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  1. 2009 Nov 02

    Husker Monday Review: Baylor

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    By HuskerLocker

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    Right after Bo Pelini was hired to coach Nebraska in 2007, a good helping of Cornhusker fans, well-versed in both modern and historical college football, pointed to this upcoming week as an early mid-term, if you will, on NU's progress under Pelini.

    A home game vs. Oklahoma, the standard-bearer of the Big 12 in the 21st Century, coached by Pelini's old buddy, Bob Stoops. If Pelini had a grace period of, say, 20 games – he's coached 21 thus far – OU, with its balance, talent, speed and reputation, would be an apt measuring stick for how far the Huskers had come – and how far, still, they had to go.

    As we stand here now, with both fighters bruised and frustrated, it's harder to see that stick in the mist of injuries, offensive woes and close, painful losses.

    But it's still there. And all of Nebraska's goals are still there, too. The Huskers control their destiny. Win out and punch a ticket to Dallas and the Big 12 Championship vs. Texas. Win out, and NU, with its fan base and classy reputation, is guaranteed no worse than the Holiday Bowl to tangle with another of Pelini's mentors, Pete Carroll and his USC Trojans.

    Yes – win out, and a fairly cool prize awaits at the bottom of the Cracker Jack box.

    NU's 20-10 victory over Baylor isn't the kind you love to relive, aside from one particular performance. We'll do it anyway, with an eye on the big stick that Nebraska would very much like to carry into the final quarter of its season – after measuring up to it, of course.

    Five Players We Loved

    Defensive tackle Jared Crick: Opponents pay so much attention to Ndamukong Suh that Crick feasts on the single-blocker approach. But Saturday, he tossed those blockers aside and chased Baylor quarterback Nick Florence like a wolfman. Thirteen tackles? Absurd. Crick's small-town persona only adds to the appeal.

    Linebacker Eric Martin: He's been threatening to make a big special teams play all year; Saturday, he finally made it by setting up a blocked punt that was returned by Justin Blatchford for the Huskers' first touchdown. If Martin is able to make the leap defensive back Alfonzo Dennard made from his freshman to sophomore season, watch out.

    Quarterback Cody Green: Warts and all, Green ran hard, competed bravely and generally seemed in command. He's got some work to do, particularly on timing routes, but he's finally a position to do something about it on the field.

    Punter/kicker Alex Henery: Nailed two important field goals – Baylor's Ben Parks missed a chip shot of his own – and made a touchdown-saving tackle on a wild BU punt return right at the end of the game. Athlete first. Kicker second.

    Cornerback Prince Amukamara: One terrific interceptions with three more pass breakups to boot. Amukamara rebounded from a so-so game vs. Texas Tech with a strong performance here.

    Three Concerns We Have

    No Daylight: Nebraska ran the ball 19 times in the second half for 61 yards. How many teams is that going to beat? The beefy offensive line has to earn its keep.

    Going Horizontal: Offensive coordinator Shawn Watson laid off the sideways passes for the first half. Then, with a seemingly comfy 20-0 lead, he started getting cute again, trying to burn Baylor for loading the box by throwing 20 yards sideways, in the hopes of creating one-on-one situations on the perimeter. You all know what eventually happened. If Watson wants to go horizontal, here's a thought: Run wide receiver sweeps.

    Shaky coverage: Baylor was close on a couple kick and punt returns to busting one open for a touchdown. The Huskers have to keep lane discipline and learn to break down and tackle better, instead of searching for the killshot.

    Reviewing The Five Keys

    Play to win, not to dominate: Nebraska did just that with a modest offensive gameplan and a defensive strategy that called for maximum coverage and zero blitzes. The result? Seven sacks and three turnovers on defense. Safe to say the plan worked.

    Match up and move it: Dejon Gomes, Lance Thorell and Sean Fisher probably were exhausted by game's end, running in and out of the game as NU mixed and matched nickel, dime and dollar coverages, but the Huskers were rarely out of position, and almost always had double coverage on the deep receiver, which led to Gomes' interception. The Huskers were lucky that Florence wasn't more accurate on that skinny slant pattern to Kendall Wright, though.

    Neutralize the earth-movers: Baylor couldn't do anything against Crick and Suh, while Nebraska had initial success against the Bears' front four, with that success waning by the second half.

    Traye and Jay: Dontrayevous Robinson looked like Nebraska's best running option until he got hurt in the fourth quarter; Robinson, like Green, competes hard on every play. BU's Jay Finley was not a factor.

    Bo vs. Briles: Baylor head coach Art Briles threw the kitchen sink at Nebraska, and the Brothers Pelini dodged nearly every bullet and landed some haymakers of their own. NU won this coaching chess match with a big dose of help from Crick and Suh.

