Miami Herald

Perry will be returning to UM campus, but reportedly won’t rejoin Hurricanes

Quarterbac­k N’Kosi Perry removed his name from the transfer portal to conclude his studies and earn his Miami degree, then likely transfer to another program.

- BY SUSAN MILLER DEGNAN sdegnan@miamiheral­d.com

After 247Sports revealed Tuesday afternoon that former University of Miami quarterbac­k N’Kosi Perry had withdrawn his name from the NCAA Transfer Portal, word spread what Perry’s return would mean for the Hurricanes.

Would it be a huge security blanket for the Canes, whose starter, D’Eriq King, is rehabilita­ting from reconstruc­tive knee surgery and hopes to be ready for Alabama on Sept. 4? Or was it a bad decision, asPerry could still end up sitting behind King in what would be his fifth year of college?

Turns out it was a false alarm of a sort. Yes, Perry, who entered the portal Jan. 7, did remove himself this week — but no, he is not returning to play football at UM, according to at least two UM sources.

“N’Kosi is planning to complete his spring semester at UM and graduate,” a person from UM familiar with the situation said.

“We still expect him to transfer, and we aren’t

planning for him to participat­e in spring football.”

After graduation in the spring, Perry — whose

name was still on the UM roster as of Wednesday

afternoon — is expected to find a new football program to call home.

The goal, according to UM, is for King to start against Alabama. On Monday, UM coach Manny Diaz was asked by WQAM radio host Joe Rose if doctors were telling him that King would be recovered by the start of the season.

“Yeah, yeah,” Diaz said. “His rehab, the way he attacks that is like he attacks anything. He’s doing a great job and, barring setbacks, that is the plan.”

A full recovery in eight months, with enough time to practice and prepare for Alabama, is obviously optimistic, though not impossible. Besides King, UM’s other scholarshi­p quarterbac­ks are redshirt freshman Tyler Van Dyke, redshirt sophomore Peyton Matocha and incoming top signee Jake Garcia. All have virtually no college experience.

Perry, who started nine games over his Hurricanes career, backed up fifth-year senior King this season and had an impressive performanc­e in the Cheez-It Bowl after King was injured with about four minutes left in the first half. Perry was 19 of 34 for 228 yards and two touchdowns in the bowl game, which UM lost 37-34 to Oklahoma State. His career numbers during the past three seasons: 208 of 397 (52.3 percent) for 2,484 yards and 24 touchdowns, with 10 intercepti­ons. He also ran for 217 yards and three touchdowns.

“When D’Eriq came on campus, N’Kosi could have gone one or two ways,” UM coach Manny Diaz said after the bowl game. “I tell you, his last 12 months on our campus and who he has been in our program has been his best 12 months.

“It’s tough to be the backup and you’re waiting for your shot, and you don’t ever know...”

No one — except for

Perry — knows for sure where his journey might end. But if it ends with a diploma in hand, he’ll be one step further.

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Quarterbac­k N’Kosi Perry stepped in during the Dec. 29 Cheez-It Bowl after D’Eriq King was injured.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Quarterbac­k N’Kosi Perry stepped in during the Dec. 29 Cheez-It Bowl after D’Eriq King was injured.

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