Rams should bring back UFL’s Luis Perez as emergency QB

With QB injuries on the rise in the NFL, here’s why the Rams should look to an old friend to be an emergency plan.

The story of Luis Perez is known, yet still not known enough. As a member of the 2024 Arlington Renegades, Perez is entering only his 11th year of playing quarterback. To put that in perspective, if a person started playing football in 4th grade, that player would be in their sophomore year of college.

A truly remarkable story, Perez learned how to play quarterback by watching YouTube videos before walking on at Southwestern College in his hometown of Chula Vista, California. After starting out as No. 9 on the QB depth chart, Perez would be the starter by Week 3 of his first year. After two dominant years with Southwestern, Perez would transfer to Texas A&M-Commerce, a Division II school located in a town of 9,090 people.

Perez would continue to shine, leading Texas A&M-Commerce to a DII National Championship behind his 5,001 passing yards and 46 touchdowns. It’s the only NCAA national title in school history.

The Rams eventually took a chance on Perez in 2018 after he impressed in minicamp. Signed for the preseason, Perez saw only limited action in the Rams’ final preseason game before he was sent to the practice squad. Perez would be released weeks later.

When asked about Luis Perez, Sean McVay had this to say in 2018.

“Really impressive. He’s got a natural stroke too, really has a good feel for picking things up,” McVay said.

Since leaving the Rams, Perez has become a spring football legend. Having started games in the AAF, XFL, USFL and now the UFL, he’s one of a select few to have played in at least three different football leagues. After a poor start to the 2023 season with the Vegas Vipers, Perez was traded midseason to the Arlington Renegades.

In typical Perez fashion, he was named a starter through injury and snuck the Renegades into the playoffs. Perez would then lead Arlington to upset the 7-3 Houston Roughnecks before upsetting the 9-1 D.C. Defenders in the XFL championship game. He was named game MVP.

Perez is perfect for spring football but perhaps he could serve the Rams in the future. In 2020, Josh McCown was signed to be the Texans’ third-string QB. McCown never left his house.

There’s a way to have Perez serve as the emergency fourth-string QB and the Rams should do it. Now, the likelihood of a fourth-string QB having an opportunity to play is rare but not impossible. The 2022 49ers used four quarterbacks due to injury so there’s a precedent for it.

A team can never be too prepared but with a starting QB in Matthew Stafford and a backup in Jimmy Garoppolo, the Rams’ number one and two gunslingers each have a long history of injury and both missed time last year due to it.

Perez understands the basic concepts of the McVay offense, he’s a known hard worker, he’s a veteran and he’s cheap. He’s been thrown into the fire, both on the field and in his personal desires, and he made it to the other side. It’s a smart precaution but one that should be made.

Former Rams QB Luis Perez threw 1st TD pass of UFL season and it was a beauty

Former Rams QB Luis Perez has now thrown the 1st touchdown pass of the season in the XFL, USFL and UFL

If there’s a new startup football league, you can bet Luis Perez is going to be the first quarterback to throw a touchdown pass.

The former Rams hopeful has made a name for himself in spring leagues over the last three years, playing well in the USFL and XFL. Unsurprisingly, he’s also a starting quarterback in the new UFL, which got its 2024 season underway on Saturday.

Perez is the starter for the Arlington Renegades and in Saturday’s season opener, he was the first quarterback to throw a touchdown pass. It was a 51-yard bomb to Isaiah Winstead to give the Renegades an 11-3 lead over the Birmingham Stallions.

Perez has now thrown the first touchdown pass of the season in the USFL, XFL and UFL, which is pretty remarkable. It’s impressive enough for him to keep earning starting jobs in these spring leagues, but to be the first player to throw a touchdown pass each time? That’s flat-out unbelievable.

Good for Perez, who had a couple of stints with the Rams in 2018 and 2022 but hasn’t stuck on the roster.

Former Rams QB Luis Perez wins XFL Championship with Renegades

Luis Perez’s football journey continues with an XFL Championship 🏆

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Luis Perez is a name plenty of Rams fans recognize. He’s had two stints with Los Angeles in the NFL, though he failed to stick around on the 53-man roster both times. However, after his performance in the XFL, he might get another shot somewhere in the NFL.