    Three Questions We Still Have

    Is Roy Helu anywhere near getting healthy? Why did he play Saturday? Repeat: Why? If Nebraska couldn't beat Baylor without Helu – and, just for the record, the Huskers pretty much did – then Nebraska had no business winning, period. Helu should have stayed home and nursed his injured shoulder.

    Where in the world is Mike McNeill, and how does Watson get him involved in the offense again? McNeill's too good to be wasted on well-covered tight end routes. Give the kid a chance to work on the edge and use his size advantage. He's a mismatch waiting to happen. Isn't Watson all about that?

    Can the Nebraska crowd find some inner resolve? And create a nightmarish atmosphere for Oklahoma this week? Memorial Stadium needs to be the toughest environment that OU quarterback Landry Jones has ever played in.

    Tags: husker monday review, baylor game, jared crick, ndamukong suh, prince amukamara, cody green, traye robinson, alex henery, bo pelini, mike mcneill, roy helu

  2. 2009 Oct 31

    BAYLOR GAME: Crick, Blackshirts Save Huskers' Bacon in Waco

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    By HuskerLocker

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    WACO, Texas - A special teams touchdown. A home crowd on the road. A day without rain, boos or clouds. Plenty of sacks and turnovers. And the starting debut of a Nebraska freshman quarterback who seems to have the skills and poise to go as far as his long, powerful running strides can take him.

    His arm may be another question.

    But after two stunning home losses in a row, Nebraska's football team captured a needed rebound victory, beating Baylor 20-10 Saturday afternoon.

    Bo Pelini's bunch, now 5-3 overall and 2-2 in the Big 12 Conference, inserted themselves back into the Big 12 North race in front 31,702 at Floyd Casey Stadium that included a reporter-estimated 15,000 Cornhusker fans.

    “It was real important,” Pelini said. “We needed a win. We got a win. We got a lot of work to do yet. A win's a win. It's No. 5.”

    Many of those raucous fans – silenced for whole portions of the second half - were from Texas, and took the opportunity to watch true freshman Cody Green – a native of Dayton, Texas – make his first start at quarterback. The decision was made on Thursday, Pelini said, because “you gotta go with your gut.”

    Initally, Green didn't disappoint. His first-half performance – 6-of-9 passing for 85 yards, 25 yards rushing – was a portrait of efficiency. With offensive coordinator Shawn Watson calling plays on the sidelines and simplifying the attack, Green operated mostly out of multiple tight end, power formations. He ran only four times, but two of them were scrambles of ten and six yards on a drive that led to Alex Henery's 45-yard field goal.

    All but one of his completions were of the short, controlled variety, but he did hit wide receiver Niles Paul on a 45-yard fade route, Green placing the ball perfectly on Paul's outside shoulder. Two plays later, true freshman Traye Robinson skied into the end zone for a one-yard touchdown. That gave NU a 20-0 halftime lead.

    “In the first half, things were rolling pretty good,” Green said.

    But the freshman made a giant mistake midway through the third quarter, locking in on receiver Khiry Cooper, only to see Baylor safety Cliff Odom step in front of the pass at NU”s 45-yard line, pick it off and return it for an easy touchdown. Later, Green fumbled right after the Nebraska defense had forced BU to turn it over.

    “It was just a late throw on my part,” Green said. “If I had thrown it a second earlier it would have been a completion, but I threw it a second later...one thing you have to do is go back on the next drive and just forget about it. You have to have a memory like a goldfish.”

    For the game, Green completed 12 of 21 passes for 128 yards and rushed for 43 yards.

    “He had some rough spots,” Watson said. “He did some things freshmen sometimes do first time out. He's got a lot to get better at, but, no doubt – he competed. He gave us some nice runs and did some good things. We didn't ask him to do much. We just asked him to kind of manage us. He had the one pick. Gotta get that fixed.”

    Fortunately, Green had plenty of help.

    NU got on the board quickly, as another true freshman – linebacker Eric Martin – bulled his way through Baylor's punt protection and partially blocked Derek Epperson's punt. The ball floated sideways and was caught by backup defensive back Justin Blatchford, who darted hard to his left, tip-toed down the sideline, and leaped into the end zone just before he fumbled.

    “I just hit (the blocker),” Martin said. “I didn't even know it was blocked until I hear the crowd yelling and I look around, and Blatchford is taking the ball back.”

    Just 90 seconds into the game, the Huskers had a bigger lead – 7-0 – than they had enjoyed since the waning moments of the Missouri game.

