Blog (25 of 25)
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2010 Feb 23
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Big Red in the Steel City
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We're back! And we have tons of stories to tell! We begin in Pittsburgh where Nebraska football captured the interest of PaHuskerfan simply on the television! His story is one of friendship, devotion, loyalty and the hospitality of all Husker fans!
And remember: If you want to be a part of this series…you can! Just email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. We’ve got quite few stories to tell yet, but we want yours, too!
Q: Tell us a little of your personal history as a Husker fan. Were you born into the Big Red Nation? Did you attend school there? Just decided to follow the program from afar? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How did you get to living where you are today?
A: I have been a Husker fan since 1979. I live in Pa. 35 miles north of Pittsburgh. I was 7 years old at the time, I was watching a game on TV, and had just continued watching them every time they were on.
How hard, or easy, is it to follow the Huskers from where you live? Do you watch the games at home? Listen on the radio? Use the internet? Is there a “watch site” in town you like to frequent? Also: How many Husker fans are there in your area?
Well, with the Internet it is pretty easy to keep tabs on the Huskers, I go on like four sites every single day, to see what’s going on with recruiting and other news. They are all very helpful. There were 3 of us who are huge Husker fans here - my older brother and my friend that passed away 2 years ago - and we got together every week to watch them on TV or listen to game on computer, and a few times had to watch it on the computer, and that isnt a very good picture...LOL.
My wife gets mad when we get the Direct TV bill when they are on pay-per-view. It drives her crazy when I spend 30 bucks on a game. I usually have to do that for all the non conference games, but oh well.
How often do you get back for games? What’s the last game you’ve been to? How has the Husker experience changed over the years? Will Nebraska be playing a game in your area any time soon?
Well my friends and I made our first trip to Lincoln in 1999, we drove. We left here at 3 p.m. on Friday afternoon arrived in Lincoln at about 6:45 a.m. Saturday morning. I remember we got to our hotel room, took about an hour-and-a-half nap, we got up went to breakfast and then went tailgating, and drank a lot. Needless to say we didn’t last long at the bars that night cause we got back up at 5 a.m. Sunday to drive home.
But I remember walking into that stadium and i was just amazed, the most awesome experience. Needless to say we fly now…LOL. The last game I was at was the Kansas game in 2008, never again that late in the year, it was so cold and I couldn’t even tailgate.
What’s the predominant college or pro team in your area? How is that fan base similar or different to Nebraska’s fan base? Hear a lot of trash talk about the Big 12, or anything like that? Give us an example of how Nebraska fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in your area.
Well I live in Steelers country, but I am a Steeler hater - I am a Cowboys fan. Living in Pittsburgh, the fans are pretty crazy, but a lot of them are fair weather fans and I hate that.
I have gone to some Pitt games, and it is very lame, they don’t sell out, unless it’s a big game. I went to the 2002 Nebraska-Penn State game. Big mistake. They weren’t very nice, they started on me soon as I got out of the car, but it is crazy there. I went to the 2006 USC game in LA. It was cool to be at the Coliseum. But there is nothing like being at a game in Lincoln. It is so awesome. The fans are just amazing, people just love us when they hear where we are from. They act we have been friends forever.
What’s one or two unique things about where you live? What makes it stand apart from other places?
Well I don’t have anything good to say about Pennsylvania...LOL...I don’t like it here.
Give us one or two of your favorite Husker memories. They can be from any time period.
My best memory was the first game I went to in Lincoln! Second was having the pleasure to watch Brook Berringer play. I didn’t know him personally, but he seemed like a great guy and had a future ahead of him.
Besides Husker football, what other Husker sports do you like to follow? How do you follow them?
I follow men’s basketball and women’s basketball, softball and baseball. I watch them on TV every time they are on.
Feel free to add anything you like.
I also have a room that is painted red and white, has nothing but husker stuff on the walls, it is pretty cool. GO BIG RED!!!
Check out these great Husker fan stories, too!
The Steel City
Pastoral Minnesota
Brickyard USA
Montana
Music City
Guam
Connecticut
Alabama
Southern California
Northern California
Wisconsin
MississippiPermanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Nov 04
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: From Reno, a NU-OU Memory
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We've got a special version of our 50 Husker Fans, 50 States series, and it comes the Biggest Little City in the World, Reno, Nevada, where Jim McCarty, known on our site as skerhead66 has an extraordinary single memory about the 2001 Nebraska-Oklahoma game.
Folks, this memory encompasses so much of what's good about the Nebraska fan base. Friendship. Kindness. Generosity. Passion. A generational connection that spans whole lifetimes. Memories like this are what make NU football what it is, win, lose or draw. We know you'll enjoy, so we encourage you to send it on to your friends, too!
And remember: If you want to be a part of this series…you can! Just email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. We need a few in the near future! Do it today!
To start with some background: I was born in North Platte, but raised all of my early years in Ralston. I played Peewee football and it was always a battle among the coaches as to which team got to wear red and call themselves the Huskers. My fondest memories of Ralston are of the Oak Hills swimming pool, and fall afternoons raking leaves and mowing lawns, but always stopping whatever we were doing when Lyle Bremser would start his broadcast with "Good afternoon football fans."
My best friend, Jeff Vojtech, and I would act out each play as it was called by Bremser, using my parents privet hedge as the line of scrimmage and jumping through or over the hedge for goal line stands and touchdowns as though we were Touchdown Tony Davis or Choo Choo Charlie Winters. As a fifth grader, I memorized and took pride in knowing every player and matching jersey number for the Huskers.
In the summer of 1969, my father informed us that our family was moving to New Jersey, and I was devastated. I had seen three live Husker games to that point. My first live Husker game was in 1968, when I was ten years old. My father took me to the opening game against Wyoming. I still have some of the Lays Potato Chip "Go Big Red" buttons that they used to put in bags of chips.
After moving to New Jersey, the only time I got to hear or see Husker games was when they played on TV. My former basketball coach always gave me a bad time because all of the sweat pants and sweatshirts that I would wear to practice were Husker red. Then came New Year's and the Huskers vault over the Texas Longhorns after they lost in the Cotton Bowl, and along came the Huskers playing a night game in the Orange Bowl against LSU. I made a wall plaque out of the picture of Jerry Tagge's game winning QB sneak from the Sports Illustrated Cover. Then came the Game of the Century, and I was bursting with pride. Johnny The Jet, and back to back National Championships while I lived in Jersey. AND THEN THEY BURIED NOTRE DAME IN A BOWL GAME. This was important to me because my neighbor, Rich Alloco was a backup QB for Notre Dame at the time. Also, the Ara Parsegian show was always on Sunday morning replaying the Notre Dame games, but we never saw any footage of the Huskers. That killed me.
In 1972 my family moved back to West Omaha, and I began high school at Creighton Prep. Every year, I would make it to at least one Husker Game, but those were the years of Tom Osborne's nemesis, Barry Switzer, at Oklahoma. I was there the year TO beat Oklahoma for the first time as Head Coach, and remember the goal posts coming down, only to be followed a couple weeks later with the announcement that the Huskers would "get" to play the Sooners again in the Orange Bowl. What a farce! I was also there the year that the Huskers had the Sooners on the ropes, and the famous hook and lateral happened right in front of me.
After graduating from high school, I attended Creighton University and Creighton School of Law, and one year out from graduating from law school I moved to Reno, Nevada, where I have lived ever since.
From 1985 until about 1994, the nearest radio station that covered Husker football was in Sacramento. I used to drive up to Lake Tahoe on Saturday morning to listen to the games on the faint radio waves that made it over Donner Pass.
In 1988 I married my lovely wife and in 1990, we were blessed with a baby boy, Alex McCarty who of course, became a Husker fan upon taking his first breath.
I always believed that my son should be able to experience a Husker game just as I had, with my dad, at age 10, as a right of passage, so to speak. I took him and my daughter to their first husker game in 1998 when the Huskers came to play Cal at Berkeley. My daughter was 5 years old at the time, and loved the Husker cheerleaders, more than the game, but my son got the chance to go down to the stadium floor. Just standing near the Husker players when he was 8 meant the world to him.
When the Husker basketball team came to Reno for the NIT tournament, my family dressed in Husker red from their shoes (Converse high tops for everyone) to pompoms and skirts for the girls, Husker jerseys for the guys, and we sat in the nose bleeder seats at Lawlor Events Center on the University of Nevada-Reno campus and cheered on the Huskers! Again, my daughter got to meet the cheerleaders and went onto the floor with them because she was all dressed up in a Husker cheerleader outfit her grandma and grandpa McCarty (Art and Margie McCarty) in Omaha had sent her for her birthday!
September 11, 2001 happened, and my son was ten. He was devastated and scared by the events that unfolded that day, as was every person of any age at that time. We had previously had no luck getting Alex to a Husker game in Lincoln, and that tragedy seemingly prevented any idea of putting him on a plane with me to go to see the Huskers that season.
But then it happened. You see, I have a friend named Michael Kealy, a friend since third grade, a Ralstonite, a true Husker fan, and the best friend a guy could ever have. Mike is the guy who talked me into looking into moving to Reno, got me a job interview, got me a job, and put me up at his aunt and uncle's house in Carson City when I first moved to Northern Nevada, until we became roommates. We lived together in an apartment in Reno until Mike married his wife Karen. Soon after, they had a son named Patrick.
On October 25th, Mike called me at my office just before noon. I thought it might be a lunch invitation. I was not available to take his call so he left an urgent message for me to call him back. All kinds of bad thoughts went through my mind as I placed the return call. But when we finally connected, it was after 1:00. He said he had two tickets to the Nebraska vs. Oklahoma game, No. 1 vs. No. 2 in the country. How often do you get to go to that kind of game?
His proposition however, was not for me and him to use the tickets, but that he of course wanted to take his son Patrick but couldn't get air arrangements made in time and cheap enough to make it work. Mike asked whether I would help him and Patrick drive the 22 hour trip from Reno to Lincoln, but we had to leave by 5:00 p.m. that day!
Needless to say, I was not enthused about that drive, especially when there were no tickets available for me to go to the game. Sometimes you just have to help a friend do something that is so far out there that it just might work, and despite my better judgment in my gut, I told Mike that I would be there for him and help him drive his son. He promised to do everything he could to try and find me and Alex tickets, because this should be a father/son trip for both Mike and I.
I picked my son, Alex, up from school at 2:30. He normally got out of school at 3:00, so he thought he was in trouble or something was wrong. I had called my wife and told her that I was helping Mike out, driving to Omaha and back over the long weekend. ( Nevada celebrates "Nevada Day" on the last Friday of October, as a celebration of the day that Nevada was admitted to the Union of the United States) The schools were out on Friday the 26th and my business would be closed. We left at 4:00p.m. on Thursday, October 25th, in Mike's Husker red Yukon, ripping down Interstate 80.
By Friday morning, the boys woke up in the back seat and we had breakfast in Sydney as the sun came up. We were tired, but still had quite a bit of driving left. The boys were excited about being in Nebraska, Alex was looking forward to seeing his grandparents in Omaha.
When we finally got to Lincoln, we had been on the road for 22 hours straight, arriving in Lincoln around 3 or 4 in the afternoon. We stopped at the first ticket scalper and asked his price for two tickets. $350 apiece for nosebleed seats in the south end zone. I couldn't afford those prices, so we just kept driving on to Omaha.
When we got to west Omaha, Mike dropped Alex and I off at my parents house and he went onto Ralston, saying that if he found us tickets through his family or whatever, he would call and give us a ride to Lincoln the next day. My parents took us to dinner that night where we met my sister and her husband.
My sister wanted to take Alex to "Husker Hounds" and buy him a styrofoam corncob hat, and we were all resigned to the fact that Alex and I had come all the way from Reno without tickets to the game and we weren't likely to find any at that time of night. (it was almost closing time when we finally made it to Husker Hounds) While standing in line to by Alex's hat, an angel stepped in front of us to buy a Husker t-shirt.
She was talking with the two young men in front of her about going to the game, that her husband was not able to go, so they were going to a party with a group of people. The two gentlemen stated that they had a bunch of friends who had flown in from the West Coast to party with them and watch the game at a local bar. The lady offered them her husband's tickets, but they turned them down!! I jumped at the opportunity to tell these people my story of having driven for the last 22 hours, without tickets to bring my son to the game. The lady indicated that if the two young men in front of us did not want them, then I could call her husband and buy them from him.
After hearing my story, the two young men just smiled and offered me their cell phone to call her husband. Everyone wanted to get Alex to his first HUSKER GAME. Alex was grinning from ear to ear and was so excited he couldn't stay in the store!
Needless to say, we bargained for the tickets, and the lady whose husband sold us the tickets told her husband to give them to us cheap so that Alex could go...he sold them to me for cost!
Gate 4, Section 23, Row 11, seats 7 and 8!!!
The next day we tailgated with Mike and Patrick after riding to Lincoln. We left early enough to walk in with the band, down 10th Street, following the drum section and we danced! We made fools of ourselves, just because we were going to the Husker game.
When we walked up that short ramp and got our first glimpse out onto the field, Memorial Stadium was filling up and Alex's mouth hung open in amazement. The fans sitting around us were all very cordial, but when they heard the story of how we got there, Alex became the hit of the section. Two spectators sitting next to us were huge gentlemen who had to sit sideways to fit into the seats, both of them were former players and every time we stood, Alex was dwarfed by these guys. But, they noticed he was having a hard time seeing so they would pick him up and put him on their shoulders.
The game was fantastic, but every Husker fan remembers the Crouch pitch to Thunder Collins, who pitched to Mike Stuntz, who then threw a touchdown to Eric Crouch. Possibly Eric Crouch's Heisman moment! And Alex was there....live and in erson, sitting right at the 35 yard line, 11 rows up.
I can't tell you what that game meant to Alex and to me. There are certain times when a father/son moment happens that you just know it will never be forgotten, not just by you as a father and son, but having that moment amongst the many other fans makes it that much more enjoyable. We were hugging everyone and even shook the hands of a couple of Sooner fans after the game from the section next to us. To be able to share that moment with all of Huskerdom makes it even more memorable. Every Husker fan we now meet is regaled with the story of Alex's first Husker game, and the memory of being there at Memorial Stadium for the "Stuntz to Crouch Touchdown Game".
Check out these great Husker fan stories, too!
Hawaii-Hilo
The Steel City
Pastoral Minnesota
Brickyard USA
Montana
Music City
Guam
Connecticut
Alabama
Southern California
Northern California
Wisconsin
MississippiPermanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Oct 28
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Big Red on the Big Island
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Folks, we've got one our best 50 Husker Fans, 50 States feature ever! This one comes to us from Hilo – that's the big island of Hawai'i – and Robert Bowen, known as Robert on the site who graduated from NU in 2001 and has lived Idaho, Japan and now the Aloha State. We think you'll love his observations about how hard it is to find games and something he likes to call “small state envy.” Enjoy!
And remember: If you want to be a part of this series…you can! Just email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. We’ve got quite few stories to tell yet, but we want yours, too!
Q: Tell us a little of your personal history as a Husker fan. Were you born into the Big Red Nation? Did you attend school there? Just decided to follow the program from afar? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How did you get to living where you are today?
A: I grew up rooting for Nebraska, which is the team my father, grandfather, and great-grandfather all supported. My family moved to Idaho when I was six, and I graduated from high school out there. When it came time to choose which college to attend, it wasn't a tough decision. I went to Nebraska, and I'm the third member of my immediate family to graduate from NU. I've lived in Hawaii for almost five years, and it's pretty much work that's keeping me out here right now. Watching college football games on TV just isn't the same when, outside my window, it's 80 degrees and the leaves aren't changing color.
How hard, or easy, is it to follow the Huskers from where you live? Do you watch the games at home? Listen on the radio? Use the internet? Is there a “watch site” in town you like to frequent? Also: How many Husker fans are there in your area?
It's almost impossible to catch the Fox pay-per-view games, but I do listen to all non-televised games via the radio broadcasts through Huskers.com. Obviously, I watch whenever we're on national TV or ESPN Gameplan. I talked to the owner of a sports bar here about ordering the pay-per-view games on his satellite, but he's a KU alum, so I don't think he was too keen on the idea. I've thought a bit about trying to start up an alumni chapter here so we could have a watch site. I think that may be difficult, though. I doubt there are too many Nebraska alumni living on the Big Island. I've lived in places, though, where it was a lot more difficult to follow the Huskers. I only caught one TV game the year I lived in Japan. The highlight of that football season was my finding a book called The Best of the Big Red Running Backs at a bookstore in Tokyo. That year was Bill Callahan’s first season, so it turned out I picked the right time to be out of the country!
How often do you get back for games? What’s the last game you’ve been to? How has the Husker experience changed over the years? Will Nebraska be playing a game in your area any time soon?
Since I graduated from NU in 2001, I've only been to three of our games in person. I was there for the Troy State game in 2001, and I was also in the crowd for that miserable Rose Bowl. One of my brothers still lives in Lincoln, and I went back for Thanksgiving last year. I had a blast at the Colorado game. I've never heard the crowd at Memorial Stadium explode like they did when Alex Henery booted that 57-yarder (and that includes any game from my freshman year, when we won the national title). I've still got that Colorado ticket stub on my refrigerator! Right now, Nebraska doesn't have any future home-and-home series planned with Hawaii, so I'll have to travel a long way if I ever plan to attend a Husker game. I went to the Fiesta Bowl when we played Tennessee in 2000, and I'd love to go catch us in another bowl game.
What’s the predominant college or pro team in your area? How is that fan base similar or different to Nebraska’s fan base? Hear a lot of trash talk about the Big 12, or anything like that? Give us an example of how Nebraska fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in your area.
There aren't any major programs out here. The closest thing to one would be Hawaii. The fan support is 180 degrees from our fan base. Sellouts are rare at Aloha Stadium, and they really only happen when the team is on a hot streak or a big-time school is visiting from the mainland. I've lived in three states with populations around the same size as Nebraska's, and there's definitely an attitude about us. Instead of finding it refreshing or inspiring that a team from a state with a population like theirs has the kind of history and success we have, they exhibit what I call “small state envy.” They don't like the fact that it's a team from someone else's small state that has achieved what we have. However, the small state envy was worse in Idaho than it is here in Hawaii. The anti-Nebraska sentiment in Idaho was so thick that it sometimes felt like I was in Boulder, Colorado.
What’s one or two unique things about where you live? What makes it stand apart from other places?
The temperature here is usually around 80 degrees, and the trade winds keep it cool. The combination of heat and humidity rarely gets to the point that it feels miserable. I miss many things about Nebraska, but the humidity isn't one of them.
Give us one or two of your favorite Husker memories. They can be from any time period.
I loved watching Trev Alberts sack Charlie Ward three times in the 1994 Orange Bowl, despite the fact that Trev wore a cast during the game. I could also go on and on about any of our blowout victories over four Top-10 teams en route to the title in 1995. However, the greatest feeling of satisfaction I ever got as a Husker fan came from watching the win over Miami to claim the 1994 national championship. I wasn’t alive to see Bob Devaney’s teams in 1970 and 1971, and I’d lived through so many heartbreaking near misses. Frazier started the game and was ineffective. Miami took a 10-0 lead. Osborne put in Berringer, who threw a TD pass to Mark Gilman before the half. Miami came out and scored quickly in the second half. After that, the Blackshirts buckled down and didn’t allow another point. Dwayne Harris sacked Miami’s Frank Costa in the end zone for a safety. Frazier came off the bench in the fourth quarter. He went three and out on his first series, but we marched down the field on the next one. Cory Schlesinger hammered it up the gut to score. We went for two to tie the game. Frazier—throwing into the same end zone where we failed to convert the two-point try in 1984—completed the pass to Eric Alford. Minutes later, Schlesinger took it up the gut for his second score and our first lead of the game. The Blackshirts had a couple more statements to make: Terry Connealy’s sack and Kareem Moss’s interception to ice the game. What more needs to be said?
Besides Husker football, what other Husker sports do you like to follow? How do you follow them?
Nebraska has beaten Hawaii’s volleyball team four or five times since I’ve lived here, and I never get sick of seeing that. I watched when we beat Stanford for the national volleyball championship in 2006 (I also watched when we lost the title game in 2005). I just missed our baseball season opener against UH-Hilo in 2005—it happened about a month before I moved to Hawaii from Japan. That would’ve been a nice one to see because that was our last team to make the College World Series. I follow Husker basketball, but they don’t make it easy on us. Given that I wrestled as a kid, I also keep tabs on how the wrestling team is doing. I met our most famous wrestling alum—Rulon Gardner—at a rodeo in Pocatello, Idaho back in 2002. I’ve still got the Nebraska hat that he signed for me. Overall, I follow most of our athletic teams. As far as sports go, though, my first love will always be Husker football.
