Torres spoke to Radio MARCA's El Programa de Ortega in wide-ranging comments that covered the season, the club's future and the state of Spanish football.
On the campaign as a whole, he was emphatic.
"I give the team a nine — I think they have been superb. We cannot do more. It is something abnormal that Getafe have spent 25 years in professional football."
He addressed his own future at the club, putting a firm date on his departure for the first time.
"A lot of people thought the new stadium was a bluff — and there is the new stadium. In 2028, I'm going."
The future of Bordalás dominated much of the conversation. The 62-year-old has a renewal offer on the table until 2028 but has not responded to it, changed agents and has been widely reported to be leaving at the end of his contract this summer. Torres struck a notably optimistic tone.
"It depends on him — if he says go forward. We are not yet safe and the moment we have nothing to play for we will sit down and sort it in five minutes. He is like family, he is happy. I am optimistic he can continue. We have made a good partnership."
He was careful when Veljko Paunovic and Fabio Celestini were raised as potential replacements.
"Paunovic and Celestini are two former footballers and I have good memories of both."
Torres, a Real Madrid member, was asked about the dressing room unrest at the Santiago Bernabéu following the Valverde-Tchouaméni incident. He kept his distance.
"I have enough with my own situation. I think football has changed a lot for the worse. If those who should be setting the example — the big clubs — do not, then imagine what can happen at the smaller ones. Better to stay quiet and try to sort out whether we can be in Europe."
Getafe currently sit thirteenth in La Liga with four games remaining. The survival fight, and the question of what comes next for Bordalás, will both be resolved before Torres's 2028 exit date arrives.