Big 12 athletic directors have a call scheduled for Tuesday with commissioner Brett Yormark to discuss a judge’s ruling that cleared the way for Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby to be eligible this season, despite him being declared ineligible for violating NCAA gambling rules.A judge in Lubbock County, Texas, granted Sorsby a preliminary injunction Monday, a decision that sent shockwaves through college sports and especially the Big 12. Sorsby, a prized transfer portal addition for the Red Raiders, had been ruled permanently ineligible by the NCAA due to dozens of violations of gambling rules, including betting on his own team while he was a redshirt freshman at Indiana.The judge ruled Sorsby should serve a two-game suspension, which would cause him to miss the Red Raiders’ season opener against Oregon State and the team’s Week 2 game against Abilene Christian. Conference play begins Week 3 for Texas Tech vs. Houston.Coaches and administrators across college sports were outraged about the ruling. In the Big 12, many wondered if the conference had the authority to add further penalties or possibly sanction Texas Tech for using an ineligible player, perhaps making the Red Raiders ineligible for the conference title game.