When the transfer portal opened this offseason, few quarterbacks generated more interest than Brendan Sorsby. The former Cincinnati Bearcats football standout was coming off a breakout 2025 season that quickly placed him among the most coveted quarterbacks available.
Several major programs pursued him aggressively, hoping to land a proven starter who could elevate their offense.
Brendan Sorsby Reveals What Made Texas Tech the Right Fit
Ultimately, Sorsby chose a new home with the Texas Tech Red Raiders, a move reportedly tied to a deal valued at around $6 million in NIL. But the decision wasn’t just about money.
Appearing on the YouTube show “Off Script with Zak Herbstreit,” Sorsby explained that his choice came down to long-term development and where he believed he had the best chance to reach the NFL.
“The goal is the NFL and I want to go to a place that can prepare me,” Sorsby said. “All five of those options were great options for that. At the end of the day I felt like Texas Tech was the best fit for me.”
One of the more interesting revelations from the interview was that Lane Kiffin’s LSU program was among the schools pushing hard to land Sorsby.
That raised eyebrows for one simple reason: Kiffin’s track record with quarterbacks.
Few offensive minds in college football have built a reputation quite like Kiffin. His offenses are consistently among the nation’s most productive, and his ability to maximize quarterback talent has been well documented.
During the 2025 season at Ole Miss, before his move to LSU, Kiffin helped develop former Division II quarterback Trinidad Chambliss into one of the most impactful passers in the country. According to PFSN’s advanced grading system, Chambliss finished with a PFSN CFB QB Impact grade of A-, ranking 5th nationally.
Meanwhile, Kiffin’s 2025 Ole Miss offense averaged 37.6 points per game, one of the most explosive attacks in the country. It ranked 12th on the PFSN CFB Offense Impact metrics. From a pure quarterback-development standpoint, it would have been easy to assume that Kiffin’s new program might have held an edge.
A Rising NFL Prospect
Yet Sorsby ultimately believed Texas Tech offered the best environment for his growth.
“Everything felt like it was going in the right direction,” Sorsby said when discussing the decision. While Texas Tech isn’t always viewed as a traditional quarterback pipeline to the NFL, the program is clearly building momentum.
The Red Raiders enter the 2026 season with a roster capable of competing immediately. Their defense ranked first in the nation in stop rate in 2025, giving the team a balanced foundation that could allow the offense to operate efficiently without needing to carry the entire load.
For a quarterback with professional aspirations, joining a well-rounded roster built to win now can be just as important as the offensive scheme. Sorsby’s own performance suggests he could thrive in that environment.
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During his breakout 2025 season at Cincinnati, he posted a PFSN CFB QB Impact Score of 88.2, placing him inside the top 10 nationally. His development throughout the year had already drawn NFL scouts’ attention.
Now he’ll attempt to elevate his game even further in Lubbock. If things break the right way, Sorsby could lead a Texas Tech team capable of contending in the Big 12 while simultaneously strengthening his case as a future NFL draft prospect.
And if that happens, the quarterback who turned down a high-profile pursuit from Lane Kiffin may end up proving that his instinct about Texas Tech was right all along.