    NU's Blackshirts – particularly defensive tackle Jared Crick, who had a record-breaking game – made sure the lead held up. Tested again and again, the Huskers' defense held up. Cornerbacks Dejon Gomes and Prince Amukamara both notched interceptions of Baylor quarterback Nick Florence in Husker territory. Nebraska chased Baylor's fast receivers and running backs sideline-to-sideline, throwing them down for short or no gain.

    And then there was Crick, who benefited from the Bears choosing to double-team All-American Ndamukong Suh. Crick, just a sophomore out of Cozad, had a school-record five sacks.

    “It could have been anyone today with all of those stats,” Crick said. “It is just a group effort.”

    The final one of the first half, in which Crick bulled through two blockers and engulfed Florence in a massive bear hug, was as impressive as any play Suh's made this season. NU had seven sacks overall.

    “Is that a monster game by him, or what?” defensive coordinator Carl Pelini said. “He just plays his tail off. He's strong, he's fast. Offenses? I don't know – they've just got to deal with him, because they started the game putting the center toward Suh, and it just makes them look foolish.”

    Said Bo Pelini: “Jared's too good of a player if they're gonna do that.”

    For the game, Baylor amassed 270 total yards, but ran 11 more plays than the Huskers did. The Bears (3-5 overall, 0-4 in the Big 12) thrice invaded NU territory after cutting the lead to ten. Once, kicker Ben Parks missed a field goal. On the second foray, Baylor turned the ball over on downs. The game clock ran out on their final charge, which occurred after a bizarre punt return that included three laterals and a touchdown-saving tackle by punter Alex Henery.

    “We had plays at the end and we didn't do it,” BU quarterback Nick Florence said. “We fought hard in the second half, it was valiant effort, but it does hurt when it is so close.”

    NU was left concerned with its running game, which produced just 145 yards and failed to deliver on several third down situations in the second half.

    “Absolutely,” Pelini said when asked if he was concerned. “It's a huge concern. We've got to be able to run the football better. We didn't run the ball to my liking today.”

    Said Husker center Jacob Hickman: “It was just missed communications that caused that. The effort was there.”

    Tags: baylor game, jared crick, cody green, bo pelini, eric martin, alex henery

  3. 2009 Oct 25

    Husker Monday Review: Iowa State

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    By HuskerLocker

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    And so we've ranted, raved and roared, shook down the house, nailed the Big Red in our personal report cards, and ate dinner in a gloomy silence.

    Not even fantasy football – or your favorite NFL team – could rock you away from that long, cold sliver of disbelief that accompanied the morning rain or snow.

    Well, that's some of you, anyway.

    And so now, after we've tried to frame this season properly, as a litmus test for coaches and players – but most specifically for head coach Bo Pelini - we pour in the cream of common sense, to offset the acid of our pens, keystrokes, gestures and tongues.

    Calm down, Husker nation. It's a blue, low mood today, but opportunity, yet again, awaits.

    Nobody has run away with the Big 12 North title. And nobody is going to run away with it. But Nebraska can still get it, rescuing itself from a midseason slump. The Huskers' defense can play any offense, anywhere, anytime and hold its own. NU's offensive line does have some muscle, when given the chance to show it.

    There should be no calls for Bo Pelini to make midseason staff changes. Wrong play, wrong level of football. Personnel and schematic changes? Absolutely. But the fatalistic stuff – come on, people.

    No – the point is this: Bo's the head coach. He's not the “defensive expert,” while offensive coordinator Watson is the “offensive expert.” Colloquially, yeah, maybe they are, but Pelini – not Watson – is responsible for the entire product. Watson coaches quarterbacks and calls plays. But if it's fourth-and-one inside enemy territory – Pelini makes the executive decision. He's earned the right to make it.

    A good head coach doesn't micromanage every little aspect of practices and games. That's a recipe for disaster, mistrust and player revolt. Not even the biggest control freaks pull that off with any kind of success. Bo's too smart to do that. Guys who have tried – fail. You can't just “change” everything.

    But if he's got a hunch about the offense, he should play it. Maybe the Huskers really are just a few good practices away from hitting on all cylinders. Maybe not.

    Five Players We Loved

    Ndamukong Suh, defensive tackle: He blocked a field goal, an extra point, ran down a receiver 15 yards upfield and generally imposed his physical will on the Iowa State interior offensive line. Afterward, he called his play “average.” That's accountability.

    Barry Turner, defensive end: The quiet man of Nebraska's defense – he hasn't done an interview since fall camp – is quietly having a pretty good season. Turner's work doesn't always show up in the stat sheet, but he's consistently collapsed the pocket toward Suh and Jared Crick. He did so again Saturday.

    Alfonzo Dennard, cornerback: The man can jump! A very late addition to the 2008 recruiting class, Dennard is well on his way to becoming one of the gems of that bunch. Tough-minded, quick to the ball, and a competitor.