On Saturday night, Perez led the Arlington Renegades to the XFL Championship, beating the D.C. Defenders, 35-26, at the Alamodome. Perez was a huge part of the victory, too, picking apart the Defenders defense.

He completed 28 of 36 passes for 288 yards and three touchdowns, averaging a healthy 7.7 yards per attempt. He was named MVP of the championship game, a deserved honor for the talented quarterback. What made his path to a championship even better is that he was traded from the Vegas Vipers to the Renegades mid-season, helping turn around Arlington’s season and capping it off with a title.

Here was Perez’s first touchdown pass of the night, a 41-yard strike over the middle to Sal Cannella to put Arlington up 6-0.

He threw another dart while on the run to Tyler Vaughns in the back of the end zone to give the Renegades a 14-0 lead.

Whether the Rams give Perez a third look or not, some team in the NFL should grant him a chance to earn a roster spot after playing at a high level in the XFL – even if it was against lesser competition.

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Below-.500 Renegades stun Roughnecks to gain XFL championship game

The Arlington Renegades upset the Houston Roughnecks in the XFL South Division championship game

A team whose record is South of .500 is the South Division champion in the XFL.

The Arlington Renegades came into Saturday’s playoff game with the Houston Roughnecks at 4-6 and losers of 4 of 5.

They had lost to the Roughnecks twice in the regular season.

In this third version of the XFL, the third time proved to be the charm for Bob Stoops and his Renegades.

Led by quarterback Luis Perez, the Renegades downed Houston 26-11 and will face the winner of Sunday’s North Division title clash between the Seattle Sea Dragons and D.C. Defenders.

The Renegades scored a season-high in points in the victory and held Houston to fewer points than any team Arlington had faced in the 2022 season.

Perez, who went to Arlington from Las Vegas during the season in the league’s first trade, was 19-of-27 for 289 yards and 3 touchdowns.

JaVonta Payton had 5 catches for 121 yards and a pair of scores for the Renegades.

De’Veon Smith rushed 24 times for 94 yards.

Houston started 4-0, lost three straight, and then won its final three games to capture the South regular-season title.

It didn’t matter in the South title game as Arlington was the better team and will be the division’s representative on May 13 in the championship clash at the Alamodome.

Rams waive Cameron Dicker, 4 others in first round of roster cuts

The Rams waived Cameron Dicker, Luis Perez and three other players in the first round of roster cuts

NFL teams were required to cut their rosters down to 85 players by Tuesday at 4 p.m. ET, which means about five players were cut from every team. The Rams made the necessary moves to get under the limit, waiving five players on Tuesday – including quarterback Luis Perez.

The Rams also waived Cameron Dicker, Adrian Ealy, Jamal Pettigrew and Caesar Dancy-Williams.

The next wave of cuts will come next Tuesday, Aug. 23 at 4 p.m. ET. Teams will need to trim their rosters to 80 players by then, and then eventually down to 53 players on Aug. 30.

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Rams bring back QB Luis Perez

The Rams are reuniting with Luis Perez, signing him to a free-agent contract

The Rams are bringing back a familiar face for the start of training camp. The team announced on Saturday that they’ve signed quarterback Luis Perez, who was with the Rams in 2018.

He was released from the practice squad that September and has bounced around since then. He had a stint in the AAF before the season was suspended, and then landed with the Eagles and Lions in 2019.

He then played in the XFL for one year in 2020 and had an opportunity in the USFL this year with the New Jersey Generals.

Perez will be unlikely to make the Rams’ roster, with John Wolford and Bryce Perkins backing up Matthew Stafford, but at least it’s another opportunity in the NFL.

Former Rams hopeful Luis Perez throws first TD pass of USFL’s inaugural season

Former Rams rookie Luis Perez threw the first touchdown pass of USFL’s inaugural season, making league history

Here’s a fun trivia question for you: Who threw the first touchdown pass of the USFL’s inaugural season in 2022? The answer: Luis Perez.

Yes, that’s the same Luis Perez who was a fan favorite during the 2018 offseason after the Los Angeles Rams signed him as an undrafted free agent out of Division II’s Texas A&M Commerce.