Feel free to add anything you like.
“Not the victory, but the action; Not the goal, but the game; In the deed the glory.”
Check out these great Husker fan stories, too!
The Steel City
Pastoral Minnesota
Brickyard USA
Montana
Music City
Guam
Connecticut
Alabama
Southern California
Northern California
Wisconsin
MississippiPermanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Oct 14
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: The Steel City
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Today’s installment of 50 Husker Fans, 50 States comes to us from the Keystone State and Steel City, where Robb D. Bunde known as PaHusker on our site has some terrific insights in comparing the Husker fan base to one of the most rabid in the NFL – the Pittsburgh Steelers! Enjoy!
And remember: If you want to be a part of this series…you can! Just email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. We’ve got quite few stories to tell yet, but we want yours, too!
Q: Tell us a little of your personal history as a Husker fan. Were you born into the Big Red Nation? Did you attend school there? Just decided to follow the program from afar? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How did you get to living where you are today?
A: I was born and raised in Hastings, Nebraska. Every day in high school I walked by the picture of the Hastings High state basketball championship team that Tom Osborne played on. I attended the University of Nebraska and graduated in 1987. I then attended the University of Nebraska College of Law from 1987 to 1990. Therefore, I spent from 1983 to 1990 as a student at UNL. I did not miss one home game during those seven years. I moved to Pittsburgh in 1990 after getting married. My wife graduated from UNL in 1990 and attended the University of Pittsburgh College of Law. We have lived in Pittsburgh since 1990 and now have our own law firm.
How hard, or easy, is it to follow the Huskers from where you live? Do you watch the games at home? Listen on the radio? Use the internet? Is there a “watch site” in town you like to frequent? Also: How many Husker fans are there in your area?
It has gotten very easy to follow the Husker compared to when I first moved here. I can listen to every game on the Internet if I cannot get the television broadcast. I moved to my current house four years ago and cannot get satellite television due to the number of very tall trees by my house. Prior to the move, I had DirecTV and could regional broadcasts, pay-per-view and any game on television. Now, I have Verizon Fios and can get regional games but not pay-per-view.
I do record Coach Pelini's coach's show and did the same during the Callahan years. When I first moved here and did not have satellite television, I had some very frustrating times. I once drove two hours to rent a cable box which I was told would allow me to get a Nebraska regional game. I had to get a friend to agree that I could use the box at her house because it was a different cable provider than I had at the time. I got the box and hooked it up. When the game started, it was not Nebraska vs. UCLA in 1993, but Texas vs. Syracuse. That kind of thing happened a lot before DirecTV and the Internet. We are in Big Ten country with Penn State and also in Pittsburgh, which is in the Big East. The Big 12 is never on regular television unless you count the Colorado game. We are always in Nebraska for that game anyway.
How often do you get back for games? What’s the last game you’ve been to? How has the Husker experience changed over the years? Will Nebraska be playing a game in your area any time soon?
I usually get back to at least one game a year. I always go to the home game against Colorado the day after Thanksgiving. We are always back in Nebraska for Thanksgiving as my mom and step dad live in Hastings and my wife's parents are in Lincoln. I also started taking my son to games when he was around five and he loves going to them in Lincoln.
The last home game I went to was one of the best. It was last years game against Colorado when Henery made the kick and Suh sealed the deal with the pick six. That is the loudest I have heard the place since some of the games against OU when I went to school. Over the years, I do think things have changed. The games in Lincoln are more commercial now, which I understand given that football is the big ticket revenue producer for the athletic department. One thing has not changed, though. I am always impressed with the way Nebraska fans treat other fans and teams.
What’s the predominant college or pro team in your area? How is that fan base similar or different to Nebraska’s fan base? Hear a lot of trash talk about the Big 12, or anything like that? Give us an example of how Nebraska fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in your area.
Since I live in Pittsburgh, the team is the Steelers. Pittsburgh is a pro football city. The University of Pittsburgh actually advertises on the local radio, TV and billboards for people to buy season tickets. Pitt only sells out one game and that is usually when Notre Dame comes. There are a lot of Penn State, Notre Dame and Ohio State fans here. But mostly, by a wide margin, it is all about the Steelers all the time. College football is not as big here. The fans are different too. They are more prone to being nasty and derogatory to the other team and their fans. I went to Penn State when Nebraska last played there and we were treated horribly. Pitt fans are a little better because they are indifferent, not because they are more courteous. The Big 12 does not get any press or discussion one way or the other here.
Nebraska fans are the same as Steeler fans in one category, their passion. However, Steeler fans will turn on the team after a loss and are not courteous or respectful of their opponents and opponents fans.
What’s one or two unique things about where you live? What makes it stand apart from other places?
Pittsburgh is a surprisingly beautiful city in terms of the landscape and environment. People think of it as a dirty, steel mill city. It is not anymore. The rivers are very pretty and the downtown is a nice friendly place.
Give us one or two of your favorite Husker memories. They can be from any time period.
I have so many great memories of the Huskers. I have been to two Big 12 championship games; the overtime win at Notre Dame; last year’s blowout loss to OU (where we were treated better than anywhere I have ever been by OU fans); Turner Gill's pass hitting the ground on the two point conversion; beating Miami to get T.O.'s first national championship; watching the Huskers beat Alabama for the national championship; and all of the great games against OU in the 1980's.
But some of the greatest memories are watching or listening to games with my family and watching the balloons get released when the Huskers score; the tunnel walk; seeing my son's face at the first game he went to; and simply enjoying the team and the passion of Husker football.
Besides Husker football, what other Husker sports do you like to follow? How do you follow them?
I do pay attention to the Steelers because you pretty much have to in Pittsburgh. I also follow the Penguins in hockey, mostly during the playoffs. Other than that, I follow college football from the perspective how things are best for the Huskers.
Feel free to add anything you like.
Thanks for covering the Huskers the way you do. I enjoy reading your perspective and also features like 50 states.
Check out these great Husker fan stories, too!
Pastoral Minnesota
Brickyard USA
Montana
Music City
Guam
Connecticut
Alabama
Southern California
Northern California
Wisconsin
MississippiPermanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Oct 01
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Pastoral Minnesota
562 views
Today’s installment of 50 Husker Fans, 50 States comes to us from the Land of 10,000 Lakes, Minnesota, where Mark Weber, of tiny Dawson, has some excellent memories to share about his time in the Husker stands. And though we want you to read the whole thing, Mark’s favorite memories need to be printed out and tacked on your fridge…they speak for us all! They’re that good!
Enjoy, and remember: If you want to be a part of this series…you can! Just email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. We’ve got quite few stories to tell yet, but we want yours, too!
Q: Tell us a little of your personal history as a Husker fan. Were you born into the Big Red Nation? Did you attend school there? Just decided to follow the program from afar? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How did you get to living where you are today?
A: I grew up in Kearney. My family had tickets growing up. We were members of the “Beef Club”. I think we got a discount on our tickets by donating a “critter” to the university. I am the black sheep of my family as I was the only one NOT to attend NU. I was going to go to Lincoln, but got an offer to play football at Dana College in Blair and had a great time doing so. We had some good teams at the time, and an Omaha TV station did a piece comparing Big Red (NU) to Little Red (Dana). A couple of my teammates are in the Nebraska College Football Hall of Fame!
How hard, or easy, is it to follow the Huskers from where you live? Do you watch the games at home? Listen on the radio? Use the internet? Is there a “watch site” in town you like to frequent? Also: How many Husker fans are there in your area?
Today it is easy to get the games on Dish, Sirius Satellite radio, and the Internet, but when I first came to Minnesota in 1990, I used to have to drive out in the country and find somewhere I could pick up am620 out of Sioux City. If I can’t make it to Lincoln for a big game, the next best thing is to be at Joe Sensor’s Sports Bar in the Twin Cities. They even have a Nebraska Alumni Band that plays during the game! In my little town I am 1 of 2 Huskers, but I know Huskers from all over Minnesota.
How often do you get back for games? What’s the last game you’ve been to? How has the Husker experience changed over the years? Will Nebraska be playing a game in your area any time soon?
I try to make 1 or 2 games a year, but it is getting harder to every year. The last game I was at was Mizzu in 2008. The night games in Memorial Stadium are almost magic to me. Coming off the ramp in the north end zone and making my way down into section 35 is a sort of homecoming for me. HuskerVision and the “production” of the games is the biggest change, but they do an excellent job of adding to the experience, not distracting from it.
What’s the predominant college or pro team in your area? How is that fan base similar or different to Nebraska’s fan base? Hear a lot of trash talk about the Big 12, or anything like that? Give us an example of how Nebraska fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in your area.
The Vikings are far and away the top story here. The Gophers (golden rodents!) get some press, but nowhere near the coverage NU gets. I don’t get a lot of trash talk; most people still remember the 1983 84-13 thrashing the Huskers put on em, but the Gophers actually lead the series by nine games! The U of M has built a new stadium and I hope they can regain some of the tradition that program once had.
What’s one or two unique things about where you live? What makes it stand apart from other places?
Dawson is a small town of 1500 in west central Minnesota. It is a typical small town – slice of Americana - and is a great place to raise kids (I have 5!) But this little town has produced some great athletes recently. Dawson is home to an NBA 2nd round draft pick (Jeff Nordgaard) an Olympian in the Athens Olympics (Carrie Tollefson) and a current D-1 cross country and track runner (Nikki Swenson). The school here does an amazing job for a small district, especially in music. Dawson also has a very good industrial base, and we are very fortunate for that.
Besides Husker football, what other Husker sports do you like to follow? How do you follow them?
I follow Baseball and Volleyball over the Internet.
Give us one or two of your favorite Husker memories. They can be from any time period.
Where to start? Leaving my parents at the car and running through the crowd as if they were an opposing defense and I was I. M. Hipp, or Jarvis, or Rozier, or Dubose, or even Tim Wurth (we have the same birthday!) Buying pop in a pitcher that you cut the top and bottom out of and you had a megaphone. Wonder Monds. The Card Section. TO’s first win against OU. Ruud’s hit on that kick off! (it was a fumble!) Jarvis having to change jerseys 2 or 3 times a game. The BLACKSHIRTS! From Strasburger to Knox to Mumford to Davis to Alberts to Kenny Walker to Peter to Tomich to Williams to Kelsay to… Betting quarters with Clem and Shelia, the dentist from Wahoo who sat behind us, on how many plays it would take Nebraska to score. Never paying Clem when I lost. Crying after reading of their deaths in a traffic accident even though I had never known them outside of section 35 rows 14 and 15. Brook, Tommie, Turner, Frosty, Crouch. Earth, Wind, and Fryar. Pancakes you don’t eat. Centers that look offsides. Standing Os for opponents. “The Pride Of ALL Nebraska”. Tunnel Walk. No American Idol to sing the national anthem - 85,000 sing it. Mad Mike. The long haired guy that threw your hot dog to you. Academic All-Americans. RUNZAS! Walk-ons. Slauson going out of his way to high five my 8 year old. Spurrier trying to block 5 defenders with 4 linemen in his own end zone….twice….. Davis, Franklin, Rathman, Schlesinger, Mackovickas…
But by far my favorite memories are of the people…the fans. These people are what separate Nebraska from everywhere else. There IS no place like Nebraska [
b]Check out these great Husker fan stories, too!
Brickyard USA
Montana
Music City
Guam
Connecticut
Alabama
Southern California
Northern California
Wisconsin
MississippiPermanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Sep 23
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Little Rock Husker
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Today’s installment of 50 Husker Fans, 50 States comes to us, once again, from SEC country, where Emmitt Fowler has some wonderful memories of growing up as a Husker, and how it almost delayed his chance to meet his future wife! Laugh and smile as we go on this journey together. And if you can tell a better first-game-at-Memorial-Stadium experience, well, we want to hear it!
Enjoy, and remember: If you want to be a part of this series…you can! Just email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. We’ve got quite few stories to tell yet, but we want yours, too!
Q:Tell us a little of your personal history as a Husker fan. Were you born into the Big Red Nation? Did you attend school there? Just decided to follow the program from afar? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How did you get to living where you are today?
A: I’m a Husker, born and bred, although I haven’t lived there for quite some time. My wife and I both grew up in Central Nebraska and most of our family still lives there. My love of the Huskers began at an early age as it does for many Nebraska kids. My earliest memory of Husker football was looking through my uncle’s copy of Sports Illustrated after the Orange Bowl victory over Alabama for the 1971 championship. Seeing the picture of Bill Janssen and Bob Terrio celebrating on the cover was enough to get me hooked for life.
Growing up, my mom was the biggest Husker fan in our house. I remember the excitement I would feel as she and I would sit by the radio listening to Lyle Bremser call the game on KRVN. On more than one occasion, I would set the radio on the front step so I could hear the game in my front yard while I threw passes, ran for touchdowns, and made diving tackles along with my Husker heroes. At other times, I would listen intently as Lyle and Kent Pavelka described the action, pouring over my 1977 Husker football program (given to me by a friend). In my mind’s eye, I could see Rick Berns and I.M. Hipp running up and down the field.
Since those early years in Nebraska, I have lived in Colorado, New Mexico, Virginia and now, Arkansas and have followed the Huskers all that time.
How hard, or easy, is it to follow the Huskers from where you live? Do you watch the games at home? Listen on the radio? Use the internet? Is there a “watch site” in town you like to frequent? Also: How many Husker fans are there in your area?
It’s much easier to follow the Huskers from a distance now than it was 20 years ago thanks to the proliferation of resources available online. I well remember the days when I would order the Sunday edition of the Omaha World Herald, which would arrive at my house on the following Wednesday. Now I listen to every game online. I’ve purchased several games on pay-per-view over the last couple of seasons as well. To my knowledge, there is not a watch site in Little Rock.
I have been somewhat surprised to find several fellow Husker fans during my first three years here. Arkansas is definitely SEC country and the Big 12 doesn’t get a lot of respect. However, it doesn’t have the feel of ‘enemy territory’ like Colorado.
How often do you get back for games? What’s the last game you’ve been to? How has the Husker experience changed over the years? Will Nebraska be playing a game in your area any time soon?
I have only attended three Husker games in my life, the most recent being the 2007 opener against Nevada. However, my most memorable experience in Memorial Stadium was the final game for the Big Eight Conference in 1995 – a 37-0 hammering of the Sooners. It just doesn’t get any better than that!
I’m planning to attend the K-State game in Lincoln this year with my son. We’re also hoping to make the sic-hour drive to Waco for the game against Baylor. That’s about the closest the Huskers will be to us this year.
What’s the predominant college or pro team in your area? How is that fan base similar or different to Nebraska’s fan base? Hear a lot of trash talk about the Big 12, or anything like that? Give us an example of how Nebraska fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in your area.
Like Nebraska, Arkansas has no major professional sports teams, which means the University of Arkansas reigns supreme. Granted, people here are passionate about the Razorbacks. However, I’ve picked up on one MAJOR difference between Husker fans and Hog fans – unwavering loyalty. Things can get pretty ugly around here (and have) when the Hogs aren’t winning. I know our program went through four tumultuous years recently but I’ve always taken pride in Nebraska fans being supportive of the team win or lose. If you’re the fair-weather type, don’t bother being a Husker fan!
Something else that I feel is different here in Arkansas is the loyalty of the Razorback fan base to the league. It almost seems that they are SEC fans first and Hog fans second. I hear more smack-talk about the SEC than the Razorbacks. Of course, that’s pretty easy right now with Florida, Alabama, and LSU. But I’ve never felt the urge to sing the praises of Texas or Oklahoma. That just feels wrong!
What’s one or two unique things about where you live? What makes it stand apart from other places?
I would have to say that Arkansas has more of a ‘college sports’ feel to it than the other states I’ve lived in; not counting Nebraska, of course. Virginia was split between Virginia Tech and UVA. And there is a strong Washington Redskins following. Colorado never was and never will be a college sports state. The Broncos rule. And New Mexico doesn’t have much passion for college athletics either. Bottom line: There is no place like Nebraska!
Give us one or two of your favorite Husker memories. They can be from any time period.
How about listening to the 1978 NU vs. OU game while painting my grandma’s basement? Just when I thought ‘Sooner Magic’ was going to strike again, Billy Sims fumbled…I was overjoyed! Or the failed two-point conversion against Miami…I cried. Or Cory Schlesinger’s go- ahead touchdown run against the Canes to secure TO’s first National Championship…I couldn’t believe it was finally going to happen. Or Tommie Frazier’s 75 yard run in the Fiesta Bowl against Florida and the look on Steve Spurrier’s face…I loved it! Or sitting along the side of the road on top of a hill in southern Colorado, listening to KRVN as Matt Davison dove for the deflection and made THE CATCH…I couldn’t believe it. Sorry, did you say only one or two?
Besides Husker football, what other Husker sports do you like to follow? How do you follow them?
I usually keep tabs on men’s basketball, baseball, and volleyball. I was fortunate to be living in Richmond, VA in 2000 when the NCAA Women’s Volleyball Final Four was hosted there. My wife and I saw the Huskers capture the national title with their victory over Wisconsin.
Feel free to add anything you like. It can be a story, an anecdote, a saying, or a simple “Go Big Red!”
My love for the Huskers nearly prevented me from getting married. Let me explain.
While attending college in Omaha, one fall weekend was designated as a Sadie Hawkins weekend – meaning the girls would ask the guys for a date. Earlier that week, a very cute and sweet girl asked me if I would like to go ice skating with her on Saturday afternoon then have dinner afterward. I had never been on a pair of ice skates in my life but I figured, ‘How hard can it be’? Did I mention she was really cute?
Everything was set until Friday afternoon when another girl called to tell me she had two tickets to the Husker game on Saturday afternoon. She and I were simply friends but she knew how much I loved the Huskers. “So would you like to go?” she asked. “Of course!” I replied. “I’m there!”
After hanging up and doing my happy dance, I suddenly realized that I had double-booked myself. I had a choice to make. So after careful consideration, I did what any polite, well-mannered young man from Nebraska would do. I called the first girl and asked her if we could go ice skating on Sunday afternoon instead of Saturday.
When she asked me, “Why?” I decided that honesty was my best choice. I explained the situation, emphasizing that I had never been to a Husker game before and that I really did want to go ice skating with her. Being a Nebraska girl herself, she said she understood and graciously agreed.
Our Sunday date was wonderful and I’ve been married to my favorite ice skater now for 22 years. I’m very thankful that she shares my love of Nebraska football and agreed to reschedule our first date.
By the way, the Huskers destroyed Oregon 63-0 that day. It was great despite the gusty wind and cold drizzle that fell the entire game. My friend and I were nearly frozen. In fact, I was so cold I decided not to stop for gas on my way back to Omaha, praying I would make it. That prayer went unanswered. I ran out of gas six blocks from my dorm. To this day, my wife says it was God’s way of punishing me for standing her up to go to a Husker game with another girl.
Thanks for giving me an excuse to reminisce. Once a Husker, always a Husker!
Check out these great Husker fan stories, too!
Brickyard USA
Montana
Music City
Guam
Connecticut
Alabama
Southern California
Northern California
Wisconsin
MississippiPermanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Sep 16
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Brickyard Husker
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We’re back with another installment of our favorite series: 50 Husker Fans, 50 States! Today’s installment: Dan Elsener, known as hoosier4huskers on our site, who’s trapped in Big Ten country! We think you’ll get a kick of out his tale.
Enjoy, and remember: If you want to be a part of this series…you can! Just email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. We’ve got quite few stories to tell yet, but we want yours, too!
Q: Tell us a little of your personal history as a Husker fan. Were you born into the Big Red Nation? Did you attend school there? Just decided to follow the program from afar? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How did you get to living where you are today?
A: My mother and father are both from Lincoln Nebraska and both attended Pius X. My mom went to UNL and my dad went to Nebraska Wesleyan. I lived in Nebraska until I was about 7 yrs old then moved back after I got out of the Marine Corps and lived in Omaha. When I was going into my sophomore year of high school my dad and mom moved to Indianapolis. About two years ago my wife and I moved back. I am a paramedic for a the Indianapolis Fire Department and my wife and I own Our Bake Shoppe in Greenwood Indiana. We routinely run into Husker fans that notice our Husker gear.
How hard, or easy, is it to follow the Huskers from where you live? Do you watch the games at home? Listen on the radio? Use the internet? Is there a “watch site” in town you like to frequent? Also: How many Husker fans are there in your area?
Living in Big Ten and Notre Dame country makes following Big 12 and Husker football somewhat difficult. Every Saturday we either watch or listen to the Husker games as a family. We can get the local game cast via satellite radio no matter what. We constantly run into Husker fans. Every time we wear our Husker shirts it seems like we have people come up to us and we talk Husker football.