    Phillip Dillard, linebacker: Never allowed ISU quarterback Jerome Tiller – who's a pretty good runner – to get loose for a 20-yard gain on the zone read. Dillard's making a late case for the NFL Draft. Good for him.

    Alex Henery, punter: A return to form for the junior – at least in the punting department, where he downed two boots inside ISU's 6-yard line.

    Three Concerns We Have

    Turnovers, turnovers, turnovers: Try a -10 margin in the last two games. Nebraska's mistakes handling the ball are bad enough, but the Huskers haven't forced any turnovers, either. Jared Crick had a fumble all to himself, but slightly overshot his recovery attempt. Dennard had his hands on a potential pick. Those are plays that have to be made.

    An offensive system that doesn't fit the quarterback: Zac Lee does have some throwing skills,especially downfield. But he's not a natural runner. He just isn't. And that's OK. So stop trying to run a zone read play that doesn't command the respect of the defensive end, who crashes down, forcing Lee to the corner, where he isn't comfortable.

    Roy Helu's health: Yes, we know Helu played with a bum shoulder last week and didn't fumble. That doesn't mean he wouldn't fumble this week. Helu's not the type of guy who will beg out of a game. NU coaches have to tread carefully with their best offensive commodity.

    Reviewing the Five Keys

    Playing Harder and Smarter: Iowa State won this category with a gameplan that didn't ask too much of Tiller and a defensive tenacity that forced the Huskers into eight turnovers. ISU hustled just a little more than Nebraska did.

    Steep Incline: Nebraska's defense was indeed tougher on ISU in every area but one: Turnovers. Of course, the Cyclones were playing without Austen Arnaud and Alexander Robinson, which brings us to...

    Wounded Clones: They'll tell stories in Ames about this game for generations, you know. How ISU went into to Lincoln missing 80 percent of its offense and Paul Rhoads coached em up? If Rhoads becomes a legend at Iowa State, this the game that spawns it.

    Where's Mike? Nebraska tight end Mike McNeill made two catches for 22 yards, was the intended receiver on Zac Lee's first interception, and was overthrown by Lee on another third down play. NU tried locating him more often, but only connected twice.

    The Specials: Iowa State ran a key fake punt to perfection as Nebraska showed its hand too quickly on a return play and vacated the area.

    Three Questions We Still Have

    Can Bo rally the boys from such a mind-boggling loss? All is not lost for Nebraska. NU has to win out from here, and hope Iowa State gets clipped one more time by someone, anyone. Missouri and Kansas are laying out a red carpet for the Big 12 North. The Huskers would be wise to remember that.

    Is Traye Robinson ready for 15-20 carries per game? Talk about going 0-60 in one game, huh? Robinson may have fumbled and ran into the backs of some of his blockers, but he looked healthy – and tough. Nebraska has to use him, and hope he holds up.

    Does a road trip do this team some good? We say yes. Not only can Nebraska beat Baylor in Waco, it can get out of town for a couple days. The Husker fans in and around Waco don't get to see the team that often; they'll be more appreciative of the product – whatever it looks like.

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    Tags: husker monday review, bo pelini, shawn watson, roy helu, zac lee, ndamukong suh, phillip dillard, alfonzo dennard, barry turner, alex henery

  4. 2009 Oct 23

    Five Keys: Iowa State

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    By HuskerLocker

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    Quarterbacks and boos and media and questions and turnovers and rankings and sound bytes and fans and -

    Oh, yeah. Breakfast with Iowa State.

    The Cyclones are playing with house money. Free as the bird that serves as their mascot. At 4-3, ISU doesn't have much to lose other than the health of its two best offensive skill players, quarterback Austen Arnaud and running back Alexander Robinson.

    Iowa State can pull out the stops, or play it cool to keep it reasonably close.

    Nebraska, meanwhile, needs to win, and look good doing it.

    Head coach Bo Pelini preaches high standards. That's good. He's not satisfied with nine-win seasons. He asks for perfection because, in his words, “you get what you ask for.” He coaches a tenacious, active game in search of execution and mental toughness. And he's good after a loss - better, maybe, than after a win.

    The man was in his element this week. He's got his team buying into an us-against-the-world mentality. Bo served as point guard on Monday with his “buck stops here” comments, and as bookend on Thursday with a similar statement. Fans may perceive Pelini as angry. Not precisely. He's trying to use a difficult loss – a stunning loss, really – as a rallying point to quickly reverse course.

    Pelini doesn't believe in a panic button. It doesn't mean he isn't pushing some other buttons.

    On to the keys.

