Koi Perich Transfer Portal

The fact he’s looking at TT goes to show you he’s not all about winning, it is an obvious money grab. Which I’m fine with, but it was pretty funny how adamant people were that it’s not about money with Koi.
So far online I've read many reasons for his decision:
that it’s not about money;
that it is about money;
that it’s about winning;
that it’s not about winning;
that it’s about exposure;
that it’s about development;
that it’s about securing the best draft position;
that that he dislikes the defensive coordinator;
...and, I've even read that he wants to go somewhere hot and where the chicks are even hotter.

I don't know, or even pretend to know.
 

It’s like going to play for James Madison or Tulane….

Unlike James Madison and Tulane, Texas Tech retained the services of their Head Coach and have deep pockets (reservoirs) of NIL funds.

They also just acquired the services of the #1 QB available in the portal.

I like their odds of sustaining the recent trend of winning.

 

Unlike James Madison and Tulane, Texas Tech retained the services of their Head Coach and have deep pockets (reservoirs) of NIL funds.

They also just acquired the services of the #1 QB available in the portal.

I like their odds of sustaining the recent trend of winning.

They do, but I hope they didn’t over pay for Sorsby, there’s no way he lives up to that ranking. The recruiting sites evaluation of transfer QBs is not very good imo.
 

So far online I've read many reasons for his decision:
that it’s not about money;
that it is about money;
that it’s about winning;
that it’s not about winning;
that it’s about exposure;
that it’s about development;
that it’s about securing the best draft position;
that that he dislikes the defensive coordinator;
...and, I've even read that he wants to go somewhere hot and where the chicks are even hotter.

I don't know, or even pretend to know.
Not many people give up money to chase wins prior to already being paid.
 




Unlike James Madison and Tulane, Texas Tech retained the services of their Head Coach and have deep pockets (reservoirs) of NIL funds.

They also just acquired the services of the #1 QB available in the portal.

I like their odds of sustaining the recent trend of winning.


I have zero doubt they'll be back in the CFP next season. But playing in the B12 is a huge step down from playing in the B1G/SEC.
 

Not if he has another season like this one.
I think he is going to the NFL after next year regardless. Might not be the best career decision but he has more-or-less said that college and college football are not for him. His goal is to play in the NFL. I think he already has his mind set on 3 years.

Take that with a grain of salt. I've never talked to the kid.
 






SMU was NOT an isolated incident. If you believe that, you're terribly naive. They got the death penalty because they were seemingly unable to keep it hidden and got caught with their hand in the cookie jar multiple times.

The entire SWC, with the exception of Rice, were under some sort of sanctions at one point or another for football. And I've mentioned many times that UCLA basketball players were being paid by a bag man through pretty much Wooden's entire tenure.
Oh stop it. Players have been paid, but how many death penalties have been doled out over the years? The needle went so far into the red at SMU that it busted the meter.

I'm old. I know players who were if not directly paid, were given "just show up" jobs in the summer. I knew someone from Ed Shuttlesworth's neighborhood in Cincinnati who recounted to me the bidding war to land Ed's college services (all it took was a fur coat). So don't call me naive. I know that cheating and payments and academic crap (the only way Bud Grant would have showed up in class is if it were held in a duck blind or ice fishing house) have gone on for years.

Buit everyone seems to be driving past my main point. The difference between then and now is that there is a new paradigm where all are competing for talent every year with revenue sharing and formal NIL money footing the bill and opportunities for players to participate annually through the portal to get the best deal possible.
 
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I think he is going to the NFL after next year regardless. Might not be the best career decision but he has more-or-less said that college and college football are not for him. His goal is to play in the NFL. I think he already has his mind set on 3 years.

Take that with a grain of salt. I've never talked to the kid.

He can say that all he wants. He's still going to have to have a good season next year to get drafted.

You just don't end up in the NFL because you were rated highly out of HS and had a good Freshman year.
 





Texes Tech went 11-2, won the Big 12 and went to the CFP.

That's a lot of winning.
Against bottom tier P4 competition. Perfect conference for his arm tackling and unwillingness to face a real challenge and become a better player (and chase stats and cash).

In four years we'll be hearing about how he won the Arena Football 1 defensive player of the year for the Minnesota Monsters.
 

I think he is going to the NFL after next year regardless. Might not be the best career decision but he has more-or-less said that college and college football are not for him. His goal is to play in the NFL. I think he already has his mind set on 3 years.