How often do you get back for games? What’s the last game you’ve been to? How has the Husker experience changed over the years? Will Nebraska be playing a game in your area any time soon?
My family goes to at least one home game each year. Last year it was VT and this year it will be OU v. NU. When I was little it didn’t matter where we lived or what we were doing, when it came to Husker football it was one thing that our family always gathered around.
What’s the predominant college or pro team in your area? How is that fan base similar or different to Nebraska’s fan base? Hear a lot of trash talk about the Big 12, or anything like that? Give us an example of how Nebraska fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in your area.
The predominant team in our area is Notre Dame. They have a great fan base and the games are fun. The Big Ten, IU, Purdue, Ohio State, Michigan all get the press. You would think there was no other conference. The fans love football but they aren’t as knowledgeable or friendly as Husker fans. They do not have the complete passion. These fans out here have many colleges and pro teams in their states. The Huskers are the pride of Nebraska. The rallying point for the whole state.
What’s one or two unique things about where you live? What makes it stand apart from other places?
Indianapolis is the racing capitol of the world. Racing is a big deal out here. We have the history of the Brickyard and the Indy 500 which the largest sporting event in the world. It is a spectacle and something any sports fan should partake in if they get the chance.
Give us one or two of your favorite Husker memories. They can be from any time period.
My favorite Husker memory was in 2000 when I went to the ND v. NU football game at South Bend. My family from Nebraska came to Indy and we all went. I will never forget walking into ND Stadium and seeing a Sea of Red under Touchdown Jesus. I could not believe it. It gave me chills. That to me was my shining moment as a Husker fan. Here the Huskers were at the Mecca of college football, the holiest of college football shrines, the house the Rockne built, and we had outnumbered the ND faithful. Which arguably has the largest college football fan base.
Besides Husker football, what other Husker sports do you like to follow? How do you follow them?
I love Husker baseball.
Feel free to add anything you like. It can be a story, an anecdote, a saying, or a simple “Go Big Red!”
When I was in the Marine Corps Husker football was even a source of pride. I was able to meet husker fans from all over the country and instantly form a bond. I remember we were in U.A.E and I was at a mall in a Muslim country and found a Husker pullover for sale. Incredible.
Check out these great Husker fan stories, too!
Montana
Music City
Guam
Connecticut
Alabama
Southern California
Northern California
Wisconsin
MississippiPermanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Sep 03
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Big Red in the Big Sky
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Our next fan story comes to us from the incredible state of Montana, where John Ilgenfritz has been living in Helena for many years. There are some terrific memories from this Fremont native that we suspect you’ll identify with quite a bit. Gameday memories that make us wish that it was the old days again.
We also think you’ll really like the comparisons John makes of Nebraska and Montana, which is NU…on a smaller scale.
And read until the end, Husker fans. There is a story about commitment, passion and the enduring ties of Nebraska football that you’ll want to share with your friends and family.
Enjoy, and remember: If you want to be a part of this series…you can! Just email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. We’ve got quite few stories to tell yet, but we want yours, too!
Q: Tell us a little of your personal history as a Husker fan. Were you born into the Big Red Nation? Did you attend school there? Just decided to follow the program from afar? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How did you get to living where you are today?
A: I was born in Fremont in 1946, graduated from Fremont High in 1964 and Midland Lutheran College in 1968. I met my future wife, Sheena in May, 1976 when we were both in Glasgow, MT. visiting students we recruited for Mountain Plains Education Program, a program to teach low-income families job skills and help them find jobs upon completion. Sheena was working out of the Idaho office and I the Nebraska office. In September I moved to Idaho, we were married on Jan. 1, 1977. Two years later we moved to Montana to be close to her mom after the death of Sheena's dad.
How hard, or easy, is it to follow the Huskers from where you live? Do you watch the games at home? Listen on the radio? Use the internet? Is there a “watch site” in town you like to frequent? Also: How many Husker fans are there in your area?
It is difficult to watch the games. Most games are only cast regionally, so we receive the Pac 10 games. If it is a national telecast only available on cable I locate a tavern that carries it. Sometimes I have to drive to 2 or 3 before I find a bar that carries it. Even if it is on network TV sometimes it is preempted by a Montana Grizzlies game.
If I cannot watch it, I listen to the game on the computer. No watch site that I am aware of, most folks watch in their own homes. Whenever I see someone with a Big Red hat or T-shirt I will talk with them, inquire where they are from and talk about the team.
How often do you get back for games? What’s the last game you’ve been to? How has the Husker experience changed over the years? Will Nebraska be playing a game in your area any time soon? What’s the predominant college or pro team in your area? How is that fan base similar or different to Nebraska’s fan base? Hear a lot of trash talk about the Big 12, or anything like that? Give us an example of how Nebraska fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in your area.
Montana is like Nebraska in that there is no predominant pro team. As for college, Carroll College at the NAIA level and Montana and Montana State at the higher level.
I get back to Nebraska every couple of years, over the past 10 years, primarily for funerals. I haven't been to a game since the 1980s. When my dad and mom moved to Arizona in 1982 they gave up their football tickets.
The Nebraska experience, for me, was all about family and tradition. I loved the Devaney-Osborne-Solich link. I was very disappointed by the decision to replace Frank with Bill Callahan. No offense to Callahan. It felt like a messy divorce.
The closest Nebraska gets to Montana is probably Colorado.
Living in Helena, the home of the Carroll College Fighting Saints (NAIA), we have grown accustomed to national championships. I believe they have won 5 or 6, were runner-ups last year and are rated 2nd in the polls this year.
The Montana State/Montana game is always a big deal . . . it feels like Oklahoma/Nebraska on a smaller scale. My wife is an alum of U of M and we go to the games when she can get a ticket. It’s about a 100-mile drive to Missoula on game day. You will see a stream of cars all with bumper stickers or special license plates. At the stadium there is quite a tailgate, with big RVs parked close to the stadium. I believe the stadium seats around 20,000 and it always seems full. The U of M has won a national championship and they played in the title game last year. They often win the Big Sky Conference Title .
Nothing compares to Nebraska fans . . . they are the best bar none. However, I do enjoy going to the U of M games as the electricity in the stadium gives me a small reminder of Nebraska. We only go once or twice a year and sit with friends of my wife that she has known since college.
What’s one or two unique things about where you live? What makes it stand apart from other places?
We have lived in Helena for close to 30 years. It is the capitol city and about 28,000 in population. Most any place we want to go we can walk to. Within a mile of where we live are Carroll College, the Myrna Loy theatre (musical presentations and special movies in the former jail - beautiful building), GrandStreet Theater (local plays and musicals held in a beautiful old building that formerly was a Unitarian Church), the Holter Art Museum, beautiful Helena Cathedral, movie theaters, children museum and more. It is a beautiful community in the mountains.
The people are friendly like Nebraska.
Give us one or two of your favorite Husker memories. They can be from any time period.
My dad and mom had 4 tickets and I would go to games with them. I can remember times when it was so cold that we wrapped our legs in plastic garbage bags to keep warm.
The game day ritual was to stop at Irv's Market on Highway 77 in downtown Fremont to pick up ham and cheese sandwiches on rye. We would take 77 to just past Ceresco, I believe, and, then turn east on a dirt road for 3 or 4 miles so we would enter Lincoln on a road that went under the interstate near the stadium.
I lived in Kansas and Utah from 1968 to 1973, moving to Lincoln in 1973 and which time I met Mike and Sue, neighbors in the apartment next to mine.
I kept in touch with Mike after moving away in 1976. If the game was on TV, we would talk before the game and at the end of each quarter.
If the game was not on TV, mike and I would still talk between quarters and, if it was a barnburner, Mike would place the radio next to the receiver so I could listen to it. Course, this was before computers. We carried out this routine for 25 plus years.
About three years ago I was back in Lincoln to visit Mike, he had MS and had been in Lancaster Manor for a few years, and he passed away while we were watching a game. Mike passed away in the first quarter, but I like to think that Mike saw the last 3 quarter and the Nebraska victory from his own skybox. I miss talking with Mike during the game. That was probably the best part of "Big Red" - the people it brought together.
Since my wife and I married on January 1st, our anniversary often included a 3 or 4 hour window which was reserved for watching the game.
We have been married 32 plus years and this Cornhusker obsession has not adversely affected our relationship.
I am old enough to consider myself a Cornhusker fan, not a Husker fan.
Feel free to add anything you like. It can be a story, an anecdote, a saying, or a simple “Go Big Red!”
I was always a Bo Pelini fan...his hiring as coach feels like a return to "family"...a restoration of the Devaney-Osborne-Solich tradition.
This year I have corn growing in my back yard . . . there are only 6 plants and they only have 5 ears, but it makes me smile. Go Big Red!Permanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Aug 26
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: A Music City Husker
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Our next featured Husker fan in the awesome 50 Husker Fans, 50 States series comes from the great state of Tennessee. Scott Norman, known as TheStache on the site, has a great story about falling in love with the Huskers in a short amount of time, and the hospitality of his fellow brothers and sisters in Husker family. Enjoy!
And remember – if you’d like to be a part of the series, or know someone who would, email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. We’ll get the questions out to you. We’re getting terrific response!
Q: Tell us a little of your personal history as a Husker fan. Were you born into the Big Red Nation? Did you attend school there? Just decided to follow the program from afar? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How did you get to living where you are today?
A: I was not born into it, and did not attend the university. In 1978 I lived in Gothenburg for part of my freshman year in high school. It was here I had my first experiences watching Nebraska. Back then the only team I followed was Kentucky, because my family lives there. But in 1978, my friend invited me over to watch the NU game at his house. I spent every Saturday at his house watching every NU game I could from then on.
It amazed me that the entire town was a ghost town on game days. The passion, knowledge and sportsmanship the fans showed drew me in like a moth to a flame.
How hard, or easy, is it to follow the Huskers from where you live? Do you watch the games at home? Listen on the radio? Use the internet? Is there a “watch site” in town you like to frequent? Also: How many Husker fans are there in your area?
Currently living in Nashville I know a few Husker fans, some from Nebraska, some not. But we are a tight-knit bunch and are always surfing, reading, and finding out anything else we can about our beloved Huskers.
If the game is on in any form, I am there. There was an unofficial watch site, but none currently. If the game is on PPV, don’t call me…I won’t answer! There are actually quite a few Husker fans in Nashville. My favorite story is a guy and his wife I ran into at Publix. As they came into my aisle and he saw my hat, at the same time I saw his. We started talking and his wife exclaimed, “I will leave you two alone.” She went and finished grocery shopping and came back…we were still talking. Nebraska fans are the only fans I ever see do things like that.
How often do you get back for games? What’s the last game you’ve been to? How has the Husker experience changed over the years? Will Nebraska be playing a game in your area any time soon?
Because I have always been so far away from Lincoln, I have only made it to 1 game. The game vs. Iowa State in 2005. I had tickets 2nd row, 15 yard line and saw the entire OT played right in front of me. I love to talk so people at work were probably happy I was hoarse for 2-3 days!
No games scheduled to be played in my area anytime soon…so not sure when I will make it back, but on gamedays, like other fans, I am decked out in my jersey, hat, and waiving my Blackshirts towel at the TV…my neighbors think I am crazy; I tell them it’s passion, passion baby.
What’s the predominant college or pro team in your area? How is that fan base similar or different to Nebraska’s fan base? Hear a lot of trash talk about the Big 12, or anything like that? Give us an example of how Nebraska fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in your area.
The Tennessee Titans, which seems to be everyone’s NFL team. Oddly, though, the college fans are mixed, predominately Tennessee Vols fans, but also Bama, and Kentucky (I like UK also) fans. The Titans fans lack the passion that college fans have and the pro game is like a completely different animal.
A lot of times I have to listen to the, “SEC is the toughest conference conversations.” Even from Mississippi State fans. Vols fans for the most part seem to think that no one not wearing that weird creamsicle orange color knows anything about football. Bama fans seem for the most part pretty knowledgeable about their team…just do not mention Auburn. Kentucky fans remind me a lot of Nebraska fans, and the football team at UK is starting to actually be a decent team. But, for the most part, UK is a basketball school with a football team; like NU is a football school with a basketball team.
What’s one or two unique things about where you live? What makes it stand apart from other places?
Music City, but it’s not only country; Nashville is also the Christian music capital. It also seems like every other person plays or sings…except me, no musical talent here at all.
Give us one or two of your favorite Husker memories. They can be from any time period.
Jan 1 1995, I lived in Pompano Beach, Fl. Although I could not go to the game I was glued to the TV. Like quite a few people when Miami went up 17-7, my heart sank and I thought…I have been here before. BUT, then things changed and who better than on the strength of a local boy…TD CORY SCHLESINGER TD CORY SCHLESINGER TD CORY SCHLESINGER…that’s what I was yelling as he scored and as the final gun sounded I proceeded to run thru the apartment like a maniac yelling, screaming, and even crying as I saw TO (the REAL TO) hoisted on the players shoulders.
Sept 9, 1990. SOUTH BEND TURNS RED BABY. The shock that the TV crew had when a large portion of Notre Dame Stadium was clad in red was priceless. That was followed up by an awesome game made even better by the fact that we beat ND in South Bend. Although I wasn’t as vocal or running around like a madman as I was in the last game I mentioned, I was nonetheless ecstatic at the fact that we had beaten Notre Dame in South Bend. After all, ND is like the Yankees, you either love em or hate em…guess where I stand!
Besides Husker football, what other Husker sports do you like to follow? How do you follow them?
Wrestling and Volleyball, internet and sometimes on TV when I can.
Feel free to add anything you like. It can be a story, an anecdote, a saying, or a simple “Go Big Red!”
They say Nebraska fans are the best. I can tell you they are the friendliest. The only game I made it to, I drove from Nashville. When I parked my truck at the game, as soon as my foot hit the ground a gentleman and his friends tailgating next to me exclaimed, “TENNESSEE…u drove from TENNESSEE.” Well of course I did. Those guys treated me to steaks, seafood, and a few cold ones and made sure after the game was over that I had some food for the hotel stay later. Also, one of them gave me his e-mail address and made sure I know to e-mail him if I ever need tickets. One day I will take him up on that offer. Even though I love the South, my soul food, my fried food…THERE IS NO PLACE LIKE NEBRASKA.
Check out these great Husker fan stories, too!
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Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Aug 24
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: A Husker Fan in Dixie Land
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The next in our series of 50 Husker Fans, 50 States comes us to via Wade Landman, who grew up in Jackson, Mississippi, and yet has been a Big Red fan all of his life!
Known as 0510914D on our site, Wade brings a tale of what it really means to be a Nebraskan, and how it’s about a spirit, and not just where you live. It’s about fathers and sons, integrity, a team attitude and appreciating the leaders of the program, like Tom Osborne. We think you’ll enjoy his moving comments as much as we did.
And remember: If you want to be a part of the fun, or know someone who might be, just email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com , and we’ll shoot out the questions – leave the Big Red light on for you.
Go Big Red!
Q: Tell us a little of your personal history as a Husker fan. Were you born into the Big Red Nation? Did you attend school there? Just decided to follow the program from afar? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How did you get to living where you are today?
A: My late father was a graduate of the University of Nebraska so yes, I was born into Big Red Nation. I did not attend school there as I was born and raised in Mississippi, and at 18 years old out of high school it was a bit too far away from home for my comfort zone. But because of my dad I grew up watching the Huskers and being a huge fan. He was so passionate about it and about the work ethic and the quality of the people in Nebraska, especially Tom Osborne. With those kinds of things being instilled in me at such an early age, it was absolutely impossible not to be a huge Nebraska football and Tom Osborne fan. It's a little like being born into the mafia. The difference is, you stay because you want to.
How hard, or easy, is it to follow the Huskers from where you live? Do you watch the games at home? Listen on the radio? Use the internet? Is there a “watch site” in town you like to frequent? Also: How many Husker fans are there in your area?
I was born in 1970 and up until about the early 90s we didn't get too many Nebraska games on TV in our area. In fact, the typical weekend consisted of about 3-5 games on TV and I guess that was pretty much the way it was with the whole country at the time. We have come along way since then haven't we? Now, everyone all over the country can literally watch college football games from morning to midnight. I watch all the games that are on and if it is a pay-per view game I buy it every time as I am currently batting 1.000 on those. There are three this year and I will again be buying all of them. I can't wait!
I can remember back in the early 1980's when Huskers Illustrated magazine was this little tiny thing about the size of a TV guide. Back then, with no internet, that was the only information we could get on the Huskers and when it arrived I read it cover to cover without putting it down. Unfortunately, we don't have any watch sites in the Jackson, Mississippi area that I am aware of. As far as the number of fans in my area goes I would say it's miniscule but the few who see my license plate frame always honk and acknowledge their fellow Big Red faithful.
How often do you get back for games? What’s the last game you’ve been to? How has the Husker experience changed over the years? Will Nebraska be playing a game in your area any time soon?
The last time I saw a game in Lincoln was the Pigskin Classic against TCU in 2001. It was the first time my wife had ever been to Lincoln and while not a sports fan, she really enjoyed herself at the game. How could she not? It's Nebraska and there's no place like Nebraska! The last game I went to was when we played Southern Mississippi in Hattiesbur. I'd have to say that's probably the smallest stadium Nebraska has ever played in but it was great for me as that is only about 90 minutes from where I live. We are not scheduled to play a game in my area anytime too soon, unfortunately!
What’s the predominant college or pro team in your area? How is that fan base similar or different to Nebraska’s fan base? Hear a lot of trash talk about the Big 12, or anything like that? Give us an example of how Nebraska fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in your area.
Well, there are 3 Division I (sorry, I'm a traditionalist) schools in Mississippi which are Ole Miss, Mississippi State, and Southern Mississippi, so fans are spread out among those as well as a smattering of fans from other SEC schools like LSU, Georgia, Auburn, Alabama and a few Florida State and Texas fans as well. The closest pro team that fans identify with and have for years is the New Orleans Saints.
In my opinion, the fan base of any one of the three universities here is nothing like the Nebraska fan base at all. In fact, there simply isn't a fan base anywhere in the country that is similar to Nebraska's. I don't say that because the fans are so much better, although they are in many, many cases but rather because the saying, "there's no place like Nebraska," is true. Its uniqueness is in the fact that it's the only Division school in the entire state and therefore, the population is not splintered into different fan bases for different teams fighting for supremacy over the same territory.
I do hear some trash talk about the Big 12 because that's just SEC fan for you but for the most part, they realize that pretty much year in and year out, the two best conferences are the SEC and the Big 12. Also, when they realize I am a Nebraska fan they don't say too much because despite our recent struggles, they remember all too well how Nebraska beat their league’s elite regularly in bowl games.
As far as an example of how NU fans might be the same or different from some of the fans in my area I would have to say that it's just an entirely different dynamic altogether. Where I'm from the fans spend a lot of their time arguing amongst themselves over stupid things and making baseless predictions about the upcoming year. They simply don't comprehend that the people of Nebraska live and die with the Huskers and that the morale of pretty much an entire state is dependent on the performance of a football team. Not necessarily whether they win or lose, although we do much prefer to win, but rather on whether or not the team plays with the kind of effort, grit, heart, determination and perseverance that makes up the majority of the population in the state. Therein lies the difference. NU fans look out onto the field and see an extension of themselves, a kind of extended family, and they want that part of their family to play in a way that represents them honorably, win or lose. The fans in my area and really, any other part of the country, look out onto the field and they see 70-80 kids, strangers who are there to entertain them for a few hours and if they lose they would just as soon cuss them as anything. There's no comparison!
What’s one or two unique things about where you live? What makes it stand apart from other places?
Well, if you like fried food you are in the right place and we have some of if not the most beautiful women in the country. If anyone reading this has never been to an Ole Miss game in Oxford, you need to go one time. Go tailgate in the Grove and you will see more gorgeous women in 2-3 hours before the game than you will for the rest of the year. I guarantee you that! Just ask the guys on the College Gameday crew, they know exactly what I'm talking about.
Give us one or two of your favorite Husker memories. They can be from any time period.
Well, I can remember going to the NU vs. WSU game in Lincoln with my dad during the 1995 season, a 35-21 Husker victory in which a freshman by the name of Ahman Green happened to have a pretty darn good game. For me this was really special because despite being 24 years old at the time, I had never been to a game in Lincoln before. My dad was ill with cancer and here we were together watching our beloved team in person. It was the greatest experience in the world and I was really glad we got to do that as he would pass away less than two years later.