    Playing Harder and Smarter: Nebraska's offense has been a little too cute over the last two weeks. Power football out of a shotgun spread, four-wide set? Oh, sure, you can do it. But defenses have to respect the quarterback and the receivers. And, right now, that's not happening. Both Texas Tech and Missouri left linebackers on the field to cover NU's wideouts, confident that quarterback Zac Lee either couldn't or wouldn't find open guys.

    That hunch was right. Offensive coordinator Shawn Watson often talks about taking what a defense gives. But what Tech gave wasn't a schematic advantage. It was an athletic challenge. And the Huskers weren't up to it.

    Watson's gameplan was in the right place. But the troops couldn't execute it. Which means – find something they can.

    Maybe that's straight power stuff. Maybe that's the zone read with Cody Green. Nebraska can't stray too far from its original design, but it may need to shed a few play pounds to get to the core of its success.

    And the offensive line? Well, you already know – don't you? So do they.

    Steep incline: If Big 12 defenses were a treadmill, ISU is about to hit a massive elevation change. The Cyclones have not faced a defense as complete as Nebraska's since the Iowa game, and the Hawkeyes' front four is a notch below the Huskers. Throw in a motivated Memorial Stadium crowd – they'll be back Saturday, with a vengeance – and this is toughest game that Iowa State has had this year. If NU can pounce early, ISU won't put up too much of a fight.

    Wounded Clones: Arnaud and Robinson won't be 100 percent on Saturday, and how the game progresses may determine the length of time they're in the game. Again – that's why the quick start is so important. ISU coach Paul Rhoads isn't going to worsen Robinson's groin injury by running him while down 21 points.

    Arnaud will test that throwing hand early. He's not a great passer to begin with, and his backup, Jerome Tiller, is more of a big-play runner than he is passer.

    Where's Mike? Nebraska tight end Mike McNeill has played roughly 50 percent of the snaps in each of the two previous games, and most of those were in the second half. McNeill wants to win more than anything – but he'll never turn down the ball.

    “I've ran pretty good routes this year and I'm moving pretty well,” McNeill said. “I think I'm open sometimes. But I'm not always in the quarterback's progression, or maybe he's got another throw he's got to make. It's not like I'm running down the field and no one sees me.”

    It's just that Lee hasn't been throwing him the ball very much.

    Ditto for the rest of the tight ends. What's happened here over the last several weeks? NU tries to throw the ball to Kyler Reed two times a game, and calls it good. Ben Cotton, Dreu Young and Ryan Hill – all pretty capable receiving options – rarely get their names called. McNeill catches just about everything in the vicinity, but it's like he's one of the fallow parks on the edge of the Lincoln city limits. What gives?

    The Specials: Iowa State has some return and kicking weapons that could account for field position and/or a touchdown. Nebraska has to find the vibe it had going before the Missouri game. Even punter/kicker Alex Henery's been a little off.

    Tags: iowa state, five keys, zac lee, cody green, alex henery, mike mcneill

  5. 2009 Sep 28

    Monday Review: Lafayette

    918 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    Before the review, we offer Nebraska’s football program a public service announcement. Imagine the following words as spoken by Yul Brynner.

    Don’t schedule Sun Belt Conference teams. Whatever you do. Just don’t.

    We know Western Kentucky is on the 2010 schedule. After that, close the vault, Bo Pelini and Jeff Jamrog. Go back to the MAC. Invite the Fighting Frankies. Dabble in Conference USA. Sniff around the WAC and Mountain West, as you’ve already done with Wyoming and Fresno State.

    No more Sun Belt.

    We saw enough penny-wise, pound-foolish football in the last month to last our lifetime. Not only were Florida Atlantic, Arkansas State and Louisiana-Lafayette inadequate opponents, only the Red Wolves had a winning gameplan. FAU and ULL were content to move pawns around the board, tick off a ten-yard gain here or there, punt dutifully and get out of Lincoln with a paycheck and relatively few injuries.

    We hear that distant refrain: But Louisiana-Lafayette beat Kansas State. True. On its home field. In KSU’s second game of a transition back to power football. By two points.

    And while these Sun Belt teams might have wonderful fan bases in their hometowns, they were virtually non-existent in Lincoln. At least with Wyoming, some Cowboys will make the drive. Heck, South Dakota State will have five times the following than Florida Atlantic did. Jackrabbits all over the joint next year.

    If you’re going to buy wins – and that’s what Steve Pederson was doing when he signed these contracts – at least buy local, where a Nebraska kid or two might sneak on to the roster. (Although SDSU is a threat to NU’s walk-on program, and should not be rewarded with trips to Memorial Stadium.)

