Interestingly, despite not living that far from Lubbock, I had zero knowledge of this case prior to reading this thread. I went and read several other articles to get a better understanding of the situation, and boy howdy is it a mess and an absolute stain on college football. Shame on Texas Tech and their boosters for bringing in this kid, excusing his infractions, and then doubling down on protecting and going to bat for him. If they had any integrity at all they would have kicked him off the team once they found out. I am unclear on whether they knew ahead of time or not, but regardless, win at all costs is alive and well at TT.
The NCAA has filed an accelerated appeal in this case, but like others have noted, it's unlikely to be resolved before the season starts, and may not be resolved until well afterward, which basically means the kid and Texas Tech both get rewarded for very bad behavior. It makes me wonder about the future of college sports in general. If the NCAA no longer has any authority to make or enforce any rules, the whole thing falls apart eventually.
I agree with this quote from an article I read on the situation:
"Later, in a post to social media platform X, NCAA president Charlie Baker said: "there is no better example of why targeted intervention from Congress is necessary. When you have schools and deep-pocketed supporters willing to look the other way on the glaring integrity threat of betting on your own team - and judges whose rulings effectively strip away our ability to stop them - only Congress can equip the @NCAA to apply this common sense rule to everyone fairly and consistently. The Protect College Sports Act would empower the NCAA to enforce rules including the gambling restrictions - it's needed now more than ever."