Another thing that I'll never forget goes back to the 1994 season. It was the night of the national championship game in Miami and dad was sick and I went over to the house to watch the game with him. Early in the third quarter we both started kind of getting that sinking feeling of, here we go again syndrome, when Miami made it 17-7 with a TD. When it was all over and Nebraska had finally done it for Osborne (although we got robbed the year before by the officials against FSU) I saw my dad's eyes tear up and I didn't even need to say anything. Although he was extremely happy that NU had just won the title, those tears were for Tom Osborne, a man he had never met, yet loved and admired so much so that his success meant that much to him. My dad got to see the back to back titles and I am eternally grateful for that. Unfortunately, he didn't make it for the 1997 championship. I miss him a lot, but during football season, when I'm watching the game and I'm jumping around cheering by myself, I know he's there with me. I know he's saving me a good seat up in heaven because we are definitely going to all of the games then.
Besides Husker football, what other Husker sports do you like to follow? How do you follow them?
I enjoy the men’s basketball team, especially now that Doc Sadler is the coach and it's much more exciting to watch. I think he's going to do good things at Nebraska. I don't really follow college baseball too much, but I keep up with how they are doing as well as the women’s volleyball team.
Feel free to add anything you like. It can be a story, an anecdote, a saying, or a simple “Go Big Red!”
I got to meet Osborne one time in Jackson, of all places. He was there to speak at the Fellowship of Christian Athletes luncheon and this was shortly after my father had passed away. I got in line and waited to shake his hand. I didn't realize that he was a much more physically imposing person than what you imagine just seeing him on TV or from afar. Big hands, a firm shake, and warm smile with what seemed like the most sincere, genuine eyes I had ever looked into. I got to tell him about my father and his reaction to the end of that Miami game, how much it meant to him that Osborne had gotten the championships and had the success that he deserved. It was interesting because even though I had never met the man before, it felt like I had known him all my life.
To this day, it still bothers me how the media and fans of other schools threw him under the bus for the way he handled the Lawrence Phillips situation. I know he is a Christian man and did what he thought was right and in the best interest of a young man’s future. It was not about personal gain but that was the way it was portrayed of course. I think the team pretty much proved during the six games he was suspended that they didn't need Lawrence Phillips, Lawrence Phillips needed Nebraska, and apparently a whole lot of psychiatric help as well.
Osborne said something once that I'll never forget because it really is so true and it's a valuable life lesson as well: "It's interesting to me how quick people are to formulate opinions based on very few of the facts." I immediately became more cognizant of this fact and can just about bet you that if you pay attention, you can point to an example of this from the people around you at work every single day of your life. It's so very good to have T.O. back at Nebraska where he belongs.
GOOOOOO BIGGGGGGG REDDDDDDD!
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2009 Jul 05
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Another NU Fan In Paradise
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Here's the next installment of our 50 Husker Fans, 50 States Series!
Today we go to, well, tomorrow! On the other side of the international date line and Guam, where Husker fan genotee lives. Read how he got there, how long it's been since he's lived in Nebraska and how he follows the Huskers today!
Check out the entire archive here.
And remember - if you want to be a part of the series...or you know someone who would llike to...just shoot us an email at sam@ne.statepaper.
Q: Tell us a little bit about your history as a Husker fan? Were you born into it? Family? Friends? Did you attend UNL? Did you grow up in Nebraska? How long have you been a Husker fan?
A: I was born a Husker fan basically cause all my family were husker fans. (4 sisters, 2 brothers and parents). I grew up just down the road from Lincoln in Ashland. We used to say just down Highway-6 from Memorial Stadium. All my friends in those days were husker fans and I think most of us still are and we were from the time we were born.
How did you come to live in Guam? Military? And where in Guam do you live? What's the general ethnic makeup of Guam? What side of the international dateline are you on? Sunrises and sunsets must be something to behold. And for Nebraskans who probably don't know, talk about Super Typhoons and the risk Guam faces from them, if you could.
I graduated from Ashland-Greenwood High back in 1969 and joined the Navy shortly after high school. I spent 21 years and retired from the Navy and my last tour was on Guam and back then things were going pretty well for me on Guam so I chose to stay here.
Basically Guam is made up of Chamorro people and nowadays they are outnumbered because there are a lot of other groups on the Island and a lot of the Chamarro people have migrated to the states and elsewhere. They are very patriotic people and are US Citizens and most of them join the military or the national guard at one time or another. A lot of Chinese, Phillipino and Korean people here a long with quite a few of us statesiders, sprinkle in some people from Thailand and that’s about it.
We are on the side of the dateline that puts us a day ahead and a few hours besides.
Sunrises are not that big a thing but the sunsets, when it isn't cloudy, are some of the most beautiful I have laid eyes on and I have seen a few. Typhoons, I could talk all day about them but they are similar and have tornado type winds in them. The big difference is they begin way out at sea and we start getting warnings days in advance. We just move everything inside and put up shutters on the windows and get ready. Most all houses here are cement so the winds don’t bother too much. Big problem is we lose power and sometimes water for days. Everyone owns a generator here. I’ve been through some pretty bad both here on Guam and elsewhere in the Pacific since I spent my entire naval career over here in the area. Closest I got to the states was Hawaii for awhile after training camp.
How often, if ever, do you get back to the United States? How often, if ever, do you get back to watch a Nebraska football game? And how long, from Guam, does it take to get back? What's the last game you've seen in person?
Haven't been back to the states since 1981. Me being the youngest I only have one sister and one brother left back there, one in Ashland area and the other in California. Went to a Husker game back in about 1964 I believe but can't remember for sure. Would love to come back and see them one time at least but don’t know if I could take that cold weather during football season anymore.
How do you keep track of Nebraska sports from Guam? I'm guessing the games aren't on there, so do you have the videos of them sent to you in the mail? Obviously, you're on the Internet...is the Internet connection expensive on the island? Or is there a place where the games are available via satellite? Are there a bunch of Husker fans on the island?
I keep up with the Huskers through every sports magazine I can get my hands, three different Newspapers here and the TV. We get a Nebraska game every year at least one and sometimes two either on ESPN or ABC. We have a pretty good satellite TV system here so we get a lot of coverage. There are a few Husker fans here because there are a lot of Air Force people here that have been stationed in Omaha before and there are a few local people who have been there and they know me so they root for the Huskers too. I’ve been here on the Island since 1988 so I know a lot of people. Some harass me about all the red I wear and my red car, but they know why.
What's the most popular sport on Guam? Is there a national team for that particular sport? Does Guam identify more with American athletes or Filipino athletes or Australian athletes or whomever? Is sport a big part of the culture in general?
As for the most popular sport on Guam it is pretty close between football and Soccer. However they have some good baseball players here and basketball is getting bigger all the time. They have national teams that play in soccer, rugby and a few other sports and the little league boys here have been to Williamsport for the Little League World Series a couple times in the last four or five years. They have a junior league team going to South Carolina for that tournament next month. Sports of all kinds are big here.
Guam's a somewhat popular vacation spot for people who know about it. Ever run across any Husker fans on the island? What kind of conversations are you able to strike up with them?
There are a lot of people come here for vacation and a lot of people come through here going other places and I run into a lot of military also and I do meet a lot of people who are Husker fans or know a little about the history of the Huskers. I run into people all the time with a shirt or hat with the Husker logo or something like that and it becomes quite a talking piece. I’ve got plenty of Big Red shirts and hats and love to wear them around because I am proud of the Huskers.
What's your favorite Husker memory? Feel free to list as many as you wish.
One of biggest memories was when I was in California on a training mission and we beat Alabama and I was running around with my head in the clouds and another great memory was when Johnny "The Jet" Rodgers ran all over Notre Dame.
What other sports, besides Husker football, do you like to follow?
I follow everything just about. Have seen that great girls Volleyball team on TV a few times. Saw the basketball team a few times also. Don't see much college baseball but try to keep up with it as much as I can. I think they had a little down year in baseball but they will be back. You can't lose all the players to pro ball and expect to field great teams all the time.
Is there was one Nebraska food you could have from the mainland...what would it be?
We get about anything we want here as for food. Some is shipped in so isn't like getting it fresh off the plant but I sure would love to have some Pheasant under glass or some real deer meat. We have deer here but they are small and don't taste the same. I was spoiled years ago. Would love to have some fresh water fish too.
Feel free to add anything you wish.
I could babble all day but just wanted to add that while I was in the Navy friends back there used to tape the radio Broadcast of Husker football and send it out to me and some of the other guys so got to listen to some great games and will never forget people like Lyle Bremser and Jack Payne and a few others. I have quite a few VCR tapes of games and a couple of DVDs now.Permanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states, johnny rodgers, football, guam
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2009 Jun 20
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Big Red, Greenwich Time
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We’ve got a great installment today of our 50 Husker Fans, 50 States feature. It comes from Harry Culpen, graduate of UNL’s College of Architecture in 1965. As his story will tell, he’s a Missouri boy who became a Husker fan, relocated to New York City, and eventually settled just on the other side of the border in Old Greenwich, Conn.
He is the co-founder of Culpen &Woods Architects out of Stamford, Conn and a long-time supporter of UNL’s College of Architecture, one of most rigorous and interesting majors in Lincoln.
We think you’ll really like his story. And, remember – if you want to be part of this series, just send us a private message or email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com
If you want to check out the archives, just click on the tag below.
Q: Tell a little bit about your history as a Husker fan. How did you become one? Family? Friends? How long have you been a Husker fan? Did you live in Nebraska, and, if so, where? And how did you come to live in Old Greenwich, Connecticut?
A: I grew up in northern Missouri and started college at the University of Missouri intending to become a civil engineer, went on to accept a commission in the Navy, after which I decided to study to become an architect. I choose NU because there was an exchange program whereby a Nebraska resident could attend the MU veterinarian college in exchange for a Missouri resident at the NU architecture school. At the time, all of the Big Eight universities had similar programs.
I choose NU because I could get a part-time job as a draftsman in a Lincoln office to help pay my $165 per semester in state tuition. I didn’t go to any football games in the first year or so, but got interested when NU played the Gotham Bowl, which I listened to on a radio next to my drawing table at the office where I worked in Lincoln. Those were the Devaney years and that’s when I became a fan.
After graduating in 1965, I returned to Missouri and worked at the St. Louis office of HOK. Times were good, HOK was expanding and I was relocated to their office in Dallas as part of the new Dallas/Fort Worth Airport project. Our team was to go on to do the new LA airport in Palmdale next. However, as you may know, there is no airport in Palmdale, CA. So, we were stuck in Dallas.
That’s where I met this very attractive young lady named McKeown who was on her way back to New York to work for the ad agency J. Walter Thompson. When HOK decided to open an office in NYC, I was the first to volunteer to for the NYC and off I went. Arriving in NYC, the first thing I did was to look up that McKeown lady. We were married a year later. We bought a rundown five-story brownstone on the Upper West Side full of aged rent controlled people and settled down to enjoy the city. I completely renovated the brownstone and after most of our older tenants exited feet first, I converted the building to a co-op, sold the apartments, kissed HOK good bye and with our three year old daughter, we moved to Old Greenwich, CT. With my newfound fortune from NY real estate, I opened an architectural office in nearby Stamford.
You graduated from UNL's College of Architecture right around the time the Devaney era was hitting its first pocket of success. First, describe your time in the architecture college. Today, it is considered one of the most, if not the most, rigorous major at UNL. Was that the case back then, as well? Students were famous for sleeping at the college to finish projects.
I thought the architecture program was extremely good. Yes, we put in a few all nighters. I did find that as I started working at HOK with Harvard, Yale, etc. graduates that my skills and knowledge were as good or better than most. So, I feel the architectural education Nebraska gave me a very good background which I greatly appreciate.
What was the campus mood around Devaney at the time you were in school? Did folks sense he was about to become the legendary coach he eventually became? Did anybody know the name Tom Osborne? How much of a fan favorite was "Fearless" Frank Solich?
At HOK in St. Louis there was one other NU alum, an engineer. We kibitzed about Nebraska football often, which by this time was flying high. When Devaney retied we were very despondent. This would be the end. Who was this Osborne guy anyway ? I don’t recall any mention of Frank Solich at that time.
How easy (or difficult) is it to find Husker games on TV in Connecticut? We presume it's Big East/Big Ten country. Is there a bar or restaurant you like to attend to watch the games? What are some other ways you're able to follow the program outside of watching them on TV? Is it easy to find fellow Husker fans in the area?
It is difficult to follow the Huskers from back here. There are the TV broadcasts but we only get a few games. When I lived in NYC I could go to a bar that carried all of the games. The nearest bar aroundhere is in New Haven, but that is too far away. So, I pick up the game on ESPN on my computer, but those are updated only at 30-second intervals and the info is limited. Maybe, those of you in the media could figure out how to broadcast via Facebook or something on the Internet that provides direct and timely coverage.
Greenwich hugs the border of New York City, near White Plains, Scarsdale, etc. Does the area follow college sports much, or is it all New York professional teams? Is UConn basketball - both men's and women's - similar to that of Nebraska football? How are the fan bases the same or different? What about the professional sports franchises? Do you consider yourself a Jets guy or a Giants guy? How are those fan bases similar or different?
Even though we don’t get a lot of Husker sports coverage, we don’t have a shortage of sports around here. I like both the Giants and Jets, Giants more as they do better. I sort of like UCONN basketball, both men and women. I don’t think any of the fan base for the teams around here is as loyal and as enthusiastic as the fans at Nebraska. These fans go mostly for the winners like the Yankees and will boo their team if it is playing badly.
How often are you able to get back for games at NU? When you do, what's your favorite part of the experience, and how does it compare to when you were in school? Are you able to take in many road games? If so, where?
This question is relevant for me. The NU Foundation is very active and I have had a lot of contact with some of the Foundation reps. As a result a few years ago I started a scholarship for architecture students. It’s not a big deal but I wanted to do something to show my appreciation for the education a received and the work the foundation does. My goal is to fund the scholarship sufficiently to provide a semester tuition for one student annually. I’m not quite there but will be in a few years. The current recession isn’t helping. So, I do get to a few games. My favorite was the 2007 Kansas game where my wife and I sat in Harvey Pearlman’s sky box. We even got to meet that crazy Cableman guy.
What's your favorite Husker memory? List as many as you like?
My favorite memory is the Miami game where Osborne went for the two point conversion.
What's something unique about the Greenwich/Stamford area? We know the golf up there is pretty terrific, and we know the views are as well, it being located on the Long Island Sound. We also know it's something of a spot for elite prep boarding schools. Were there any recent Leonardo DiCaprio/Kate Winslet sightings during filming of Revolutionary Road? How does life there compare to life in Nebraska? Or how does it not compare?
This area is pretty nice. We have four almost equal seasons beaches in the summer, skiing in the winter, boating, golf, 45 min. train ride to NYC. I think I would rather live here than Nebraska. However,when we get back for games, my wife and I agree that Lincoln and the university setting are pretty nice.
Feel free to add anything you wish.
One more thing to add. One of my shipmates in the Navy went on to become a professor at Virginia Tech. Many years ago we started a $5 bet on which school has the better team each year. Until recently, we had to rely on the pools to determine the winner. And for years I won all of the bets. Recently however, I am loosing my winnings back to my shipmate.
Now that we have the head to head contest we don’t need the pools. So, last year with our wives in tow, we went to Lincoln for the game. The Foundation got us four seats together and we all had a great time – except for the final score which the VT folks liked more than I did. This year we will all go the game at VT and I hope to even up the bet.Permanent Link to this Blog Post
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2009 Jun 11
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: A Big Red Fan Among War Eagles
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We’ve got another terrific profile in our 50 Husker Fans, 50 States series! Today, we head down to the heart of SEC country – Auburn, Ala., where the aptly named Husker_in_the_South follows Nebraska football.
We think you’ll really enjoy this one, especially the comparisons between NU football and how it’s played in Auburn, who was once considered a “sister school” to UNL. You’ll see that Nebraska stacks up quite favorably. Also: this fan has a terrific favorite memory, so make sure to read all the way through!
Enjoy and remember: If you want to be a part of the series, just send us an email at sam@ne.statepaper.com or send a private message here.
Q: Tell us a little about your history as a Husker fan. Did you grow up one? Did you live in Nebraska? Did you have family here? How did you come to live on the plains of Alabama?
A: I was born and raised on a small farm 60 miles northwest of Lincoln in Shelby. Most of my family still lives around the area (Mom, Dad, brother Heath, sister-in-law Kelsey, nephews, Coy and Jett all live around Shelby). I was a Husker fan from day 1. I went to UNK for undergraduate school because they had a pre-chiropractic program, but every football Saturday was spent in Lincoln or in front of the TV cheering the Big Red.
After UNK, I attended Palmer Chiropractic in Davenport, Iowa in the middle of Big Ten country. Yikes! I was in Iowa from July of 2003 until October 2006. During late October of 2005, a buddy at Palmer invited me to travel South to his alma mater, Auburn, for a football game. When we arrived in Auburn, it was 85 degree weather...in Iowa, it was 45. My mind was set on moving south!
How easy (or hard) is it to find Nebraska fans in the Auburn area? We imagine there are few here and there, yes? What about watching the game themselves? Are you able to get most of them down since the SEC doesn't clash with mid-afternoon ABC regional games? Is there a bar or restaurant you like to go to? How do share and show your passion for Nebraska football in your area?
There are a few Husker fans in Auburn. The first one I found was the priest at St. Michael's Catholic Church. Father Bill Skoneki graduated from Nebraska in the late 1970s. He is an avid Husker fan, whom I enjoy chatting about the Husker games with on Sundays after mass.
We get some of the games on TV, but not all of them. Last year, I did not have the opportunity to watch the Texas Tech game! What a heartbreaker! Fox Sports, Versus, and ESPN are the easiest ways for me to get the games. I have also been known to twist arms of my friends who have the ESPN College Game Plan to set their DVRs to record my games, so I can watch them later.
I show my passion for the Huskers every opportunity I have! I always seem to wear my Husker gear to the gym and Fridays before games (Everyone down here wears their orange and blue). Plus, I talk Husker football to everyone, even when people don't want to hear about it! Everyone in Auburn knows that I'm a diehard Husker Fan!
Are you able to get back for Nebraska games very often? Do you try to get to road games in Texas?
I've been down in Auburn for 2 full seasons thus far, and with work, I do not have a lot of opportunities to fly back to Nebraska for Husker games. My brother, Heath, has season tickets, so if I can persuade him to give me his other ticket, I'm hoping to fly back to Nebraska for the Oklahoma game this fall.
I went to the Gator Bowl this year in Jacksonville. My buddy, Gabe Hanquist from Omaha, flew down to Birmingham and I picked him up at the airport and we drove to Florida for the game. What a blast that was!
Auburn, obviously, is home to the university. How similar (or different) is the fan base down there from Nebraska? What about the games themselves? How is the passion for Auburn and Alabama, and which one is more similar to NU? How does the town compare on game day to Lincoln? Both schools recently removed their head coaches, hiring former defensive coordinators to run their programs. Of course, Auburn's hiring seemed a lot more controversial. Also, did you get a lot of grief over the Cotton Bowl a few years ago?
Auburn has a very loyal and passionate fan base, just like Nebraska. It has been easy for me to adjust to living here with Auburn fans. They are a knowledgeable fan base and they respect Nebraska and the way we play the game. Auburn has a tremendous amount of traditions that bests even ours! That is very hard for me to say!
The biggest difference between Nebraska fans and Auburn fans are the highs and the lows. Auburn fans seem to ride the wave of highs and lows a lot more than Nebraska fans. That is part of the reason I am a Husker fan...consistency.
The passion for Auburn and the hatred of Alabama runs deep! My favorite question to ask Auburn fans is, 'Would you rather have an Auburn win, or Alabama lose by 20?' A great number of people say "Alabama lose by 20!"
The town of Auburn is roughly 54,000 people plus 26,000 co-eds. On game days, this town is crazy!! Jordan-Hare Stadium holds more than 87,000. During the conference schedule, people start filing into Auburn with their RVs on Wednesday before games! The tailgates are huge and elaborate. The campus is very open and accommodating to the fans for tailgating. Lincoln's campus does not allow quite the same set up. Also, the tailgating scene down here is more of a social event than a sporting event. Many women wear their pearls and high heels for the games in Auburn, where in Lincoln, jeans and a T-shirt are the norm. I prefer to be comfortable in jeans and a T-shirt!
Comparing the in-stadium atmosphere is not even close! Lincoln is way better than Auburn. Auburn does not sell out every game. The SEC conference games are usually sold out, but it is odd seeing empty corners in the stadium. Auburn just put in a Digital TV like Nebraska, and have even tried to do a Tunnel walk. It is pretty good, but can anyone really beat ours? I think not!
The Auburn hiring of Gene Chizik is quite controversial. I am a Tommy Tuberville fan, so watching the drama unfold was like watching a soap opera. It was a little over the top. I think Auburn fans are starting to calm down and accept Coach Chizik with open arms. I think he will do a great job with the talent he has on the team.