    What did we learn Saturday night? Less than we have after any other game since Nicholls State in 2006. Lafayette was tired and beaten up, facing its third major-conference opponent in as many weeks. The Ragin Cajuns visibly seemed to deflate after NU’s first touchdown, when tight end Ben Cotton recovered a Roy Helu fumble in the end zone. The secondary covered the Huskers’ receivers like it was optional. ULL shied away from nearly every physical showdown, as well.

    So instead of offering a game-specific review – there were 15 players to love, frankly, the Huskers won all the keys, and there were few questions or concerns based on that three-hour window – we instead review the non-conference season as a whole. Later this week, look for an in-depth report card of the first four games, as well.

    Five Players We Loved

    Running Back Roy Helu: He’s been durable, dependable, productive (555 all-purpose yards)and capable of the home run play, too. Helu still needs to polish up his pass protection, but he’s been the Big 12’s best, most consistent running back through a month. And his performance at Virginia Tech – 169 tough yards, tons of broken tackles – goes on the NFL Draft audition tape.

    Defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh: Don’t let his sack and tackle statistics let you think he hasn’t been dominant. Three offensive lines have schemed specifically to stop Suh, and it hasn’t worked. He shoots into the backfield with such alarming speed, at times, that he’s almost there too soon, and overruns the play. But he’ll be tested by Missouri and Texas Tech, which frustrate great defensive linemen – especially those who like to fly upfield.

    Punter/kicker Alex Henery: The nation’s best in a dual role, and certainly in the top three nationally as a place-kicker. Throw in kickoff specialist Adi Kunalic and Nebraska, hands down, has the best kicking unit in the country.

    Wide receiver Curenski Gilleylen: The kid just gets open, and he gets open for big plays. He’s been the beneficiary of some of Zac Lee’s best passes, but eight grabs for 255 yards? That’s one-quarter of the football team every time he touches it. We’ll take that.

    Strong safety Larry Asante: He’s forced a fumble and returned an interception for a touchdown. Most importantly, no breakdowns on his side of the defense. Through four games, Asante’s been NU’s quarterback in the secondary. Still plenty tough in run support. Getting better in coverage. Now – is he healthy?

    Special Mention: Center Jacob Hickman for keeping an ever-changing offensive line grounded with his work ethic and smarts (work a little on the snaps, though, Jake), quarterback Zac Lee for his arm and confidence, nickel back Eric Hagg for being a consistently explosive wild card all over the field.

    Four Concerns We Have

    The Huskers haven’t faced a real offense yet: Only Florida Atlantic is in the NCAA’s top 50 of total offense, and the Owls are 115th in scoring offense. Missouri and Texas Tech? Both securely in the nation’s top 20 of offenses. NU’s defense has indeed been good – 23rd nationally in total defense, 3rd in scoring defense, 31st in sacks against teams that dearly tried to prevent them. But it hasn’t really been tested. Not yet.

    Depth: NU can’t afford any more injuries at quarterback, running back, tackle or safety without moving into some uncharted waters. Every time Lee runs, you hear Husker nation cringe a little for his safety.

    Penalties of all variety: There’s false starts, holding calls, pass interference penalties and way too many 15-yard personal fouls for my liking. Pelini keeps talking about cleaning it up. The Big 12 referees are flag-happy. Just look at the national rankings, where Texas Tech and Texas A&M occupy the last two spots nationally in penalty yards. Flags will have a clear impact on the outcome of games. Pelini should make a goal to win that battle every game, if he hasn’t already.

    Wasted timeouts: No stat tracks this, but I’m willing to bet NU takes more defensive timeouts than any team in the Big 12. That’s not bad, but you’d like to see Pelini save a couple for a rainy two-minute drive.

    Three Questions We Still Have

    Who is the real Zac Lee? The calm stud we saw in games one, two and four, or the frazzled, inaccurate one who, by his coordinator’s own admission, “chased ghosts” at Virginia Tech and misread coverages. We’ll soon find out in upcoming weeks.

    To be fair to Lee: The Hokies made a fool out of Jacory Harris, and smacked around Alabama’s quarterback for three quarters, too.

    But his performance, thus far, isn’t all that surprising. Lee had the best arm on NU’s team in 2007, he has it now, he’ll have it five years from now. He opens up the field to all kinds of possibilities. But he has to produce for an entire year in tougher road games, frankly, than Joe Ganz had to face in 2008. Lee’s a good kid, and up the challenge.

    Can NU generate QB heat with a four-man pass rush? Against pure spread teams like Mizzou, Tech and others, a four-man rush is the simplest, most surefire way to make sure you’re covering all the angles and pass routes. When Nebraska chose to blitz against both teams, they responded by burning the Huskers with quick screens for long touchdowns. The onus is on defensive ends Barry Turner, Pierre Allen and Cameron Meredith. How they play may determine how NU’s defense fares.