On the first drive of the USFL’s season on Saturday, Perez drove the New Jersey Generals down the field for a touchdown, finding Randy Satterfield in the back of the end zone.

That touchdown came a few plays after Perez and Satterfield connected on a 49-yard bomb on the first play of the game, setting up the score to go up 7-0 on Birmingham.

Perez didn’t make the Rams’ 53-man roster in 2018 but he got another chance in the AAF, where he played well before the league shut down. Perhaps this stint in the USFL will earn him an opportunity in the NFL before the 2022 season.

New Jersey Generals’ Randy Satterfield scores first USFL touchdown

The USFL season started with a pair of touchdown passes

The first drive in the new USFL resulted in a touchdown for the New Jersey Generals.

Randy Satterfield caught a touchdown pass from Luis Perez and took a crushing hit but held on to the football for the score.

The 6-foot-4, 210-pound Satterfield also caught a 49-yard pass from Perez on the first play of the game.

The lead didn’t last as Alex McGough threw a 35-yard pass to Osirus Mitchell, formerly of Mississippi State for a TD.

Both teams chose the one-point PAT and converted and the game was tied at 7 and the USFL was underway.

Jeison Rosario: Humbling setbacks turned him into a beast

Jeison Rosario blossomed as a fighter after some humbling experiences and adopting an improved training regimen.

Jeison Rosario shared a dream with most children in his poor neighborhood in Santa Domingo, Dominican Republic. He wanted to play baseball, which is akin to a religion in the Caribbean nation.

One problem: “I was scared of the ball coming at me,” he said through a translator on The PBC Podcast.

Scared of the ball? That’s ironic given that he is now one of the most-feared sluggers in boxing, a world champion who could climb onto pound-for-pound lists if he beats Jermell Charlo in a 154-pound title-unification bout on Saturday.

And for the sake of clarification: He was afraid of the ball, not the other kids. Rosario was a brash street fighter who thought he was indestructible until one day when he walked past a boxing gym.

It would be the first of several humbling experiences that would shape him as a fighter and a person.

“I liked to fight in the street,” he said. “I thought I was the best, the toughest in the street. One time I walked by the gym. Some kids with a little more experience were sparring. … I got permission to put the gloves on and I got my ass whooped really bad.

“My pride brought me back. And a couple of weeks after I started training, I went in with the same kid and whooped him.”

Jeison Rosario (right) overwhelmed Julian Williams in January. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

Rosario (20-1-1, 14 KOs) has been whooping people ever since. He won his first 12 professional bouts – 10 by knockout – to set up a fight with hard-punching middleweight Nathaniel Gallimore in April 2017 in Las Vegas, Rosario’s first fight outside the D.R.

The arrogant kid fought Gallimore that day, the kid who thought he was the biggest, strongest and baddest but turned out to be less than he thought. Gallimore put him down three times in Round 6, prompting the referee to stop the fight.

That was his second humbling experience.

“I had a big ego,” he said. “I thought I was stronger than anybody, bigger than anybody, a harder puncher than anybody. So my ego was up. God doesn’t see ego as a good thing. So God punished me for my ego.

“… You saw what happened. Actually it was perfect timing for me to get humble, to train the right way. It was a blessing for me.”

Rosario had to endure one more humbling experience for his career to take flight. He went 6-0-1 in his next seven fights – and avenged a draw with Mark Hernandez in the rematch – which set up a fight with tough Mexican Jorge Cota in April of last year.

Rosario eked out a split-decision victory that indicated to him and his team that changes were necessary. Manager Sampson Lewkowicz, well aware of his fighter’s potential, suggested he work with world-class trainer Luis “Chiro” Perez in Miami.

Rosario took two of the four major junior middleweight belts from Williams. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

It was a marriage made in boxing heaven. Turns out that Rosario, even though he was 18-1-1 and a contender, trained more like a journeyman than a contender. That changed with Perez.

“It was very hard,” he said. “My manager always told me that to cross over to the next level I need to come here to the United States, with my trainer Luis Perez. [Before] I was going from my house to the gym with my wife and kids. There was no proper [discipline], no proper anything.

“… Thank God I came here. You saw the result of my fight with Julian Williams.”