I moved to Auburn in November of 2006. Two months later, I was in Dallas, TX watching the Huskers play Auburn in the Cotton Bowl. My grandpa Lefty took the whole family to Dallas for the game. It was a great time! Our tickets were in the middle of the Auburn section. I wore my Husker red proudly. I have the program and ticket stub framed and hanging on my office wall. I still receive grief about the loss!
We imagine you get a lot of Big 12 vs. SEC talk down there. Do you find yourself in spirited debates on that subject? Can you ever convince folks to see your side of it?
I always seem to find myself defending the Big 12. It has been difficult the past few years to find a footing in the argument, especially when Oklahoma loses to Florida in the National Championship game. I'm not too concerned, because I see the Big 12 North becoming contenders with Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas, and even Colorado. Once the Big 12 becomes a more complete league, north and south, I'll have the upper hand in the debates!
Auburn was well known as having the nation's most powerful booster, a bank tycoon named Bobby Louder. Do folks down there talk about him the way Husker fans talked about Steve Pederson? OR do they talk about him like Husker fans talk about Tom Osborne? There is some sense that Auburn athletics won't really be the same until he's out of there.
That is a great question! Mr. Louder has donated a lot of money to the university over the years and no one doubts he is an Auburn Tiger. Auburn fans seem to view him as the George Steinbrenner of Auburn Athletics. They appreciate what he gives the program, but want him to stay out of it! I don't see, however, how he is expected to give so much and not have his opinion heard.
I'm glad that the Nebraska big boosters stay behind the curtains. It is an ugly business to put yourself out in front!
Don't get me started on Steve Pederson...
What other sports besides Husker football do you follow? How do you follow them?
I enjoy watching all Nebraska sports. I follow Basketball, baseball, and Volleyball the most.
My mom, Peg Vrbka, is a huge Volleyball fan. She has attended many games over the past years. My parents and their friends had tickets to the Final Four in Omaha the last two times it was there.
What's your favorite Husker memory. List as many as you wish!
My favorite Husker memories include going to the spring games growing up with my Grandpa Lefty. One year, Grandpa wanted to walk through the weight room before the game. As we walked down there, Grandpa ran into Gov. Ben Nelson, and they chatted for a few minutes (they knew each other through Farmland), then as we walked through the doors to the weight room, Coach Osborne was walking out. I was more in awe of Coach Osborne, than I was of the Governor.
I have gone to numerous games in Lincoln over the year, but I always have fun at away games and bowl games. I've been to Missouri twice with my aunt Judy, uncle Kevin, and cousin Eric, who are Missouri fans and season ticket holders (I'll be there again this year!).
I went to the last two Alamo Bowls with Bock, Scott, Kendall, and Jessie. We drove through the night to Austin, Texas. Spent the night in Austin on 6th St. Then continued to San Antonio.
Gabe Hanquist and I have gone to several games over the years in Lincoln and also at Kansas, at Missouri, and the Gator Bowl. I hope we continue the tradition!
Feel free to add anything else.
The reason I love the Nebraska fans so much is the fact that they will take the time to talk to someone. When I was in Jacksonville for the Gator Bowl, I had so much fun talking to all the Huskers fans about where they were from and people we commonly knew. I will always miss that the most about Nebraskans.
Go Big Red!!!Permanent Link to this Blog Post
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2009 Jun 10
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Wisdom In Delaware
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We don’t hear of too many Husker fans from the great state of Delaware, and you’re in for a treat today, as Joe Lileikis, Jr., Wilmington, Del., resident is here to lay out life as a Nebraska follower smack dab in the middle of…Big Ten country? Yep.
We learned a lot in this interview we never would have known, and you will, too!
And remember, if you want to be a part of the series, simply send us a private message here or email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com.
Enjoy!
Q: Tell us a little about your history as a Husker fan. Did you grow up one? Did you live in Nebraska? Did you have family here? How did you come to live in Delaware? And where in Delaware do you live?
A: I was born in Omaha in 1980 and lived there off and on for about 9 years. My Dad, Joe Lileikis Sr., was an IB on the scout squad in '78 before he had to leave the team for personal reasons. I was bred a Husker and will do the same for my children when I get to that point in my life. We had season tickets in the south end zone for the 1990 season and I can remember going to the Baylor and Colorado game (tough loss in the rain), and going to the Citrus Bowl that year.
Virtually all of my family is in Omaha, or was at one time. As far as I know we're all Husker fans too.
We moved to Delaware when my Dad got a job in Philadelphia with Amtrak. He's now in Austin, TX.
Since he moved there, we started a tradition where I fly down to go to the annual "Texas" away game, excluding the Texas Tech game because it's too far of a drive. So the past 4 years I was able to see Baylor (2005), Texas A&M (2006), & Texas (2007), in addition to home games for Texas (2006), USC (2007) & Kansas (2008).
I still live in Delaware, currently in Wilmington.
What's it like trying to Husker sports from Delaware? Is it easy to find places to watch the games when they're not on national TV? Have you found fellow Husker fans? How do you follow the team from afar? The Internet? TV? Family back home? Are Husker games generally on TV out there?
It's really tough to watch a Nebraska game on TV out here. We're in Big Ten country and we'll get Indiana vs. Illinois before we'll see Nebraska vs. anyone. Until recently I didn't have the Fox Sports channels, so if they're on those stations now I will get them. There's only a few sports bars that will show any Nebraska games, and you have to request it to be on IF they have it.
So my best bet to follow a game is live radio from huskers.com or have my Dad send me text updates.
The only chance I have for a Nebraska game to be on TV is for it to be on ABC/ESPN and not have a Big Ten game on TV. If it's a regional game, then I need to go someplace to watch the game on ESPN Game Plan. The local Grotto's restaurant occasionally has it on TV. In fact there were 2 Husker fans that worked there that would see my fiancée and I come in and would make sure to put the game on for us.
Many Husker fans haven't probably been to Delaware, so may be unaware of the state's "sports profile." How big is the fan base for the University of Delaware? The Blue Hens are quite good on the Division I FCS level and have never made the leap to Division FBS. How big is college football in general there, and whom, besides Delaware, do they root for? Or is it more of a pro sports town, following the Redskins, Nationals, Wizards and Caps?
The University of Delaware is located in Newark, which is about 15-20 minutes from my house.
The city is a big Blue Hens town. However the state is definitely pro-Eagles (Philadelphia).
UD is decent in football for their sub division. It's a small stadium and it almost always sells out. I keep hearing a rumor that they're looking to build a new stadium across the street since a Chrysler plant shut down. I think they have hopes of joining a conference in the FBS once they have a new stadium.
Delaware is pretty much for any Philadelphia team, be it the Eagles, Flyers and Phillies. You see a few Dallas Cowboys, Baltimore Ravens and Washington Redskins fans here and there, but nothing like the Eagles.
I personally don't watch the NFL, and if I did, I wouldn't watch the Eagles. Even though there are a few former Huskers playing for them. I'll root for the player, not the team.
Also since we're near Penn St., there is a BIG following of them as well. Coming home to Nebraska and seeing everyone in red, as opposed to navy blue or green, is so comforting.
What, if any, attention was given to the recent drafting of NU linebacker Cody Glenn? Was it a big deal out there like it was here?
I heard nothing about Cody Glenn in the local papers. My only insight was from what I read online.
The Delaware papers, specifically the News Journal, only focus on local teams and barely give an inch to sports outside the tri-state area.
Delaware recently approved sports gambling. Plan to make any legal wagers on the Big Red this fall?
Well they may have approved sports gambling, but the total specifics haven't been lined out.
I'm not really a gambler so I don't think I will do any.
And my Dad always taught me to never bet on the Huskers b/c there's too much emotion involved.
What are some of your favorite memories regarding NU football?
The most exciting memory I have is the Texas at Nebraska game in 2006. I remember the halfback pass from Lucky to Swift, the broken tackle run by jackson, the botched opening NU kick, and of course the fumble by Nunn that lost the game.
The 1994 Kickoff Classic at the Meadowlands vs. West Virginia was a sweet game to be at as well. Going into that game, everyone talking about how WVU was this "GREAT" team and NU wailed on them.
The 2007 NU at Texas game was a disappointing loss. Wats called such a great first half and Billy C. ruined the second half.
The 2006 NU & A&M game was also a great game to watch. Blowing that lead we had but came back to win it was clutch.
And who could forget the 2001 OU at NU game...the catch...awesome!
What other sports, besides football, are your favorites at Nebraska?
I recently started watching NU basketball. It's been on ESPN2 out here a lot so I've been able to DVR it and watch it on my own time. We had a pretty good team this year, but the size hampered us a lot and we couldn't score when we needed to.
Feel free to add anything you wish.
If anyone will have tickets to the NU at Virginia Tech game this year, I'm looking to go!!
Oh, and GO BIG RED!!!!!Permanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 May 26
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Wisconsin
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Our next dispatch comes from our dairy neighbors to the north, as wdpolicky weighs in on a whole range of issues, including a Gerry Gdowski-signed $1 bill, Wisconsin’s version of Tom Osborne, Kevin Cosgrove, and how the Big Ten stacks up against the rest of the nation. You’ll love his perspective on a number of hot topics.
And stick around for Wes’ message at the end. It’s just how we feel here at Husker Locker.
And remember…if you want in on the fun, send us a private message or email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com. And Go Big Red!
Q: So in what part of Wisconsin do you live? For how long? And what relocated you to that great state of cheese?
A: I live in a suburb of Milwaukee – Pewaukee. My wife of nearly 4 years, Jennifer, and I - along with our 2 children, Isabelle (5) and Payton (2) - have been up here for 15 months. We relocated here for a new positioned offered to my wife with State Farm Insurance.
How did you become a fan of Nebraska growing up? Friends? Family? Did you arrive at fandom on your own? Did you attend NU?
I have been a fan as long as I can remember. I vaguely remember watching the 1986 Sugar Bowl against LSU and remember Steve Taylor QB’ing for the Huskers. I can also remember my parents attending quite a few games, most notably the 1987 OU/NU game. I remember watching the game on TV, and at the time, the coolest part was the ‘cup snake’ that was made from the drink glasses at the game.
My first Husker Football memory though as a child was probably when I was about 3 or 4 years old and NU was played Barry Sanders and OSU in a night game. My aunt and uncle’s car broke down in Syracuse, Nebraska and I remember watching the game at the bar there. I would say that is probably when I became more and more interested in the Huskers. It was not until a few years later that I could really follow along, but I do remember learning more and more about football.
The other item that I remember fondly was at the Seward County Fair. Then backup QB Gerry Gdowski signed a $1 bill that my mom had just before going to the Demolition Derby. I thought that was one of the greatest days ever.
My entire family is Cornhusker fans. Grandparents, parents, aunts, uncles, cousins, etc. All of them will ensure that Saturday is blocked out during the season so that they can either attend, watch, or listen to the game.
Most of my friends growing up and even into college are Husker fans. Shoot, even during my days at Doane College, if we were to pick between the Doane game and the Huskers, we would not even think twice about the Tigers.
I did not attend UNL, but nonetheless, I followed the Cornhuskers more so than my own College.
How easy (or hard) is it to follow the Huskers from afar? Obviously the Internet probably makes it easier, but how many of the Huskers' games are on in Big Ten country? Is there a place where Husker fans gather to watch the games? Is it easy/difficult to locate Nebraska fans in the state of Wisconsin?
So far, I have been pleasantly surprised with the availability of viewing the Cornhuskers via TV. Both Football and Basketball games have been readily available for me to watch here in Wisconsin. Obviously the first 3 football games were on pay-per-view only so I had to purchase those. I also had to purchase the Virginia Tech game as ABC had 2 “Games of the Week” and the other happened to be a Big Ten matchup. As for Basketball games, I am fairly certain that I was able to see some games, that friends and family were not privy to, namely the TCU game.
Following the Cornhuskers is not a problem. The Internet obviously is the number one factor there and in the same breath, Huskerlocker.com has provided me with opportunity to keep up on all events related to the Huskers.
I have not located, nor have I really researched any locations to watch Husker games. That is something I will do during our 2nd year up here. First year was just making sure I was able to view the games. Now that I know they are available, I can worry about where I will watch them.
There are not many Husker fans, that I have come across up here. For obvious reasons, this is Big Ten country, with the Badgers being the No. 1 choice. There also seem to be a lot of Hawkeye fans up here as well.
What are Wisconites' general opinion of Nebraska athletics? The UW football program rose to prominence in the 1990s under NU grad Barry Alvarez, running an offshoot of the Huskers' old power rushing offense. Do most Badger fans recognize that? Do UW fans also notice the relative similarities between NU and UW uniforms? What about NU volleyball coach John Cook, who helmed Wisconsin quite successfully for many years?
Most UW fans know the link between Alvarez and NU, but do not realize that what Alvarez did was an off-shoot of what TO ran at NU. Again, I think it goes back to the attitude about the event itself and how knowledgeable they truly are about their teams. I say this, and I am a guy who probably remembers too much about NU athletics.
Barry Alvarez on the other hand is what TO is to UNL Athletics. Fans believe that BA can do no wrong and is their saving grace for any of the programs here.
How about Kevin Cosgrove? Does UW's former defensive coordinator ever come up in polite (or impolite) conversation?
Honestly, I have only discussed this one or two times for various reasons. One, it physically makes me ill to think about it. And two, the 2 people I discussed this with were shocked that NU brought him in and basically thanked me for having NU relieve him of his duties in Wisconsin. The only think I have ever heard good about KC was that he is a nice guy. Other than that, he should not be coaching football, especially defense. More of a mentor and a character builder.
How would you describe Badger fans? The reputation we've heard is a little nuts, a little goofy. Is football No. 1 up there, or is it basketball and hockey, which recently won a national title?
You know, it is funny. Since being in Milwaukee, I have found that there is a different sports culture up here. Many people like all Wisconsin teams and support them, but do not get to know them as in depth as Nebraska fans do. UW has no problem selling tickets to any sporting event, yet, you talk to a lot of the people that go to the games, and they could not tell you who started at QB or at point guard, rather it is more of a social event and something to do. I would argue, that Marquette basketball fans are more like NU football fans. Extremely loyal and protective of their traditions.
With all of this said, my guess is that if you drive up the road 40 miles toward Madison, the attitude changes significantly. However, overall, with all the sports teams up here, UW Athletics are not held in the same esteem as they are at home in Nebraska.
Do you hear a lot of Big Ten talk up there? The Big Ten has become an object of derision nationally and on ESPN...do fans up there recognize and process that, or do they brush it off?
Yes. The Big Ten talk is cheap up here. They believe that all teams are exceptional and that is why records are middle of the road. I get the Big 10 Network for free, and I have spent about 2 minutes on it.
Fans really brush off the negative talk about the Big Ten. As stated earlier, they defend themselves by saying they beat up on each other, similar to the SEC. I think that there are good teams in the Big Ten conference, but it gets old when some teams, such as Purdue, start off great, and then get into Conference play and fail. It was a weak year for the Big Ten in football.
How often are you able to get back for Nebraska games? Frequently? Not at all? When was the last time you came back for a game?
This past season, we were back for 3 weekends, 2 home games (Baylor and Colorado) and 1 away game (Texas Tech). As my children get older, it will be more and more difficult to get to even one game. However, as it stands now, I will shoot for 1 game a year and every game after that would be a bonus. I love the atmosphere downtown Lincoln, however, I am just as content with hanging the red flag outside the house with a white “N” and grilling at home, while watching the game.
The last game we attended, was the Colorado/Nebraska game. What a terrific game! Probably the best I have ever attended. Alex Henery kicked the 56-yarder right into our End Zone. What a fantastic memory.
What, if you could pick one, is your favorite NU memory?
I know you asked about 1, I have 2:
*Nebraska/Wyoming in 1994: Being able to watch Brook Berringer shine and lead the Huskers to a hard fought victory over WR Marcus Harris (Biletnikoff Winner) and the pesky Cowboys.
*Watching the 1996 Fiesta Bowl win over Florida. It was at that time that I realized how much ESPN and other sports media really did not know what they were talking about. I remember hearing “Nebraska cannot run on grass.” 524 rushing yards later, we smoked’em. Absolutely dominated them.
Feel free to add anything else you like.
Not that sports are the end all, be all…nor do they save the world, but it is a true pleasure to be a fan of such a great Athletic programs. Obviously from the responses given, I really enjoy the football team. However, it is great to know that during almost any season, I can support a Nebraska athletic team and they will represent the state with passion, and love of the game.
Nebraska athletics are what really define the state. Any student athlete that has played a sport or currently representing NU on an athletic club, I want to say thank you for all that you do. Your time and commitment do not go unnoticed.
GO BIG RED!Permanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states, kevin cosgrove, barry alvarez
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2009 May 20
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: In Avocado Country, A Dream Fulfilled
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(Above: Photo of brooktownhusker, his son, and former Nebraska quarterback Vince Ferragamo)
Welcome to another edition of 50 Husker Fans, 50 States, one of our favorite features here at Husker Locker!
You know, one of the cooler moments in the life of a Husker football fan – man, woman or child, sophomore student or scion of the state – is clutching that ticket to a game at Memorial Stadium. We often save those stubs in lockboxes or in drawers where the valuables are kept. Some tuck them inside their pocket for good luck. Which one of us hasn’t clutched a Husker game ticket tightly, looked down at it more than once, just to see if it’s still there, in our hand?
So imagine when a lifelong Husker fan gets his named picked out a lottery, and he’s given the chance to buy a whole sheet of those tickets for the season? That’s the story we bring you today all the way from the avocado capital of the world and brooktownhusker.
Enjoy! And remember – if you want to be a part of 50 Husker Fans, 50 States, or know someone who does, just send us a private message or email us at sam@ne.statepaper.com.
Q: First, tell us your "history" as a Husker fan. How did you become a fan? Family? Friends? Did you attend UNL? How long have you been a fan? How have you passed on your fandom to other members of your family?
A: My grandfather attended UNL back in the 1920s. My grandparents' first date was a Husker football game. After they got married, he left school to work the family farm when my great grandfather became ill. When my mom was about a month old, the family moved to California.
Although I was born and raised here in California, I grew up watching and listening to Nebraska games, so I've pretty much been a fan for life. "Californians for Nebraska" used to pay for the broadcasts on a radio station here in Southern California, so we could listen to the games when they weren't on TV. Fortunately for me, my wife's mother was also born in Nebraska, so she knew how Huskers fans were.
We passed on our passion for the Huskers to our sons, so now we have four generations of active Big Red fans here in Southern California. My 94-year-old grandmother continues to be the biggest fan.
You live in Fallbrook, California, which is close to the San Diego metroplex. What is unique about Fallbrook? We hear the world’s best guacamole is made there. How easy is it to find Husker fans in the area? How do you get your Husker fix for games? TV? A watch site? The Internet? Radio?
Fallbrook is the Avocado Capital of the World, so it's fairly rural and has a large agricultural base by Southern California standards. We're located in the northern end of San Diego County.
It's very easy to find Huskers fans in the area. Fallbrook borders Marine Corp Base Camp Pendleton, which sometimes brings Big Red fans to our town. In addition, it's about 45 minutes into downtown San Diego and about 1 1/2 hours to downtown LA, so we have numerous choices (10, I believe) for watch sites to hang with the Husker faithful when we can't get the games on TV. I've been to watch sites with more than 100 Huskers fans in attendance to watch the games.
My wife's cousins were out a couple of years ago and were amazed at the crowd when we invited them to one of the games. They had no idea we would have that many fans, so they didn't even think about wearing red. I gave them a good-natured bad time about being the only ones in the place not wearing red (especially since he is a season ticket holder from Nebraska). I enjoy the fans at the watch sites so much that I will occasionally go, even when the games are available on local TV. Since the advent of the Internet, the radio broadcasts are no longer available.
One other advantage of living here is that we were able to go to LA and be extras in the Jim Carrey movie "Yes Man" for the Nebraska football game scene. It was a fun day hanging out with all the alumni and fans and we actually made the final cut and got to see ourselves in the movie.
Do folks around the area like to follow San Diego area players, like Meno Holt and Anthony West?
The folks at the watch sites in San Diego follow the local players and recruits (not really sure about the rest of the local football fans). I've even seen some of the players' parents at one of the watch sites.
What sports fan base, if any, out there compares to Nebraska? The Chargers? The Padres? San Diego State? USC or UCLA? If they don't compare, how are they different from Nebraska? How would you describe interest for those programs out there? Is it more about another sport?
It's hard to compare local fans to Nebraska simply because there are so many teams and so many other attractions competing for attention. Also, there are plenty of people here who are from somewhere else. It's not uncommon to find groups of people who are loyal to their teams from back home, so you never find a stadium full of fans rooting for the home team like the Sea of Red in Lincoln.