    When the Huskers absolutely need a yard, will the offensive line deliver? Ever since the Callahan conversion to a slow, plodding zone stretch power game, this has been a consistent bugaboo. Oh, for the days when a quick fullback plunge for two yards happened faster than you blinked your eyes. At any rate, NU first has to get healthy. Then they have to start getting lower off the ball. The Huskers are a great pulling team. They need maul better, though.

    See also: ULL Fan Photos

    Tags: monday review, roy helu, curenski gilleylen, alex henery, ndamukong suh, larry asante, zac lee, jacob hickman, eric hagg

  6. 2009 Sep 22

    The Bo and Alex Show

    505 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    I used to have pretty boring earth science teacher. Natural, I suppose, since rocks, even the igneous ones, aren’t especially thrilling to the typical high-schooler. So whenever we’d want take...

    Tags: bo pelini, alex henery

  7. 2009 Sep 20

    VT WEEK: Husker Monday Review

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    By HuskerLocker

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    And so. The road from here, after a sudden head-on collision in the final moments of Nebraska’s 16-15 loss to Virginia Tech.

    First, a week of warmth and good tidings, as the Cornhuskers welcome a Sun Belt also-ran (Louisiana-Lafayette) to Lincoln for the 300th consecutive sellout. Hangover or not, NU’s walking out of Memorial Stadium on Saturday night a winner.

    Then, a bye week.

    Then, what I’d call the biggest game of the season for Nebraska’s psyche: A night war in Columbia, on ESPN, for Big 12 North supremacy and a couple of recruits that both Missouri and the Huskers are after for their 2010 class.

    That’s 16 days, between now and then. Enough time to heal, physically and mentally. Enough time to forge an identity that wins conferences games on the road.

    Know this: Tech was only a small part of this season’s test. It could have been a springboard. But it won’t be. Now, Nebraska has to avoid it becoming a stumbling block.

    Head coach Bo Pelini has experience here. As interim coach in 2003, he dusted off the Huskers after Frank Solich’s firing and won the Alamo Bowl. As defensive coordinator at LSU, he rebounded from a crushing 50-48 loss to rival Arkansas to craft an excellent plan for the SEC Championship game, beating Tennessee 17-10. And as head coach last year, he sifted through the rubble of 52-17 and 62-28 and built a stronger, smarter team after both games.

    In Bo we trust – to adjust.

    On with the review.

    Five Players We Loved

    Kicker Alex Henery: Better known as “A Money” inside of 50 yards. Pretty sweet rugby-style punter, too.

    Running back Roy Helu: Nebraska put the load on his shoulders and he bore it with toughness and agility. Good on-field attitude, too.

    Defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh: Of course he’d like to Tech’s last offensive play back. He’ll probably wonder himself what he was doing, NU’s best pass rusher, just standing there, watching VT quarterback Tyrod Taylor buy time. Otherwise, Suh was awesome on Saturday. His only weakness, really, is sometimes trying to do too much on one play.

    Defensive ends Barry Turner and Pierre Allen: Well-prepared, they were, to corral Tyrod Taylor. Allen and Turner refused to be turned by blocking tackles, were rarely pinned on outside plays, and consistently remained stout on inside runs. Good effort.

    Three Concerns We Still Have

    Meltdown penalties: When it rains, it pours with NU’s offensive line and tight ends. They played a mostly clean game – until that disaster in the third quarter, which was one of the subtle turning points.

    Not Enough Niles: if he’s a playmaker in practice, then you have to give him designed touches in the game. One poorly-thrown screen pass is not enough. Why is Zac Lee looking for Mike McNeill in double coverage 30 yards down the field and not Paul? Why is Menelik Holt the guy running corner routes in the end zone, and not Paul?

    Look: Jeremy Maclin wasn’t 6-foot-4 either. But Missouri moved him around, got him snaps, cleared out the middle of the field and let him catch a short slant, that kind of stuff. And if Paul’s just another receiver at NU, then put him where belongs, in the slot, and stick Chris Brooks on the outside in four-wide situations. Shawn Watson has to do something to direct Lee’s attention in Paul’s direction, or isolate Paul in the open field.

    Straight coverage: If Taylor had been any kind of passer, Saturday’s game might have been much different. Tech’s receivers routinely had a step on NU’s defensive backs; Taylor just couldn’t hit them. Nebraska’s corners were fairly aggressive, it seemed; they were lucky they didn’t get burned more.

