Brendan Sorsby transferred to Texas Tech, putting one of college football’s most efficient dual-threat quarterbacks into the center of an early Heisman conversation. Last season, he posted a 27-5 touchdown-to-interception ratio, ran for 580 yards and nine touchdowns, and finished No. 10 in QBR while playing for a 7-5 Cincinnati team.
The move matters now because preseason Heisman betting has already begun to sort out the field, and quarterbacks have won 13 of the last 16 trophies. Twelve of the last 16 winners opened at +2000 or higher, which is why Sorsby’s current +7500 number is less a verdict than a starting point. The last 16 Heisman winners also played on teams that averaged 10.6 regular-season wins, a bar that frames the challenge in Lubbock as much as the upside.
Texas Tech enters the season as the defending Big 12 champion with an 11.5 win total, a projection that signals real optimism before Week 1. That kind of team profile can matter in a Heisman race, especially for a quarterback who just showed he can produce with his arm and legs. Sorsby’s 2023 numbers also stand out against the backdrop of a market that rewards volume, efficiency and a team good enough to stay relevant deep into the season.
The friction is that Texas Tech does not have the kind of big-time national spotlight game that often moves the needle in the Heisman market late in the season. That leaves Sorsby trying to build a trophy case without the kind of signature stage that some recent winners used to push themselves into the final conversation. His path may be simpler and harder at the same time: keep winning, keep producing, and make the numbers too loud to ignore.
For Texas Tech, the bet is clear. If Sorsby’s production travels, the Red Raiders may have more than a conference title defense on their hands. They may have a quarterback who forces his way into the race before the rest of the country fully catches up.