California also has its share of fair-weather fans, who are enthusiastic when the local teams are doing well, but evaporate when they aren't. USC is very popular at the moment due to its recent success in football, but I think the die-hard fans are far fewer. I don't think any of them compare to the loyalty and enthusiasm of Husker fans. If you're reading this, you already know there's no place like Nebraska!
What other Husker sports, besides football, do you like to follow from afar? How do you get news on those teams? Since volleyball is a big sport in California, does the state have some awareness of the success of Nebraska’s team?
Baseball comes in a close second, followed by volleyball. I'm not real sure if folks have much awareness of the volleyball team's success other than when they read about the team making it to the Finals. Because the weather supports just about every sport during any time of the year, we have many people interested and participating in numerous sports. Volleyball is a big sport, but I'm not sure of the Husker following here since we have some great volleyball teams in California also.
Do you get back for many sporting events? How often or how rarely? Were you able to enjoy the one time Nebraska came to the Holiday Bowl a decade ago?
In 2006 I won the ticket lottery and was able to fulfill a lifelong dream and obtain season tickets. I travel back to Lincoln several times a year to take in games and visit family.
Nothing quite compares to hanging out with 85,000 of my best friends on Saturday in Memorial Stadium. I've had the great pleasure of taking different family members back on trips so they could experience the game-day atmosphere in Lincoln. My wife and her mom also enjoy their annual trip to Lincoln to see a game and visit with family.
I was able to take the whole family to the Holiday Bowl here in 1998. It was great being able to make such a short road trip. I've also taken the boys on other road trips; the Fiesta Bowl in 1999 and the Rose Bowl in 2001.
What's your favorite Husker memory? If you have more than one, let's hear them!
Too many to list, so I'll stick to the top 5 (not in any particular order):
The day I finally got my Season Tickets.
My first home game in Lincoln, UNL vs. Wake Forest (my youngest son's best friend was the punter for WF).
All the bowl games I've attended (Orange, Fiesta, Rose, Alamo, and Holiday).
Getting all four generations of the family together to watch the Alamo Bowl on my Grandmother's birthday.
Meeting Tom Osborne at a "Californians for Nebraska" dinner.Permanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 May 14
50 HUSKER FANS, 50 STATES: In California, The Son of Husker Broadcaster Remembers
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We return to a beloved feature here at Husker Locker with a great story.
David Blackwell, known as DBlackwell on the site, now enjoys the Huskers from afar in Walnut Creek, Calif. But he enjoyed an up-close look at the memories and Huskers that make most of us tingle.
He's the son of Dave Blackwell, the former KMTV sportscaster who used to join Lyle Bremser and Jack Payne on those Husker radio broadcasts all those years ago. The elder Blackwell was there for the Game of the Century, Tagge's leap into the end zone for NU's first national title and a lot of other memorable games. And just like father, the son was there, too, to see it through the wide eyes of a boy who grew up in a time when Husker legends loomed largest in the landscape.
Q: First, tell us your "history" as a Husker fan. How did you become a fan? Family? Friends? Did you attend UNL? How long have you been a fan? How you passed on your fandom to other members of your family?
A: We moved to Omaha right after I was born in 1964. My father was a sportscaster with KMTV, and was also the color analyst with Lyell Bremser through about 1972 (we moved to Utah in 1973). After my Dad died in 2005, a great Husker fan send me a box of cassettes of game broadcasts by Lyell, Jack Payne, and my Dad, including the Game of the Century, which still gives me chills.
We had season tickets, so while Dad was in the booth, my Mom and I would sit in the stands. Growing up, everyone I knew was a Husker fan, and I couldn't imagine supporting any other team. As a kid, I had the full gear: red cowboy hat with a white "N", red sports coat, red shirt, red pants. It was quite a look.
I'm trying to indoctrinate my four kids into Husker football (they are all under 6), and they already love Hail Varsity (they call it the "Boom Boom Song"). My wife is a Bay Area native, so she doesn't yet get it, and probably won't.
You live in Walnut Creek, California, which is close to the San Francisco/Oakland Bay Area. How easy is it to find Husker fans in the area? How do you get your Husker fix for games? TV? A watch site? The Internet? Radio? How about San Jose and Sacramento? Are those areas chock full of Husker transplants, too?
We moved to Walnut Creek from SF a few months ago, so I don't know about the extent of the local fan base. While in SF, I often went to the Final Final, which generates a huge turnout for games, and is the best SF spot for a Husker fan to watch a game. There are some decent sports bars in Walnut Creek, so I'll scout them out this fall. If I can't get the game on TV, I'll listen to it on the web radio and follow it on the internet.
I get my daily fix through HuskerPedia run by David Max, who I have met and is a great guy. I open it every day, and read almost every story, including yours.
Do folks around the area like to follow Bay Area players, like current Huskers Zac Lee, Dejon Gomes and Roy Helu and former Huskers Maurice Purify and Sam Keller? Is there some recoginition in the area that Nebraska likes players from the area and recruits pretty actively out there? San Francisco Community College has been fairly well known since the days of OJ Simpson...do fans follow that JUCO closely at all?
I have some friends that have gone to SFCC games, which produces some good players. It's a pretty international fan base, but they apparently draw well. As discussed below, though, the interest in college football and tracking high school players is pretty weak here. I've mentioned Helu to others around here, and I get a blank stare. There are some very good high school teams in the area (e.g., De La Salle), but I haven't seen locals become fans of the colleges where those players end up.
What sports fan base, if any, out there compares to Nebraska? The 49ers? The Giants? The As? The Raiders? If they don't compare, how are they different from Nebraska? What about Stanford and Cal? How would you describe interest for those programs out there? Is it more about basketball?
There is no local sports fan base that compares. College football here is weak, even though Cal produces some pretty good teams. Stanford fans don't have a clue about football. Football in the PAC 10 will never generate the fervor that it does in the Big 12 or SEC. Currently, the pro sports franchises here are floundering, but there will always be diehard fans of the Niners, Raiders, Giants, and A's, although attendance is suffering for some of those teams. These teams have been here for awhile, so they have established pretty good roots, despite mismanagement and poor performance. In the current economy, attendance will be interesting to watch.
Bill Callahan was the head coach of Oakland before Nebraska. What's the general impression of him out there? Just another guy caught in the wake of Al Davis? A beneficiary of Jon Gruden's coaching skills? The guy who got the Raiders to the Super Bowl?
When Callahan was hired, I was telling a colleague (former Raider player from the 70's) about how good he would be. My colleague smirked and shook his head, which should have told me something. I think people see Callahan as the beneficiary of Gruden's team building, but that team is so screwed up that there are a myriad of reasons why Callahan and everyone following him has failed. Speaking of Callahan, I naively thought that the hiring of Steve Pederson was a great step forward for the Husker program due to his passion and prior success. It just shows how wrong we can be.
What other Husker sports, besides football, do you like to follow from afar? How do you get news on those teams?
Honestly, I only follow two sports with passion: Husker football and Utah Jazz basketball. These bonds were created in part because of my Dad's association with both teams, so I got to know players and management growing up. As I get older, I get more jaded about sports in general, and don't have the time or the energy to follow other teams to the extent I follow the Huskers and Jazz. I would like to see Husker baseball rebound and Husker basketball get to the NCAA Tourney some day, but I don't live and die with their performances.
Do you get back for many sporting events? How often or how rarely?
I rarely get back. When I was in law school in Utah in the late 80's, ten of us drove a Winnebago from Salt Lake to Lincoln for the Utah-Husker game. I took my friends to Misty's and a few watering holes, and we sat in the Utah section during the game. It was a blast and great to be back at Memorial. I'll try to join David Max this year to a game, hopefully OU. If my Dad ever gets the Bremser Award for the NU Football Hall Of Fame, I would definitely come out for that. I also went to the Rose Bowl against Miami, which was painful, and saw NU play Cal in Berkeley in 1998, where a huge swath of the stadium was red. That was pretty fun, although the offense struggled.
What's your favorite Husker memory? If you have more than one, let's hear them!
The Winnebago trip was pretty wild. As a kid, Johnny Rodgers had dinner at our house in Omaha, which was great. I also met Devaney, Tagge, and others as a kid, which was always a thrill. I remember watching the Schlesinger Orange Bowl against Miami with my Dad in SLC; when NU finally closed out that game and won its first National Championship in years, it was absolutely joyous.
Want to own a DVD copy of the 1971 Game of the Century with the Bremser/Blackwell/Payne play-by-play? Click here!
Now then...hey you - yeah you! We want to hear your Husker fan stories -no matter where you live. Email me at sam@ne.statepaper.com and let us know if you, or someone you know, would be interested in being a part of this series!
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2009 Jan 29
50 Husker Fans, 50 States: London Calling
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We have a special guest again for our 50 Husker Fans, 50 States feature: Dale Meyer from London. He's Londonspride on the Husker Locker network, and we think you'll get a real kick out of this native small-town Nebraskan's story.
Check out the sacrifices that have to be made when you're across the pond and craving college football. It'll inspire you and make you laugh.
Remember, if you'd like to be part of this feature, or know someone who would, send us an email at sam@ne.statepaper.com!
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Q: You live in London. How you'd get across the pond? Talk about your journey that led you from Nebraska (presumably) to London.
In 1975, two years after graduating high school in Bertrand, Ne. (pop 714) I left home and moved to Redlands, California to broaden my horizions. While living and working there I was there I made an acciontence who had just started a construction company in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. I accepted the offer and moved to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in 1977 for a two-year contract as a manager for this company. My two-year contract turned into 12 years working in several cities in the country. While I was living in Jeddah, which is on the west coast of Saudi on the Red Sea, I met my wife, Kathleen, an Irish nurse, who was working at one of the military hospitals. In 1989, prior to the birth of our first child, we relocated to London and are still here.
You mentioned it's extremely difficult to get American football over there without the Armed Forces Network. How many Nebraska games appear on this network? How long after the fact do they appear on there - or are they broadcast live? Do you have to make allowances in terms of time to see a game, or do you simply watch the game whenever you can? You mentioned your friend is a Michigan fan. Do you guys have healthy debates about the 1997 season?
Over the years it has become better and easier to catch some games on the TV over here. Up until about the early 90s and even during my time in Saudi, my Dad would send videos and newspaper clippings of the games as often as possible.
Then I met my friend Wesley, a Michigan fan, who was working at a US military base in London. We were able to watch college football at the base (about 5 miles) and watch the games at the bar. An added bonus was that we were also able to sample USA beers on the base. This was fantastic as it had been over 15 years since I had seen a Nebraska game live on TV!
The drawback was that unless the game was an early kickoff the bar would be closing before any late games would begin due to the time difference. As the years went by, my friend was able to purchase an AFN dish for his house that are only offered to active or retired military personel. This has greatly improved our ability to watch college football all night long. Usually, there will be a choice of a couple of games in each time slot and maybe 4 games over the entire night (6:00 p.m-4:00 a.m.). Sometimes during the early part of the season in September the sun will be coming up as I am walking (staggering) home on a Sunday morning after a long night watching college football.
I have been able to catch several Nebraska games over the years and really enjoyed the Gator Bowl this year as it was an afternoon game in the US and started here at 6:00 p.m.
My friend Wes and I have had some very good banter over the years in regards to Nebraska and Michigan, especially in 1997. I remember that we watched the bowl games all night long and it was granted that Michigan would be #1 as it squeaked by their game in the Rose Bowl. The next day I saw via the net that the Coaches’ poll voted us #1. I immediately telephoned Wes and congratulated him on Michigan being voted #1, but then added ……..in one poll. The silence on the other end of the phone was deafening. Priceless!
This year there has also been quite a bit of banter, mostly me giving, not receiving. As the old saying goes, “what goes around comes around”. This year is my chance to return the verbal that I took from him during the dark ages (Callahan years). I was reminded many times in the last few years that Michigan had the longest bowl streak going. Well, this year, thank's to Michigans' new coach and a 3-9 record, that will be the end of that! The down side is that now Florida State that has the record and there is one thing we both agree on is our dislike for ANY Florida teams (and Notre Dame of course).
How else do you follow Nebraska football? The Internet, presumably. How often are you checking on the Huskers?
The Internet is a really great thing for keeping up with Nebraska football. I watched the first game telecast on the net with Nebraska and San Jose State in 2000 and have paid to watch a couple of games on the Fox Web site. I also listen to the radio via the web for games not televised on AFN. I keep up via your website and Huskerpedia to name a few. My Mother sends me Sport Illustrated etc. in the post.
Have you had a chance to get back to see any games in recent years? If so, which ones? If not, has it been weird living through all the highs and lows of last 15 years - three national titles, the firing of Frank Solich and Bill Callahan, from very afar?
Even though we may live some distance from the action, I still am very up to date on the happenings of NU Football. The last game that I was able to see was Nebraska against Utah State in 2002. It was really good be in the stadium again and see the tunnel walk in person for the first time. I can’t really say it was weird living through all the highs and lows of the last 15 years (or shall we say 30 years) as it was just normal for me. I was always on the phone to my father while he was alive, talking about the games past and games future, recruiting etc.. Now, I try and keep up with my sister who lives in St. Paul, Minn., who is also a big fan. In 2002, she took me to a Husker bar in the St. Paul area, which televises all the Husker games, to watch the Iowa State game. That was weird for me, to go into a bar full of Husker fans, beers in a Husker glass, the bartenders wearing N shirts etc. in Minnesota?
Let's talk about sports in England for a second. Obviously, traditional football is the main course. What, if any, clubs do you follow? How are fans in London different from American fans in anything? How are they different than Nebraska fans? We often hear about the rare passion and excitement of fans over their clubs and the national team? Is it as fierce as advertised? Are sports on TV as often over there as they are here?
If I had a team that I support in the Premier League here it would be Arsenal, mainly as I have several brother in-laws (my wife has 7 brothers and 6 sisters) who support them. Generally, I just want to see a good game against the big clubs, like Manchester United, Liverpool and Chelsea. This year Aston Villa has cracked into the top 4 - that is important in order to get into the Champions League competition.
Rugby is by far my favourite sport over here. I love watching the Six Nations Cup (England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, France, Italy) which is held every year and starting the beginning of February.
Rugby fans and football fans are completely different, at least in my opinion.
At football games over here in Europe, generally you still have to segregrete the fans in the stadium mainly to avoid any trouble. Rugby does not have that problem, as fans from the opposing sides will be sitting side by side with no problems. As the old saying goes, “rugby is a sport for thugs, played by gentlemen, and football is a sport for gentlemen, played by thugs” Sometimes it seems the fans are very similar to that statement.
What other sports stand out in the London proper? Rugby? Cricket? Tennis? How much - if any - coverage do American sports get there? Did David Beckham's emigration to Los Angeles open up those markets some to other sports?
This is a great golfing country and hundreds of golf courses just in the London area. There is a lot of interest in the US tour on TV and of course the Ryder Cup. I really enjoyed being able to give back some of the stick that I have been getting over the past Ryder Cups as we finally won again last year. I kept showing my betting slip to all the patrons in my local pub who were laughing at me at the beginning of the matches. Tennis is quite popular here again with Andy Murray rising in the ranks. There is even talk that he may even win Wimbledon. A few years ago, you could get better odds from the bookies for a bet on the second coming of Christ than for a British male player to win Wimbledon!
What's your favourite memory as a Husker fan?
I will never forget seeing my first game in Memorial Stadium when I was about 10 years old. While the team we played escapes me I remember that we were making the 4-hour drive from Bertrand to Lincoln and my dad and grandpa had tickets but could not get a third one for me. A conversation ensued about ticket scalpers and how much a ticket would cost at the stadium. Our guess was about $50.00 in those days, which was way out of reach. I walked down to the stadium with them anyway and watched them go through the ticket barriers into the stadium.
I then walked over to the south stadium and was able to see through the fence onto the field and was watching the players warming up in the corner of the end zone. A man approached me while I was watching them and asked me if I wanted to go to the game? I assumed he was a ticket scalper and I told him that I really wanted to go to the game but did not have any money to buy a ticket. He said “no problem, come with me” He then introduced me to his wife and we proceeded into the staduim. The seats were on the second tier, first row, 40 yard line East stadium. What a great seat!
My luck was due to the fact that he had a son about my age who was ill that day and did not want to sell the ticket. I was at the right place at the right time. We won the game of course and I couldn’t wait to see my Dad and Grandpa after the game to tell (brag) about my good fortune. My dad telephoned the gentleman on the following Monday as he had given me his business card, and thanked him for his kindness. The story made it to the local newspaper here. I will never forget that day!
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2009 Jan 22
50 Husker Fans, 50 States - Florida
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We're back with our latest installment - the great state of Florida, home to Nebraska's 2009 Gator Bowl victory. For the Sunshine State, we selected hurricanedj, a lifelong Husker fan whose family still gets back for Husker home games despite living in Orlando. Enjoy his interesting commentary at the end of the story about Clemson fans.
Q: How and when did you become a Husker fan? Is it family tradition? Just something you stumbled upon? What, to you, does it mean to be a Husker fan?
A: Being from Omaha, Nebraska, everyone in my family became Husker fans at birth. My parents and relatives were huge Husker fans, so my sisters and I followed in their footsteps. How could we not? Growing up we were all spoiled with Nebraska's success. For as long as I have been alive, we have averaged 10+ wins a year. When our family moved to Florida in 2001 and NU started losing more, we were hit with the realization that Husker football was changing. It was a hard pill to swallow, especially because we were so far from home. But we remain hopeful, optimistic and proud of our team and where we are from because deep down, we will always bleed Husker red!
You live Orlando, Florida, but your family still has season tickets. How does that work? How often do you get back for the games? How does your family decide who will go to the games and who has to stay home? Does living so far away, yet still having season tickets, make the experience more special when you do get back for a game?
The season tickets get fought over before the season even starts. My parents get first choice of the game they want to go back for and the other games are divided between myself and my two sisters. It's always great going back for a game.
There are so many little things you take for granted when you live there and when you get to go back only once a year you take notice and really learn to appreciate it. We crave a Runza at halftime, the goosebumps on our arms when "Sirius" starts on the loudspeaker, the 'Pride of All Nebraska' playing our fight song, releasing red balloons into the air after a TD, and yelling 'Husker Power' as loud as our voice will allow.
It's so different going to a game at Memorial Stadium, unlike any of the other stadiums we have been to. Nebraska fans are so dedicated and when you go to a game you feel like you are a part of something bigger than yourself; you feel like you are a part of the state's identity and pride.
How easy is it to find fellow Husker fans in Florida? Talk about the alumni groups you've uncovered in Orlando and Tampa during your time there. What's it's like when a bunch of Husker fans pour into a bar in the Sunshine State? Do Floridians look at you funny?
It is actually very easy to find Husker fans here. You would be surprised how many times i get stopped and asked if I am from Nebraska when i wear my Husker gear. Just walking around the mall I was stopped three times in one day when i was wearing my Husker hat! The Orlando chapter of the NU Alumni group meets at T.G.I. Fridays Front Row, a 2-story sports themed restaurant that we fill to capacity on gamedays. People tend to look at us weird because we are so passionate and loud during games, regardless of whether we are winning or losing. It's the closest feeling we have had to actually being in Lincoln for a game.
Florida is a hotbed for college football, with the University of Florida as the flagship program these days. Is it accurate that most of Orlando is for the Gators, since Gainesville is nearby? Or is it pretty well split? What about Tampa? Is the city on board with South Florida, or is that still a work in progress? Does Central Florida play into things at all?
Most of the fans in the area root for the Gators now, because Florida fans can be very fickle and jumped on the Gators bandwagon when they started winning. South Florida seemed to be a one-year-wonder but are slowly building a following. Central Florida fans are like UNO fans. They like UCF, but really root for the bigger schools like the Gators, Seminoles, and 'Canes.
Describe some of the differences between Florida, Florida State and Miami fans. How are they the same? Is the rivalry down there as intense as we believe it to be? Are any of these fans similar to Nebraska fans, or are they all different? What about Nebraska fans in Florida - do they have a preference among the big three?
The rivalries are very overhyped by the media. Most fans will argue about football and talk smack, but don't know the game very well and only root for who is currently winning the most. You don't see as many Miami or Florida State fans ever since they started losing and the Gators started winning which is unlike most Husker fans who have stayed with the program through good times and bad.
What's your favorite Husker memory? It can be from any time involving any team.
My family's favorites-
Dad- Mike Rozier's 2 yard sideline to sideline TD run against UCLA that helped earn him the Heisman.
Mom- 1975 Sugar Bowl vs Florida.
Sister- The 1994 National Championship, celebrating at 72nd and Dodge in Omaha with thousands of fans.