Indeed, Rosario went from relatively anonymous contender to an absolute sensation from one fight to the next. Williams, coming off a huge victory over Jarrett Hurd to win two major titles, didn’t last five full rounds with Rosario this past January.

The victory was both a stunning upset and the arrival of a potential star. If he beats Charlo on pay-per-view – particularly if he does it convincingly – he will be a prime candidate to be named 2020 Fighter of the Year.

That street kid has come a long way.

“We put our life in danger to improve economically for our families,” he said. “Other than that, what has changed for me is that people in my country didn’t believe I could compete at this level. Now they’re starting to believe.”

We all believe.

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Jeison Rosario: Humbling setbacks turned him into a beast

Jeison Rosario blossomed as a fighter after some humbling experiences and adopting an improved training regimen.

Jeison Rosario shared a dream with most children in his poor neighborhood in Santa Domingo, Dominican Republic. He wanted to play baseball, which is akin to a religion in the Caribbean nation.

One problem: “I was scared of the ball coming at me,” he said through a translator on The PBC Podcast.

Scared of the ball? That’s ironic given that he is now one of the most-feared sluggers in boxing, a world champion who could climb onto pound-for-pound lists if he beats Jermell Charlo in a 154-pound title-unification bout on Saturday.

And for the sake of clarification: He was afraid of the ball, not the other kids. Rosario was a brash street fighter who thought he was indestructible until one day when he walked past a boxing gym.

It would be the first of several humbling experiences that would shape him as a fighter and a person.

“I liked to fight in the street,” he said. “I thought I was the best, the toughest in the street. One time I walked by the gym. Some kids with a little more experience were sparring. … I got permission to put the gloves on and I got my ass whooped really bad.

“My pride brought me back. And a couple of weeks after I started training, I went in with the same kid and whooped him.”

Jeison Rosario (right) overwhelmed Julian Williams in January. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

Rosario (20-1-1, 14 KOs) has been whooping people ever since. He won his first 12 professional bouts – 10 by knockout – to set up a fight with hard-punching middleweight Nathaniel Gallimore in April 2017 in Las Vegas, Rosario’s first fight outside the D.R.

The arrogant kid fought Gallimore that day, the kid who thought he was the biggest, strongest and baddest but turned out to be less than he thought. Gallimore put him down three times in Round 6, prompting the referee to stop the fight.

That was his second humbling experience.

“I had a big ego,” he said. “I thought I was stronger than anybody, bigger than anybody, a harder puncher than anybody. So my ego was up. God doesn’t see ego as a good thing. So God punished me for my ego.

“… You saw what happened. Actually it was perfect timing for me to get humble, to train the right way. It was a blessing for me.”

Rosario had to endure one more humbling experience for his career to take flight. He went 6-0-1 in his next seven fights – and avenged a draw with Mark Hernandez in the rematch – which set up a fight with tough Mexican Jorge Cota in April of last year.

Rosario eked out a split-decision victory that indicated to him and his team that changes were necessary. Manager Sampson Lewkowicz, well aware of his fighter’s potential, suggested he work with world-class trainer Luis “Chiro” Perez in Miami.

Rosario took two of the four major junior middleweight belts from Williams. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

It was a marriage made in boxing heaven. Turns out that Rosario, even though he was 18-1-1 and a contender, trained more like a journeyman than a contender. That changed with Perez.

“It was very hard,” he said. “My manager always told me that to cross over to the next level I need to come here to the United States, with my trainer Luis Perez. [Before] I was going from my house to the gym with my wife and kids. There was no proper [discipline], no proper anything.

“… Thank God I came here. You saw the result of my fight with Julian Williams.”

Indeed, Rosario went from relatively anonymous contender to an absolute sensation from one fight to the next. Williams, coming off a huge victory over Jarrett Hurd to win two major titles, didn’t last five full rounds with Rosario this past January.

The victory was both a stunning upset and the arrival of a potential star. If he beats Charlo on pay-per-view – particularly if he does it convincingly – he will be a prime candidate to be named 2020 Fighter of the Year.

That street kid has come a long way.

“We put our life in danger to improve economically for our families,” he said. “Other than that, what has changed for me is that people in my country didn’t believe I could compete at this level. Now they’re starting to believe.”

We all believe.

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