Take that with a grain of salt. I've never talked to the kid.
I admit to not being a football expert, but my viewing of Perich this season was one of seeing a kid who was not a strong tackler. If he doesn't improve and start sticking his hit, he won't play in the NFL. At least not as a safety.
 

Against bottom tier P4 competition. Perfect conference for his arm tackling and unwillingness to face a real challenge and become a better player (and chase stats and cash).

In four years we'll be hearing about how he won the Arena Football 1 defensive player of the year for the Minnesota Monsters.
Your Koi hatred is becoming legendary
 



Your Koi hatred is becoming legendary
Far from it, it's pretty pedestrian. I appreciate you dapping it up, though!

Wildly long take coming. There's a TL, DR at the end.

We've hit a point with the current CFB landscape where it's illogical for us to do the polite Minnesota Nice clap and thank mercs, particularly homegrown ones, for gracing our poor little program with their athletic talent when they say see ya later without so much as a second thought. These athletes are paid handsomely and unconstrained by the rules that used to exist. If you're highly talented (enough that you're guaranteed mucho playing time here as time goes on), don't commit to the program for the long haul, and move on for reasons that are very clearly associated with a money grab, we owe you nothing but perhaps spite, which is what I choose in this particular case due to this being a homegrown mail-in/arm tackle specialist. Don't get me going on the "he was only going to play three years anyways" copium.

We should praise the great players who choose loyalty to the brand and scoff at those who leave because we arent good enough for them, but instead we do this self piteous "Thanks for your time Koi, good luck" spiel. That's awful, enabling messaging, especially when someone leaves without so much as a thank you to the very fans who want to make sure everyone knows they appreciate the time Koi put in here.

I will always have disdain for Perich because he is a Minnesota kid who committed to and then spurned his home program for the worst reasons, and in hindsight, it's very clear to me that he was half assing, on autopilot, and looking onward most of the year, which jeapordized our season (just compare last year to this year with the PFF data. It wasn't a sophomore slump). He absolutely fucked us out of nine wins, and was repeatedly out of position (likely) or arm tackling (100%) in the narrow games which we barely eked out. People will point to the Purdue win and how vital he was to that victory, but I'd challenge someone to watch that game film and find out how many plays Koi was out of position, misread plays, or was overaggressive on Purdue scoring drives. I'd venture this happened repeatedly over the course of the season and was a contributor to how some teams hung 30+ on us. Has anyone else considered that it's possible that part of why Collins' scheme sucked as hard as it did was due to Koi? Hard to be successful when you've only got 10 on the field on defense because the 11th guy is focused on either being opportunistic or protecting his body for the next year.

I'm aware this is a highly unpopular, opinion based take and I'll likely garner disdain from more people than already feel that way towards me, but I believe it's right, I stand by it, and I'm frankly surprised more people haven't shared similar sentiments. The "go get em kid, get as much money you can get" angle is absolutely bonkers to me but it's consistent with the shitty, destructive messaging we're sending our younger generations today.

TL, DR: I still think Koi sucks, hard, and think he mailed it in this season, protecting his body and chasing splash play opportunities with his eyes on the horizon the entire time, jeopardizing our W/L total.
 

Far from it, it's pretty pedestrian. I appreciate you dapping it up, though!

Wildly long take coming. There's a TL, DR at the end.

We've hit a point with the current CFB landscape where it's illogical for us to do the polite Minnesota Nice clap and thank mercs, particularly homegrown ones, for gracing our poor little program with their athletic talent when they say see ya later without so much as a second thought. These athletes are paid handsomely and unconstrained by the rules that used to exist. If you're highly talented (enough that you're guaranteed mucho playing time here as time goes on), don't commit to the program for the long haul, and move on for reasons that are very clearly associated with a money grab, we owe you nothing but perhaps spite, which is what I choose in this particular case due to this being a homegrown mail-in/arm tackle specialist. Don't get me going on the "he was only going to play three years anyways" copium.

We should praise the great players who choose loyalty to the brand and scoff at those who leave because we arent good enough for them, but instead we do this self piteous "Thanks for your time Koi, good luck" spiel. That's awful, enabling messaging, especially when someone leaves without so much as a thank you to the very fans who want to make sure everyone knows they appreciate the time Koi put in here.