Sister- Driving from Omaha to Miami nonstop to see the 1997 National Championship game with four other family members in a small Honda Accord. Talk about dedication!
Me- Its a tie between the 1997 'Miracle Catch' at Missouri and the 1997 National Championship, sitting 2 rows behind the Nebraska bench for Osborne's last game. Seeing Osborne getting carried off and meeting the team when they got back to their hotel in Miami were highlights of my youth.
How fun was the Gator Bowl? Where did you sit, what did you do, how many Husker fans did you see? How great was it to have your favorite team within driving distance for once?
The Gator Bowl was a blast! We began our weekend at the Gator Bowl parade in downtown Jacksonville. Of course, the "Pride of All Nebraska" did not disappoint. From there we walked across the street to The Landing to join 5,000 other Husker fans at the pep rally. We were a little disappointed there weren't any former players or coaches there to give a pep talk, but the band once again rocked!
The crowd was loud and energetic (like always) and it got us pumped for the big game the next day. On game day, we tailgated with a mixture of Tigers and Husker fans. The stadium was great and the atmosphere was electric. The South and West sides were mostly Nebraska and the East and North sides were mostly Clemson...although Nebraska fans outnumbered Clemson by a couple thousand. My family and I haven't seen Nebraska bowl game since the 1997 National Championship game in Miami so, needless to say, we were extremely fired up all week. The first half of the game was nerve-wracking, but the second half was well worth it. We all had a great time and the final score allowed us to drive home with happy hearts. Go Huskers!
What was your impression of Clemson fans? A lot like Nebraska folks? Positive or negative?
For the most part, Clemson fans are cordial and respectful. They love their team almost as much as we love ours! The older Clemson fans are generally nice, but the younger fans are a little odd...they "dress up" to watch a football game! The girls wear heels and the guys wear button-down shirts. Maybe it is a southern thing, but it is definitely not how we do it back home in Nebraska!Permanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2009 Jan 15
We Want YOU for 50 Husker Fans, 50 States
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Hey there, Husker Nation! Are you a fan living outside these fine borders of Nebraska? We'd love to hear from you! How you keep up with the team, how you live in "enemy" territory, how you hook up with Husker fans...the whole Husker enchilada, if you will.
If you - or someone you know who has a great story - is interested, drop us a line at sam@ne.statepaper.com, or simply email us here. Remember - you may live elsewhere, but we're still all one Big Red Soul...thanks!Permanent Link to this Blog Post
Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2008 Dec 04
Husker Heroes and 50 Husker Fans, 50 States: Uganda
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Above: Sgt Bignell with his Ugandan students on graduation day.
Husker fans...get ready for a really cool edition of our 50 Husker Fans, 50 States segment.
For this one, we're flying across the Atlantic Ocean to the African nation of Uganda, where Sgt. Justin Bignellis helping local Ugandans fight terrorism inside their own nation.
This is a story of service, courage, freedom, the universality of sport and a tribute to enduring passion of Nebraska football and the worldwide Big Red Nation.
Enjoy.
And send this to every Husker fan you know. We hope you and they appreciate it as much as we did.
Q: What position do you hold in the military and where are you currently at in Uganda, if you can say? What role are you serving among the Ugandans? Go into as much detail as you'd like. How difficult/rewarding has that experience been?
A: My name is Sgt. Justin Bignell and I am a 13m, which is a Multiple Launch Rocket crewmember stationed in Fort Sill, Oklahoma. I am originally from Fremont, Nebraska and have been in the Army for 3 ½ years. I am deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom in the Horn of Africa with Charlie Battery 2nd Battalion 18th Field Artillery Regiment.
My unit is working under the newly formed AFRICOM and the Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa. We are based out of Camp Lemonier in the small country Djibouti. From Djibouti we are sent out to various locations throughout the Horn of Africa. I was blessed to be given the mission of helping run the Ugandan Counter Terrorism Course for the Ugandan’s People Defense Force.
The course is a 15 week course in team building, physical fitness, marksmanship, and basic infantry skills. Basically we work with Ugandan soldiers to teach them the skills that they will use on peacekeeping missions in Sudan, Somalia, and at home while battling the Lord’s Resistance Army.
The Lord’s Resistance Army is a notorious rebel group based in southern Sudan that has battled to over throw the Ugandan Government for almost 20 years. They employ brutal guerrilla warfare tactics as well as the kidnapping of Ugandan children and forcing them to be child soldiers. Last month over 50 children were abducted from one of my student’s home village.
I have really enjoyed working with these men. Doing so has made me realize how wonderfully blessed I am. It is especially the little things that we take for granted. These soldiers protect their families and their nation for less than $100 a month. That isn't even enough money to buy food for their families. Most men have to spend long hours at work and then go home and farm for most the night just to feed their family. After working with these men for several months we've formed very close bonds and relationships that I will never forget.
You mentioned that you've made these men in Nebraska football fans? How so? Did any of them know what American football was? Do they like the Husker logo? Do they wonder what a "Cornhusker" might be? Is there one particular person in your camp that's taken a greater interest than the others in Nebraska football? Since rugby is a sport of some popularity in Uganda, do they compare it to that at all?
The only knowledge that my students had of American football is what some might have seen on TV somewhere or by just what other people have told them about it. American style football is growing in popularity in the capital city of Kampala. A small league of teams has actually even been started this year in Kampala I was told.
My students loved hearing me talk about Nebraska football. I would come into work Monday and they would ask me first thing in the morning if my football team had won. Although they might not understand “Nebraska football” itself as in the coaches, players, and recruits that I would brag about, they did understand my passion for the Huskers and my love for the state of Nebraska. I think that is where we really connected on the issue.
The first time that they saw the Husker logo was on graduation day. After the ceremony I had gotten all of my guys together for a quick photo with my Husker flag. When I told them that it was a Nebraska Cornhusker flag, they argued on who would be the lucky ones to hold the flag in the picture. That lasted a few minutes before they finally decided on who it would be.
At the end of the course I even brought out a football so I could teach them how to play. It was going to be flag football of course, but they were scared at first because they thought it was going to be full contact. One soldier reminded me of the fact that I hadn’t brought out any pads or helmets for them. After they realized that it was going to be flag football they were so excited and eager to learn. Rugby is a pretty popular sport here as well. I had to teach them how to throw the football; everyone threw it just like a rugby ball.
How did you become a Nebraska football fan? Has it been a lifelong love, and, if so, through whom did it start? Did family and friends shape your fanhood, or was it something you developed on your own?
Nebraska football has been a part of my life for as long as I can remember. Some of my earliest childhood memories are of me and my father watching the Huskers play. My wife is originally from Kansas and we have done a successful job of converting her to Nebraska football, but just can’t get her away from Jayhawk basketball!
How hard is it to keep up with Nebraska football in Uganda? Presumably, you have to do it by Internet, right? Do you listen to the games on the computer? Do people send you newspaper clippings and tapes? Since Uganda is nine hours ahead of central standard time, is it easier to follow NU for day games or night games? Where and how did you learn of Nebraska's win over Colorado?
It’s actually pretty easy to keep up on Nebraska football while we are deployed. I am able to listen to the games on Huskers.com. Between listening to Adrian Fiala and getting the play by play from my father on instant messenger, I get a pretty clear picture of what is going down on the field.
For those who are on main bases throughout the world, the Armed Forces Network will from time to time have a Nebraska game on TV. With the Internet it is also easy to keep up with all the Husker news, team reports, and recruit information. The hardest part is the late nights staying up listening to the games. I like the day games better because I don’t have to get up at 3 or 4 a.m. and then work that morning!
The Nebraska-Colorado game was the first one that I missed. And boy do I regret that. We had graduation rehearsals early the next morning.
First thing I did when I woke up was jump online to check out the score.
The second thing I did was check Youtube for the Alex Henery kick.
It was just a great way to finish this season. The emotion of the players was amazing. They have really worked their tails off this year and I am proud of them.
How is sport treated in Uganda? Presumably, soccer is popular, but are the. Given the violent, 30-year history of Uganda - Idi Amin, Sudanese Civil War to the north - is it hard for Ugandans to make time for sports, or is it a part of everyday life?
The past of this country is always in the minds of its people, but they don’t let it bother them. They try to live their lives to the fullest. Being in the south central region of Uganda, we are kind of sheltered to what is going on around the rest of the country, especially along the northern border with Sudan and now recently the western border with the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Among the students, the favorite sports to play in their off time were soccer and volleyball. The children in the surrounding villages do nothing but play soccer when they are out of school. We even gave out a few soccer balls to some neighborhood children when the patches on their soccer balls would come off.
Share a favorite Husker memory, if you can.
Having lived through the glory years of the mid-1990s and through our most recent down years, I have a lot of great Husker memories, but my two favorite memories come from the most recent years.
I was deployed to Iraq during 2005-2006 and was watching Nebraska and Michigan in the Alamo Bowl in the chow hall in Balad. Of course you all remember the ending of that game right? Well I didn’t see it! A mortar hit right outside the chow hall and knocked out the power right before the end of the game.
But my favorite Husker memory would come from the next season when I returned home from Iraq and was able to take my father down to Dallas for the Nebraska-Auburn Cotton Bowl. Although we didn’t win the game, it was the first game that we went to see together and it will be the one that I will never forget.
Pretty awesome, right? If you know a fan - from anywhere in the world - you'd like to nominate for 50 Husker Fans, 50 States - or Husker Heroes - drop us a line at sam@ne.statepaper.com
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Tags: husker heroes, 50 husker fans, 50 states
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2008 Nov 24
50 Husker Fans, 50 States - Arkansas
1,718 views
(Above: Razorbacks! Thanks to Wikipedia)
OK, folks, our next state in the series is on the western edge of SEC country - Arkansas. This entry comes from pas250, Pete Schafer, who lends some terrific insights about the similarities - and striking differences - between Nebraska and Arkansas fans. Plus, he weighs in on the SEC vs. Big 12 debate!
We think you'll love his passion for Husker football! Enjoy!
PS: Pay special attention the best memory answer. It's a darn good one.
Q: First, where in Arkansas do you live and what is your general profession?
A: My family and I reside in the small college town of Conway, Arkansas, which is approximately 30 minutes west of Little Rock. It is a wonderful little town that has maintained the quaint old-time, small town feel and qualities that have been lost in most parts of the country today.
How did you become a Husker fan? Was it one specific event? Was it family? Friends? Did you grow up in Nebraska?
Saying you are a “fan”, to me at least, implies that you have a choice. That you chose to support the Huskers and that you could walk away from it at any time and start cheering for another team. Being born in Nebraska, at least in my family, you don’t “become” a Husker fan, you are a Husker because it’s in your DNA at birth. That may sound hokey in light of today’s sporting popular culture. Where kids flip-flop their loyalty based on the jersey their favorite rap star wears in their most recent video. Any male over the age of 35 knows what I am talking about.
I blame my unmitigated Husker fanaticism on my father. He was one of the first in our neighborhood to build a Husker Room in our basement in the mid 1960’s. His “GO BIG RED” toilet seat was the greatest birthday gift I ever gave him. Not until his grandchildren came along many years later was I able to recreate that same level of excitement from something I gave him. He named our family dog Jet, after Husker great Johnny “The Jet” Rodgers. It always prompted the obligatory explanation to those meeting our dog for the first time because he was a very small runt of a dog…hardly worthy of such an impressive name implying great speed and swiftness. True Husker fans “got it” and loved it.
You mentioned having four generations of Husker fans. Talk about that a little bit. Just how far back does the lineage go?
I was born in Omaha and my family lived in the Omaha, Blair and Gretna areas for four generations. My extended families were farmers who owned much of the land which is now full of housing developments and part of the urban sprawl of those communities. We moved to Waterloo, Nebraska in 1971 and I remained there until I graduated and moved to Lincoln to attend UNL.
Everyone in my family was huge Husker fans. It was always funny at family reunions to see how everyone went out of their way to be so over the top nice to my third cousin on my father’s side…he had 12 season tickets to the Huskers. My cousin, while a smart man, couldn’t have known what an incredibly wise investment he was making back in the early 1960s when he bought his tickets. He’s kept them all these years and due to his advanced age isn’t able to attend the games any longer. He usually gives them out to family members and business associates. Since he has no children, everyone is tripping over themselves, sucking up to him in hopes he will remember them in his last will and testament and reward them for their “kindness” with just a few of those tickets!
You said you've lived all over the country. Where, other than Arkansas, have you lived? How hard was it to seek out news about Nebraska sports in all those places? What areas were most like Nebraska? Which areas were least like it?
After college, I have moved around the country quite a bit including stops in New York City, San Francisco, New Jersey, Iowa, Florida, Tennessee and now Arkansas. Being a college football fanatic, New York was the most difficult place to live because it is a pro sports town and it was almost impossible staying up to date on all things Husker. This was before ESPN became as huge as it is today where you can get scores and updates 24/7. There was, and I believe still remains, a large New Yorkers for Nebraska group and we got together for Husker games and “Taste of Nebraska” parties on a regular basis. I can’t tell you how much that meant to me to be in a city of over 10 million people, where sometimes you feel so lost, to come together on those football Saturdays to watch the games. Even though I had never met any of them previously, because we shared such a unique bond in our passion for not just the Huskers, but the entire state of Nebraska, I felt as though I had known them my entire life.
The other states were all fine places to live, but while more interested in college football than New York was, they all seemed to be too new to the party and lacked the historical perspective to truly appreciate the beauty of the game. Of course, I lived in those other states during the 80’s and 90’s when the Huskers were dominating college football so everyone was very respectful of Nebraska and our football legacy. The only state that was disrespectful was Florida, because, everyone there was either a Miami Hurricane fan or a Florida State Seminole fan and they were having a great deal of success themselves at that particular time…especially against the Huskers. In spite of the fact that they didn’t all bow down and kiss my NU ring, it made for a lot of fun smack talking, something I could never find in the other states.
Arkansas is the state that most reminds me of Nebraska, which is why I live here and love it so much. Aside from the strong mid-southern accents of its natives, there are similarities in population, family values, physical landscape, etc. Little Rock reminds me exactly of Omaha and Fayetteville, while not the state capital, is eerily similar to Lincoln. This state is all about its Razorbacks and they eat sleep and breathe college football. Their program is in a similar position to that of Nebraska where they both have new coaches and are in rebuilding mode. Of course they didn’t have the Callahan years to suffer through, but to hear them tell it, the Houston Nutt years were just as bad. I don’t know if Nutt would have been worse than Callahan was, but I don’t think he would have understood the Nebraska Way and would have ended up fired too.
Is the Arkansas fan base similar to Nebraska? Is it oriented more toward basketball or football? Talk a little about the recent stories about Houston Nutt leaving the program and Bobby Petrino joining it? How did fans take that in Arkansas? Similar to how fans took events here in Nebraska when Bill Callahan was fired?
The Razorback fan base is very similar to Nebraska in their passion for their team. However, I find them to be unrealistically critical of their team. They want so badly to be relevant in college football, but they mirror the attitude of most of the general sporting population these days…instant gratification. They see what Alabama has been able to do in just two years with Nick Saban and they expect the same thing to happen at Arkansas.
The sad part is, Houston Nutt had put them on the college football map the past couple of years with Darren McFadden and Felix Jones. They had Mitch Mustain on board and were ready roll. But the fans just kept nit picking and nit picking at every little thing they could and they drove Mustain to USC, Jones left early for the NFL, and eventually Nutt went to Mississippi. There was an article in Sports Illustrated last year that talked about all the crazy stuff that went on in this state with a few of their overzealous boosters and the football program.
All I ever heard on talk radio while Nutt was here was how terrible of a coach he was and how they needed to fire him. Then when he resigned and went to Mississippi, all you heard was crying about what a betrayal it was for him to commit such blasphemy. Nutt had the last laugh bringing his ol’ Miss team in to Arkansas this year and beating the Razorbacks. People here were/are so livid over this turn of events that you can’t even mention Nutt’s name in a public setting anymore.
Although I say they support their team, they seldom sell out their home games. I was able to purchase season tickets last year for my son and I and it wasn’t difficult. It is all based on how much you want to donate to the university. I sat in the stands and did the “pig sooey” call and loved the experience of college football, however, it was nothing compared to attending a game at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln. A lot of booing and heckling of both teams on every play. I haven’t been to a game at Memorial Stadium in about 10 years unfortunately, but I don’t recall experiencing any unsportsmanlike conduct from the NU fans.
Is there a constant debate between who's better, the SEC or the Big 12? Wasn't that debate tempered a little bit in Arkansas this year when Texas beat them so badly?
Yes, there is CONSTANT debate about how the SEC is the greatest conference in the history of mankind!! It reminds me of when I lived in New York City and how New Yorkers don’t acknowledge anything west of the Hudson River. It’s just like that here with regards to the SEC…they really don’t think there is any other decent football being played anywhere else. When people first learn that I am from Nebraska I see the “Hulkification” morphing process begin…their eyes and skin start turning green, uncontrollable drooling, etc. They just can’t wait to get into the “SEC is better than the Big 12” debate.
The hatred here for the Longhorns runs so deep that it is difficult to put into words. It goes back to the days that they were both in the Southwest Conference. They blame Texas for breaking up the SWC. Although they say that Arkansas got the better end of the breakup because they joined the SEC and Texas the Big 12. Since they don’t consider their program an elite program in the SEC yet, the fact that Texas so soundly defeated the Razorbacks does little to dampen their conviction that the SEC is still better. Their argument is usually based solely on the fact that the SEC has won the national championship the past two years. So, their historical reference is extremely short sighted. Which again, is the same as it is in our society today…what have you done lately?
How do you seek out fellow Husker fans in Arkansas? Is there a place where you watch the games? Do you listen to certain games on the Internet, the radio?
Primarily I always keep an eye open for anything people have that denotes them as being Husker fans, ie: flags outside their homes, clothing, license plates or stickers on their cars, etc. It’s a great icebreaker when you see someone out wearing a husker shirt or hat or something. We just had a baby a couple of years ago, so I’ve been staying home a lot and watching the games from the comfort of my own sofa. I’ll start seeking out Husker groups when the baby is a bit older and we have a life again.
No local radio stations carry the Husker games so the only way I am able to get the games is on the internet.
Any other Husker sports you admire along with football?
I follow all Nebraska sports, but not as passionately as I do the football team.
What's your best Husker memory? It can be from a game, a tailgate, whatever.
I don’t really have a singular moment that is a favorite memory. Honestly, my entire childhood is my best Husker memory. Growing up, football Saturdays at our house meant you better want to listen to the Husker game or you better find someplace else to be for about five hours. My father always had every radio in the house, garage, car, boat, duck blind, etc., wherever he was, tuned into KFAB and Lyell Bremser’s call of the game, pre-game and post-game shows. Even if the Huskers were playing on TV, he always turned the volume down on the TV and listened to Bremser’s play-by-play while watching the game on TV. When Bremser retired and Kent Pavelka assumed the announcing responsibilities it was one of the most sanguine days in my father’s life. My father had a general electric transistor radio that went everywhere with him if he was forced to leave the house during a game. That transistor spent many afternoons with my father and I pheasant hunting, on the lake fishing, blue rock shooting, cutting firewood, raking leaves in the yard, etc. When my father passed away from cancer several years ago, that transistor radio was the only thing among his personal effects that I really wanted due to the intimate role it had played in my childhood memories. Unfortunately, my mother had already give it to the church with most of my father’s other personal effects. I hope whoever ended up with that radio enjoys it as much as my father and I did…but I doubt it.
I remember as a child, never doing anything on game days that meant I couldn’t at least listen to the game. If my mother insisted that I run errands with her, I made sure she had the radio in her car tuned into the game before I would leave the house. In those days it was easy to stay tuned to the game as almost every business establishment would have the game playing over their store intercom. I remember standing in Center Ace Hardware in Omaha as Jarvis Redwine scored a touchdown against Missouri and hearing a cacophony of cheers go up from the other patrons, feeling as if we were actually at the game!
Feel free to add whatever else you like that you think people might be interested in.
The only other thing I would like to add is how blessed and lucky I feel to have grown up in Nebraska during the time I did. It was a rare and unique time and given the way the sports world is today I doubt it will ever be repeated.
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We just keep churning out the hits, as you can see! Want to be a featured fan, or know someone who should be? Drop me an email sam@ne.statepaper.com. There are all kinds of states still wide open!
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2008 Nov 17
50 Husker Fans, 50 States - Indiana
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(above, Jim, in the far right, with his family before the 2006 USC game in Los Angeles)
The third fan in our series hails from the north side of Indianapolis and learned to love the Huskers from afar until NU rolled into town in 1978. Jim Hester’s family worked the chains at Memorial Stadium for years and played college football at Ball State – and had some seriously conflicted loyalties during that classic 41-40 game last year. Also known as IndyHusker on the site, Jim has some terrific insights on NU football as it compares to all the teams banging around in the Hoosier state.
