eligibility in May, you sought to avoid the consequences of that determination through litigation rather than accepting responsibility for your actions, and you pursued entry into the NFL only after abandoning those efforts.
As Commissioner Goodell has emphasized, participation in the NFL is a privilege that carries with it significant responsibilities, including accountability. By all accounts, you are a talented player with the potential for future success. We encourage you to focus on preparing for possible entry into the NFL through the 2027 NFL Annual Draft.
Sincerely,
Lawrence P. Ferazani, Jr.
‘27 @SaylerStapleton is a true point guard who you’d want on your squad controlling the game. Quick guard with solid handles and a high IQ for playmaking. She’s dished out several assists in a big win this morning.
@PRO16G
The magic of no longer needing to run cross country ✨
With the ability to actually take some time off this fall, Cooper Lutkenhaus was a whole lot more prepared for his second global championship experience. That paid off for the 17-year-old Texan today, as he became the youngest gold medalist ever at the World Indoor Championships, winning the men’s 800m in 1:44.24.
The next chapter 🌎
After finishing the New York City Marathon this morning, now having completed each of the seven World Majors, @EliudKipchoge has announced that he’s now setting his sights on the “Eliud Kipchoge World Tour.”
With the goal of “uniting the world through running,” Kipchoge will race seven marathons across the seven continents over the next two years. The tour will help raise funds for the Eliud Kipchoge Foundation, which supports educational and environmental causes worldwide.
🗣️ “Running is the most universal sport, it connects us all. With this project, I want to compete not only for records, but for the people. I want to continue to push myself to run at my best but I also want to inspire, give back, and remind everyone that no human is limited. I believe that we can all come together and become a better world.”
The first destination of the tour will be announced soon.
Meade Boys won their 5th straight SPIAA League Title yesterday as they gear up for an attempt at a 6th straight year of hitting the podium at State. #sportsinkansas
“We gotta be able to communicate. And if we make a mistake while communicating really well and really loudly, then that's a different thing... but making a mistake by not communicating can't happen."
Jack Daniels, the legendary running coach and exercise physiologist, has died at the age of 92. 🕊️
He was a collegiate swimmer in the 50s and earned degrees from Colorado School of Mines and the University of Montana (double major in physical education and math) before serving in the U.S. Army in Korea. He earned a team silver medal and a team bronze medal in the modern pentathlon at the 1956 and 1960 Olympics, respectively. His curiosity about elite performance is what eventually drove him to running and more degrees from the University of Oklahoma (M.Ed.) and University of Wisconsin (Ph.D. in Exercise Physiology).
Daniels’ genius lay in combining cutting-edge science with genuine care for runners of all levels. From Olympic champions to recreational joggers. He coached at Oklahoma City University, Texas and SUNY Cortland (where he led 8 NCAA Division III national titles and 130+ All-Americans from 1986 to 2003), NAU, Brevard College and Wells College. Nike also hired him in the 80s as a researcher and physiologist and he helped athletes like Joan Benoit Samuelson prepare for the 1984 Olympic Trials, where she won gold.
Most notably, he developed the VDOT concept: a practical proxy for VO₂ max that incorporates efficiency, mental toughness, and race performance. He’s also best known for publishing the Daniel’s Running Formula, which pulled together his decades of training philosophy into formulas focused on allowing runners to train at the right intensity to improve.
News of his death was first reported by Runner’s World.
Someone’s going to have a GREAT weekend story for school on Monday 😅
16-year-old Cooper Lutkenhaus improves his personal best, already the HS record, by an enormous 3+ seconds to take second in the #USATFOutdoors final in 1:42.27.
He sets a new U18 world record and becomes the youngest athlete ever to represent Team USA at a World Championship.
Lutkenhaus moved from seventh to second in the last 200m, splitting a ridiculous 12.48 last 100m down the homestretch.
His time to shine ☀️
Tyus Wilson wins his first #USATFOutdoors title in the high jump with a third-attempt clearance of 2.27m in the high jump. Wilson, Shelby McEwen, and JuVaughn Harrison all cleared 2.22m on the first try but the Nebraska senior was the only jumper over the next height.
It was a great bounceback for Wilson, who was the NCAA indoor champion but only finished sixth outdoors.
This is what coaching is all about
“All those wins and losses fade away, but those relationships stick with you forever." - Gregg Popovich
Beautiful message
"We talk about four levels of commitment: physical, mental, emotional and spiritual. The spiritual is about team spirit, the team comes first."
@CanesHoops head coach Jim Larrañaga is a national icon
(Via @CBSSports 🎥)