I will always have disdain for Perich because he is a Minnesota kid who committed to and then spurned his home program for the worst reasons, and in hindsight, it's very clear to me that he was half assing, on autopilot, and looking onward most of the year, which jeapordized our season (just compare last year to this year with the PFF data. It wasn't a sophomore slump). He absolutely fucked us out of nine wins, and was repeatedly out of position (likely) or arm tackling (100%) in the narrow games which we barely eked out. People will point to the Purdue win and how vital he was to that victory, but I'd challenge someone to watch that game film and find out how many plays Koi was out of position, misread plays, or was overaggressive on Purdue scoring drives. I'd venture this happened repeatedly over the course of the season and was a contributor to how some teams hung 30+ on us. Has anyone else considered that it's possible that part of why Collins' scheme sucked as hard as it did was due to Koi? Hard to be successful when you've only got 10 on the field on defense because the 11th guy is focused on either being opportunistic or protecting his body for the next year.

I'm aware this is a highly unpopular, opinion based take and I'll likely garner disdain from more people than already feel that way towards me, but I believe it's right, I stand by it, and I'm frankly surprised more people haven't shared similar sentiments. The "go get em kid, get as much money you can get" angle is absolutely bonkers to me but it's consistent with the shitty, destructive messaging we're sending our younger generations today.

TL, DR: I still think Koi sucks, hard, and think he mailed it in this season, protecting his body and chasing splash play opportunities with his eyes on the horizon the entire time, jeopardizing our W/L total.
Yeah, but that USC game last season was pretty damn fun. Turned the season around.
 

Far from it, it's pretty pedestrian. I appreciate you dapping it up, though!

Wildly long take coming. There's a TL, DR at the end.

We've hit a point with the current CFB landscape where it's illogical for us to do the polite Minnesota Nice clap and thank mercs, particularly homegrown ones, for gracing our poor little program with their athletic talent when they say see ya later without so much as a second thought. These athletes are paid handsomely and unconstrained by the rules that used to exist. If you're highly talented (enough that you're guaranteed mucho playing time here as time goes on), don't commit to the program for the long haul, and move on for reasons that are very clearly associated with a money grab, we owe you nothing but perhaps spite, which is what I choose in this particular case due to this being a homegrown mail-in/arm tackle specialist. Don't get me going on the "he was only going to play three years anyways" copium.

We should praise the great players who choose loyalty to the brand and scoff at those who leave because we arent good enough for them, but instead we do this self piteous "Thanks for your time Koi, good luck" spiel. That's awful, enabling messaging, especially when someone leaves without so much as a thank you to the very fans who want to make sure everyone knows they appreciate the time Koi put in here.

I will always have disdain for Perich because he is a Minnesota kid who committed to and then spurned his home program for the worst reasons, and in hindsight, it's very clear to me that he was half assing, on autopilot, and looking onward most of the year, which jeapordized our season (just compare last year to this year with the PFF data. It wasn't a sophomore slump). He absolutely fucked us out of nine wins, and was repeatedly out of position (likely) or arm tackling (100%) in the narrow games which we barely eked out. People will point to the Purdue win and how vital he was to that victory, but I'd challenge someone to watch that game film and find out how many plays Koi was out of position, misread plays, or was overaggressive on Purdue scoring drives. I'd venture this happened repeatedly over the course of the season and was a contributor to how some teams hung 30+ on us. Has anyone else considered that it's possible that part of why Collins' scheme sucked as hard as it did was due to Koi? Hard to be successful when you've only got 10 on the field on defense because the 11th guy is focused on either being opportunistic or protecting his body for the next year.

I'm aware this is a highly unpopular, opinion based take and I'll likely garner disdain from more people than already feel that way towards me, but I believe it's right, I stand by it, and I'm frankly surprised more people haven't shared similar sentiments. The "go get em kid, get as much money you can get" angle is absolutely bonkers to me but it's consistent with the shitty, destructive messaging we're sending our younger generations today.

TL, DR: I still think Koi sucks, hard, and think he mailed it in this season, protecting his body and chasing splash play opportunities with his eyes on the horizon the entire time, jeopardizing our W/L total.

I'm at the WGAF stage. Flakes will flake, even talented flakes. Time to move on with those I can root for.
 


Yeah, but that USC game last season was pretty damn fun. Turned the season around.
I don't question his commitment level from 2024, he was stellar. Which is why his 2025 performance and the proceeding transfer out is, to me, such a damning testament to his poor character and commitment.
 

I don't question his commitment level from 2024, he was stellar. Which is why his 2025 performance and the proceeding transfer out is, to me, such a damning testament to his poor character and commitment.

Sophomore slump.
 





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