Enjoy - and pay attention to the answer to the very last question. It sums up the experience of a lot of Husker fans, I think.
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Q: When did you become a Nebraska football fan? Why? Was it family or one particular thing that got you hooked on the Huskers?
A: We moved to Indiana in the early 70s so I did not grow up in the shadows of Memorial Stadium. But as far back as I can remember we would watch Nebraska every time they were on TV. We would travel back to visit family in Lincoln and Columbus every year and there was always a trip down to campus or driving by the stadium. So my allegiance started early. But if I had to pinpoint a moment, it would be in 1978. I was ten years old and Coach Osborne brought the Huskers into Bloomington, Indiana to take on the Hoosiers. The weather was miserable. I distinctly remember catching bronchitis from sitting there in the cold and rain. I remember I.M. Hipp was the running back. Nebraska killed them 69 - 17. From that day on I was hooked.
You mentioned you had many family who had worked the chains at Nebraska football games. Who in your family did that? How did they get involved? What is it like working the chains of a major college football game?
My grandfather, Max Hester, started working the chains at the Nebraska home games for many years. I am not sure of the exact number but I believe it was over forty. I can remember watching games back here in Indiana and keeping an eye out for him whenever there was a measurement. When he finally decided it was time to give up the chain gang, he passed that onto one of my uncles, Chuck Squier. Now my cousin Jon Squier works the sidelines. So I guess it has become a family tradition.
I know my grandfather loved it. But it could be dangerous. When I was in college, I was watching a Husker game on TV. If memory serves me it was Baylor. Here I was in my dorm at Ball State on a Saturday night with a bunch of guys watching football. There was a play that went towards the sidelines. At the very end a player was pushed hard out of bounds. Well I saw one of the chain gang go down. I stood up and said I thought that was my grandfather. Everyone told me to shut up and sit down. I protested but eventually retook my seat. Well after the half time break they announced that “linesman Max Hester would be fine”. Everyone just kind of looked at me shocked and I just smiled. I was very proud of him. He and my grandmother Chelys were true Huskers.
You played college football at Ball State. First, congrats on a great current season! Second - in what ways did Ball State's program compare to Nebraska? In what ways was it different? How interesting was it to see Ball State travel to Nebraska in 2007 and go toe-to-toe with NU, losing on the second-to-last play of the game?
Ball State is doing great. They have a great coach and staff, a great team and the students and fans are really behind them. I really think the Nebraska game last year showed Ball State what they are capable of achieving. That was one game though, I really had no desire to watch. So I listened instead and found myself torn on every play. At the end I was happy because Nebraska had won, but also happy because Ball State received a huge lift to the program even in defeat. Boy, I hope none of my Ball State friends read this.
To compare the two programs would not be fair. There is a big difference between the programs in the Big 12, Big 10 or SEC and the small division I programs. The resources, the traditions, the fan base are on a smaller scale. I had knee and shoulder problems for the few years I was part of the program so I did not see any action except on the practice field.
But what I can tell you is those guys work just as hard and are just as passionate about football as anyone. They just do not have the depth chart and number of quality athletes that the big programs have. They just wear you down. We did have some former Nebraska players as coaches at the time. Jeff Carpenter was our defensive ends and strength coach, Mark Mauer was our quarterbacks coach and Lawrence Cooley came in as offensive line coach my sophomore year. All of them were great guys. We would talk Nebraska football from time to time.
Where in Indiana do you live? Obviously, the state is chock full of college football programs, not to mention college basketball teams, the Pacers, the Colts and, for those living in northwest Indiana, all of the Chicago sports teams. From your perspective, which of those fan bases is most like Nebraska? Which is the least? Which programs have you found yourself following?
I currently live on the north side of Indianapolis. And yes we are full of great sports programs. Indy is a great sports town for professional, college and high school. Obviously the state of Indiana is known for its basketball. If you have never been to a high school basketball game where thousands of fans show up to see you play the cross county rival you should add it to your list to do. We have high school gyms that can seat like 8,000 to 10,000 fans at some of these schools.
Notre Dame has its football tradition. Indiana and Purdue have their men’s and women’s basketball tradition. Ball State has a history of some great seasons in many sports. The Pacers and Colts traditions and fan base are great. We have very passionate fans for all these programs. You asked which fan base is most and least like the Huskers. Well, Notre Dame Football has the rich history and national fan base that Nebraska has. Indiana basketball fans have the same “live and die on every game” passion that you see in Nebraska fans. Personally I follow all of them as much as I can.
Talk about Notre Dame for a minute. How does ND and NU compare when it comes to fans? Obviously, both programs have enjoyed immense success, but the fan bases seem different. Certainly the campuses aren't much alike. What's the experience of watching a game at Notre Dame vs. watching a game at Nebraska?
Notre Dame Fans are actually very much like Nebraska fans in the way they love their football. They will show up hours before a game to tailgate. They have blogs, websites and all the things passionate fans revel in. And for the most part Notre Dame fans are very gracious hosts and treat opposing teams much like Nebraska fans do. A few years ago my cousin Jon came out from Lincoln and I took him to a game. As a Nebraska alum he was speechless at the campus and atmosphere. They both have their great traditions that are rooted in their tremendous history.
Now I will say the Notre Dame fans were speechless when Nebraska rolled into town back in 2000. To see that stadium turn red was a beautiful sight. The ND fans could not believe what they were seeing. Never had so many opposing fans even showed up at a game, and then to have all of them get tickets. They were shocked. The fan sitting next to me said he had never seen anything like it in the decades he had been a season ticket holder. That said, add an ND home game to the list of things to go and see. You will not regret it.
I believe the difference is the Notre Dame Fan base is made up of so many different people from all over. They either came to school there and moved back home after graduating. Or they grew up Catholic somewhere in the country and ND was the school that “dad” loved so they became fans. They share their passion for the school and the program.
But it stops there. Nebraska is different because even though we have a national fan base, it seems to be mostly Nebraskans who still live in the state or area or have moved to so many different places across the country. They are tied together by the bond of being native Nebraskans. I have not lived in the state for over 30 years. I grew up in Indiana. But I still consider myself a Nebraskan and so do all the Huskers I meet.
How do you seek out fellow Nebraska fans in Indiana? Is it easy? Difficult? Are there places where they gather?
It’s easy to find Nebraska fans. And, there are more than what one might think. A Nebraska fan typically has a license plate holder, bumper sticker, a flag or clothing item prominently displayed on fall afternoons. It is sort of like raising a homing beacon. And as soon as another Nebraskan sees that beacon they quickly introduce themselves and forge a friendship. I have met so many people over the years that are from Nebraska. And even though I did not grow up there, they knew my grandparents, an aunt, uncle or cousin. They might have grown up in the same town or gone to the same high school. Once again, it is the football that ties Nebraskans together.
Regarding your question about do we meet somewhere? I will plug Neon Johnny’s Sports Bar on Indy’s Northwest side. Lots of Husker faithful and the best half price pizza special you can buy on a Saturday afternoon or evening. They always have the Huskers on and lot of the faithful are there to cheer them on.
What's your favorite Husker memory? It can be from any time involving anything Nebraska?
There are so, so many. My first game versus Indiana…the first national championship I remember against Miami…the Nebraska vs. Notre Dame game in South Bend…
But really I would have to say sharing all of this with my family. Growing up in Indiana I did not get to spend a lot of time with my grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins.
As an adult I have had the good fortune to go back on several occasions and spend time with family and going to Nebraska games. We went to the Notre Dame game in Lincoln after my grandparents’ 60th wedding anniversary party. Only in Nebraska would half the crowd bug out a few minutes early to get to a game. Going to a Notre Dame game with my cousin Jon here in Indiana. We even went to Los Angeles to watch Nebraska play USC a few years back. That is the picture I included for this article. There were seven of us, my Aunt Jan and Uncle Gary Giovino, my Aunt Mimi and Uncle David Ernst and my cousin Alli and her husband Billy VanHeusen. We spent a fun weekend in Los Angeles even if the Huskers did lose. Over the past year we lost both my grandfather and grandmother and just in the past few weeks my Uncle David. I am grateful that Nebraska Football gave me some extra time with each of these wonderful people. I miss them dearly, but I cherish the memories.
I look forward to building those memories with my own family now. My two sons and daughter wear their Nebraska gear proudly and even sit down to watch games with me from time to time. I can’t wait for the day I can take them to their first Nebraska game in Lincoln.
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Pretty sweet, huh? So, remember, if you're interested in becoming one of our 50 fans, or know someone who might be, send me an email at sam@ne.statepaper.com. And be sure to join the site if you haven't already! It's free!
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2008 Nov 11
50 Husker Fans 50 States - Ohio
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Our next featured fan is from the epicenter of Big Ten football - Columbus, Ohio. Kurt Kravchuck, known as Krav on the Husker Locker site, has been to his share of memorable Nebraska football games, and had one of those once-in-a-lifetime airplane chats with Tom Osborne.
Enjoy! We certainly did! And be sure to check out all of our Husker fans by clicking on the tag below!
Q: How did you become a Husker fan? Was it one specific event? Was it family? Friends? Did you grow up in Nebraska?
A: In 1969, my dad turned me on to one of the greatest passions in my life - Nebraska Cornhusker football! Although we lost to a tough Missouri Tiger team on my 8th birthday, the Huskers finished the season strong winning out the rest of the way including victories over the Sooners in Norman (44-14) and a Sun Bowl victory over Georgia (45-6). My family (mom, dad, 3 sisters & 2 brothers) all grew up in Omaha and cheered on the Huskers via KFAB radio (Listening to the MAN - Lyle Bremser) or on TV when available.
Most of my family has moved from Nebraska, but we stay connected when it comes to 'Game Day' (phone calls, text messages, traveling back for games, etc.)!
What about Nebraska athletics do you like the most? Who do you admire?
I have always admired Coach Tom Osborne from afar. His demeanor, intelligence and passion for the program made every kid in Nebraska 'dream' about playing for him in Memorial Stadium! On a business trip in 1998, I had the unique opportunity and pleasure of traveling with Coach Osborne from Lincoln to Minneapolis and back (for a Cabela's Owatonna Retail Store Grand Opening).
Coach Osborne was quite gracious and allowed me to ask questions for close to three hours. Talk about an experience of a lifetime! We discussed many aspects about the football program, but more importantly we discussed his 'TeamMates' mentoring program' and its' impact on both the youth involved as well as the mentors. In my opinion, Coach Osborne is the epitome of what today's leaders should strive to emulate.
You live in Columbus, Ohio - home of Ohio State. What similarities does the fan base at OSU have to that at Nebraska? What differences? Would it be fair to say Columbus is a college town, or does pro hockey and pro football get quite a bit of attention, too?
My family (wife Marie and son Gunnar) moved to Columbus in 2000. I soon found out what kind of a fanatic I was by measuring myself against the passion of the Buckeye fans. Although Ohio has many collegiate and professional teams within the state, there is little doubt in my mind that the Buckeyes’ fandom reigns supreme within the state.
The similarities are the fan following and passion for their team. The main difference I've noticed.is that it appears that a majority of Husker fans remain faithful to the program through successful times as well as challenging times. I hope that Husker fans stay grounded and continue to support their team through the difficult times and remain the best fans in college football.
Several of my 'Buckeye friends' here in Ohio repeatedly inform me that Nebraska will again rise to prominence due to a former player and 'Buckeye captain' (Coach Mark 'Bo' Pelini) is 'in charge.” I wholehearted agree with their assessment due to Coach Pelini's leadership style & passion for the game. Coach Pelini is exactly what the Huskers need, a 'players coach' who will motivate his team to maximize its potential and make fans proud of their effort on the field (win or lose).
How do you seek out fellow Husker fans in Ohio? Is there a place where you watch the games? Do you listen to certain games on the Internet, the radio?
Initially (in Ohio), we would listen via the web or seek out a sports pub televising the games. Thanks to satellite television and pay-per-view, we have had the opportunity to watch nearly all of the games. I have met other Husker fans through school, church and occasionally on the road (Husker fans with bumper stickers are curiously friendly here in Central Ohio).
Additionally, we proudly wave our Husker Flag on the front of our house with the exception of Flag Day and Memorial Day.
As one drives down any residential street in Central Ohio, a majority of homes have their 'Block O' flags (scarlet and gray) waving from the front. One day as I was driving through the neighborhood, I noticed another home with a Husker flag waving from the front. I had to stop and introduce myself, The gentlemen answering the door was a Husker fan from Iowa and an associate professor at the Ohio State University. We enjoyed a brief conversation about our mutual admiration of the Huskers. Huskers Fans may be forward, but we're known for being friendly!
Any other Husker sports you admire along with football?
Baseball, Volleyball, Basketball.
What's your best Husker memory? It can be from a game, a tailgate, whatever.
My 'Top Ten' memories are as follows. Thanks to Uncle 'Great Bob' for all the tickets.
1) Taking my son Gunnar to his first Nebraska game (2007 Kansas State vs, Nebraska) and setting the hook for the rest of his life as a faithful Husker fan
2) Meeting and conversing with Coach Osborne
3) Taking my son Gunnar to his second Nebraska game (2008 San Jose State vs. Nebraska). Thanks again to Uncle 'Great Bob' for the tickets.
4) Attending the 1996 Fiesta Bowl with my lovely bride and experiencing the 62-24 victory over the Florida Gators
5) Attending my first game (OU vs. NU) on Nov 11, 1978 with my sister-in-law (Patsy) in 10-degree weather. The Huskers won the game 17-14.....but regardless of the outcome, the Huskers played the most physical game I've ever experienced in any sport!
6) Watching the 2008 NU vs. Texas Tech game with my son at home on television. Although the Huskers lost the game (barely), the effort on the field made us proud to be fans!
7) Meeting Tommie Frazier at the 2002 Orange Bowl just prior to his induction in the Orange Bowl Hall of Fame.
8) Introducing Tommie Frazier to my son and Nephew (Nick) prior to the start of the 2007 KSU vs. NU football game as we entered Memorial Stadium.
9) Attending the 2006 NU vs. USC game in Los Angeles with my brothers, sisters, in-laws & outlaws. We stayed at the team hotel and several members of the 2006 Huskers graciously signed an NU Flag for my son.
10) Attending the 1996 Big XII Title Game in St Louis, MO. Although the Huskers lost the game, their effort & play through adversity was a trademark of the team's persona. Also, I'd like to send out 'big props' to the members of the St. Louis law enforcement agency & Missouri Highway patrol for their sense of humor during our 'tailgating' activities .I treasure the picture of the three officers (with their Harleys) and myself which is proudly displayed on my Husker 'Wall of Fame'!
Feel free to add whatever else you like that you think people might be interested in.
The following phase sums up the embodiment of what it means to be a Husker (whether a Player, Coach or Fan)
"Not the victory but the action. Not the goal but the game.
In the deed the glory."
All people should embrace the meaning as well as the words!
Pretty awesome, right? If you're interested in becoming one of our 50 Husker fans, or know someone who might be, let us know! Drop me a line or send me an email at sam@ne.statepaper.com!
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Tags: 50 husker fans 50 states
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2008 Nov 06
50 Husker Fans in 50 States - Virginia
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So this is a new ongoing, feature on Husker Locker, where we travel around to the 50 states finding Nebraska fans and bringing their stories to you. We're a big red soul around here, and we don't want you to forget it! This will help you remember.
Our first fan comes from Virginia, and is one of those classic stories of loving the Big Red from afar. On this Web site. you'd know him as VaBeach_Husker.
In real life, Mike Bickel, a commissioned officer of the U.S. Navy stationed in Norfolk, Va., grew up learning about Nebraska football from his grandparents, who lived in Western Nebraska. Mike could only catch glimpses of the Huskers as a kid, waiting for them to appear on national TV, which, before 1983, was only a couple times per year.
In fact, he just attended his first game a few weeks ago against Baylor. His very first! You can see why we made him our first featured fan.
Here are our questions and his terrific answers:
Q: How did you become a Husker fan? Why?
A: I became a Husker fan because of my grandfather. My parents grew up in western Nebraska my father was also in the navy and so we always lived near the water. Most of my childhood was spent in Virginia occasionally when we would get together with my grandparents, my grandfather often talked about Nebraska football and how it was such a big deal in the state. We did not get much of a chance to watch Nebraska football unless it was a nationally televised game. Cable TV was not available and so the only opportunity was from the big three TV stations (ABC, CBS, and NBC). This usually meant that the only games I could watch were the bowl games and the annual oklahoma/Nebraska game. All my information came from the newspaper and occasionally TV highlights.
When Nebraska football came on TV, it was the one time I remember that everything stopped for my family as we watched. My mother would time our Thanksgiving dinners around game time. I remember watching the “game of the century” with my grandfather. Although I do not believe my grandfather ever attended any Nebraska football game, I have always associated my grandfather with Nebraska football. I grew up dreaming of going to my first game with him. That was almost 40 years ago. Unfortunately he passed away before that ever happened.
I understand you just saw your first game in person. What was the experience like? What was your favorite thing about it? How did you feel as the game unfolded? Can we have a picture of the experience for the story?
On October 25th my son and I attended our first football game. It was everything i had hoped for. I saw thousands of fans dressed in red. The band played, the balloons rose, and the fans cheered. The tunnel walk which i had only seen on the Internet before came to life. I felt a chill through my body. As i sat there, i could not help but wish that my grandfather was also there with me to share this moment.
Having my son Jeff with me was special. It gave me an opportunity to share with him a little of my passion for Nebraska football that my grandfather shared with me. My favorite moment was when Nebraska came from behind to win the game.
What is it about Nebraska football program that you loved when you were younger? What do you love now?
Growing up I enjoyed watching Nebraska power football. I always thought how much harder it was for a team to run through someone than to pass over the top of them. It was amazing to watch how the “pipeline” would push defenses out of the way and the backs would break open for long runs. The game is constantly changing and Nebraska ability to keep up is important. I now enjoy the fact that Nebraska has the ability to get back into game through the air. They still like to run but they have enough of a balanced offense to pass their way back into the game. I also like the walk on program. What an opportunity for so many kids to be a part of their state’s team. I am glad it was brought back. With the right coaches and players, the blackshirts will return. Gone are the days of the 1990s but there will still be plenty of great days left to enjoy.
What’s it like living as a husker fan in Virginia? How do you follow the team from afar?
I did not know any Nebraska fans in Virginia before the Internet, it was very difficult being a husker fan. Being so far away, I only knew the names of the star players. Now it is much easier. I can stay on top of stories about recruiting, games, opponents and players.
In the state where you live, what’s the typical favorite college football team?
Virginia Tech is the biggest team in my area closely followed by the University of Virginia. I actually attended Va Tech during 1981. I have followed both Nebraska and Va Tech for many years and i have noticed Va Tech started to take on quite a few of nebraska’s characteristics beginning in the 1980s. Va Tech is known for “Beamer Ball’’ but they also have a unity walk, refers to themselves as hokie nation, stress a strong defense and punishing offense and even their game day notes released by the university is set up the same way as Nebraska.
Va Tech fans are much louder than Nebraska. I enjoy Va Tech’s team entrance very much. The stadium plays Metallica’s “Enter The Sandman” loud and the fans jump up and down together as the team enters and two players lead them onto the field. One player carries the united states flag and the other carries the Virginia state flag. It really gets the fans pumped up for the game. It has much the same impact as the tunnel walk does at Nebraska.
Do you have a favorite Husker memory or anecdote you’d like to share?
My favorite anecdote has to do with my first attempt to attend a Nebraska football game. Nebraska never played on the East Coast. Ever year, I would look at the schedule to see if Nebraska would play someone near Virginia. The closest I came was in 1983. I was 22 years old.
My wife, Beth, and I were in Pensacola, Florida attending a 9-month-long Navy school. Nebraska was to participate in the 1984 national championship game against Miami at the Orange Bowl. At that time, this was the closest I had been to making it to my first Nebraska game. I made contact with some friends of my parents that had family members who were season ticket holders. They were not going to be able to make the trip but were willing to sell me their tickets if I wanted them. I was excited about the opportunity to finally see my first game and it would be for the national championship, possibly the first since 1971.
The Navy school that i was attending was closing down for the holidays. I was ready to make my plans to go the game until I found out the school was to start again on day after the game. Since the game was at night, there was no way i could make it back to Pensacola by 7 a.m. the next day. I asked for permission to miss a day of the school but it was denied. I had to give up the tickets. I ended up watching the game that would define Tom Osborne’s career on TV. I was crushed that they lost but even more because Beth and I could have been there for it. That could have been my first game! I will always remember that game as the game I almost made it to.
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