Orlando Sentinel

Perry in mix for starting QB job

- By Christy Cabrera Chirinos

MIAMI GARDENS — The plan, Mark Richt said, had been to give N’Kosi Perry a chance

And so, on the third offensive series of Miami’s eventual 31-17 win over FIU on Saturday afternoon, the Hurricanes coach put the ball in the hands of one of his young quarterbac­ks.

Perry, a redshirt freshman entered the game, led Miami to two quick scoring drives and that made it virtually impossible for Richt to reinsert starter Malik Rosier, who was responsibl­e for a career-high five touchdowns a week earlier in the Hurricanes’ 49-24 win over Toledo.

Now, with the Hurricanes heading into a short week ahead of their ACC opener against North Carolina on Thursday, Richt has a decision to make.

Will Perry have the opportunit­y to make the first start of his Hurricanes career? Or will Rosier — who has dealt with accuracy issues throughout his career but is still 13-4 as a starter — again lead the offense?

“We’ll decide this week. We’ll decide this week,” Richt said on Saturday night after the FIU win. “Like I said, my quote would be, ‘When the time comes, whoever I think is the best guy to give us the chance to win will be the guy. He’ll be playing.’”

If Richt opts to give Perry the start Thursday, it’ll mark the first time since Perry’s senior year of high school football in 2016 at Ocala Vanguard that’ll he’ll be in that position.

But, he insists, he’ll be ready for the challenge.

Against FIU, Perry looked comfortabl­e and confident from the moment he entered the game. Richt shared that the quarterbac­k saw a good bit of practice time with Miami’s firststrin­g offense ahead of the game to prepare him for the opportunit­y to play.

And when given the chance, Perry responded, completing his first 10 passes before finishing the day 17 of 25 for 224 yards with three touchdowns and an intercepti­on. He added nine carries for 32 yards and was sacked twice.

“It felt good. It felt like what I’m used to doing,” said Perry, who was a fourstar prospect coming out of high school and rated among the nation’s top dual-threat quarterbac­ks in 2017 when he signed with the Hurricanes. “I was very comfortabl­e. … I didn’t know what [Richt] had planned in his mind, all I knew is, I’d be ready when he called my name. … I’m definitely proud of myself, I’m proud of my team, but, who knows what coach Richt has in mind. We’re just going to practice like we’ve been doing before. We don’t know who the starter is.”

Perry’s teammates were equally impressed with his performanc­e, praising the quarterbac­k’s poise and readiness. Several, though, noted his play didn’t come as a surprise, given what he’s been able to show them in practice.

“We come out on Greentree and play like that,” said receiver Mike Harley, who finished with a career-high seven catches for 76 yards. “N’Kosi will come out with the ones and twos and make some plays. Malik will come out on ones and twos and make some plays, Cade [Weldon], Jarren [Williams]. We all have faith in our quarterbac­ks. We knew what time it was. We made plays happen.”

 ?? MARK BROWN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Miami coach Mark Richt, seen here talking to N’Kosi Perry, has a starting-quarterbac­k decision to make.
MARK BROWN/GETTY IMAGES Miami coach Mark Richt, seen here talking to N’Kosi Perry, has a starting-quarterbac­k decision to make.

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