That's a massive overreaction for a guy who hasn't taken a snap in your system yet. UConn's defense faced him last year and he completed under 55% of his passes against a secondary that ranked outside the top 100 in pass efficiency defense. His QBR was below 50 in four conference games, which is backup-level production. The jump to the SEC East is a different animal entirely; the weekly defensive speed and complexity he'll see is a tier above anything in his previous conference. Just look at the havoc rates of the front sevens he'll face at Georgia and Tennessee. His offensive line at his old school gave up 2.5 sacks per game, and now he's stepping into a unit that's rebuilding two starters. Calling any unproven transfer a division dark horse is pure offseason hype ignoring the actual film and data. He's a question mark, not an answer, until he proves he can handle that weekly punishment and make quicker decisions. The track record of quarterbacks transferring up a competitive weight class is spotty at best. Let's see him win the job and manage a game against a top-30 defense before we start with the dark horse talk. The physical tools are there, but the consistency and decision-making under duress have never been.