    Reviewing the Five Keys

    Violent Dance: Nebraska didn’t handle Jason Worilds very well. He had five QB hurries, flushed Lee several more times, and drew a holding penalty on that botched third-quarter drive. He’s a player. Marcel Jones and D.J. Jones are, too, but they’re not of Worilds’ caliber yet.

    The Specials: Nebraska played Tech to a draw, or maybe even had a small edge. Tech’s big kickoff returned was offset by Paul’s punt return. Adi Kunalic consistently pounded the ball for touchbacks. Henery was money on punts.

    Hustle and Flow: The linebackers held up. Frankly, they seemed better when they know the opponent is going to run the ball. Will Compton, Phillip Dillard and Sean Fisher consistently pursued well, lined up correctly and wrapped when tackling.

    Lane and Lee: NU’s quarterback didn’t look rattled in the first half, and indeed made a few savvy scrambles and throws. But after that penalty debacle in the third quarter, Lee wasn’t the same guy. What happened? We’ll have to ask Tuesday. Lee wasn’t available after the game. (Note to coaches: Isn’t part of growing up as a QB facing the music right afterward?)

    Big-Game Coaching: In our estimation, Pelini and Watson were up to the challenge. We could argue the Cover 2 call, or a few of Watson’s play selections. You could analyze it until you’re blue in the face, frankly, but the coaching staff was up to the moment. You couldn’t necessarily say that about last year’s game in Lincoln.

    Three Questions We Still Have

    Who is this team in the red zone? Right now, Nebraska seems like a bunch that’s not sure how to score a touchdown. The Huskers nibbled around the edges but never pushed over that one score they really needed.

    Can Nebraska close when it counts? The Huskers spit the bit a little. Oh, they played hard, but they didn’t seize victory. Virginia Tech was tired and ready to fall. NU kept the Hokies in the game with mental mistakes, dropped passes and penalties.

    How soon is that Missouri game again? Soon enough.

    Tags: monday review, vt week, alex henery, ndamukong suh, pierre allen, roy helu, barry turner

  8. 2009 Sep 04

    FAU WEEK: Five Keys

    451 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    Here come the Hooters.

    (And if you didn’t think that was coming, you don’t know our Five Keys very well).

    In roughly the last 20 years, Nebraska has chosen to make its season opening opponent, with a few exceptions (1994, 1996, 2002 and 2003 among them) soft, fruit-filled pastries to enjoy on a late summer day. The names – San Jose State, Western Illinois, Maine, Florida Atlantic – change, but the games they inspire do not.

    Oh, there is this nugget of fear right until kickoff. Is this the year the Cornhuskers come out flat? Then the Memorial Stadium crowd leans in, the opponent makes a bonehead play, and it’s time to look for the kid selling Runzas. Even the Fallen Team of 2007 knew how to cut a pound of flesh from Nevada.

    Take last year. First quarter. Western Michigan sets up a perfect trick play, WMU quarterback Tim Hiller steps to throw the easiest touchdown pass he’ll ever toss, and he forgets the ball. Just plum slips out of his hand. You couldn’t dream it up.

    But this is what happens to non-major conference programs at the beginning of the year. By midseason 2008, when Illinois had already been beaten down a little by injuries and losses, and Western Michigan had some confidence, the Broncos rolled into Champaign and scored an upset.

    Six weeks from now, FAU would be a more dangerous team than it is today. As it stands, we call the Owls a funny name. Beyond that, we preach respect. And, as such, a full, in-depth five keys to kick off 2009.

    KIDS: That’s short for: Keep It Downhill, Shawn. Offensive coordinator Shawn Watson is much smarter than we are at this playcalling gig, so we figure he can already tell that Florida Atlantic’s defense will eventually crack under the weight and strength of Nebraska’s physical offensive line. Maybe not on the first drive. Maybe not even in the first quarter. But eventually. FAU can only stunt and guess its way into the right defense so many times, right?

    Quentin Castille would have been a perfect fit for a game like this, because smaller defenses loathe tackling a load like Q. In Castille’s permanent absence, might NU use some heavier sets, some double tight end packages? Can Nebraska so easily vacillate between power and shotgun spread? We’ll see.

    Our long-term concern is the durability of Roy Helu. He’s never been in better shape, and he’s not the kind to beg out of a game. But he has been the kind who’s had to miss a practice or two the following week because of a pull, strain or tweak. There hasn’t been a running back alive who didn’t play with little hurts after the first game, for the rest of a given season. But Nebraska’s coaches need to give their prized junior just enough of a break to keep him away from nagging problems.

    If that means a little more Rex Burkhead in weeks one and two, so be it. Burkhead could use the work. Know this: Helu’s money time is in October and November. September is the rehearsal.

    36 inches: That’s about the distance separating the facemask of FAU quarterback Rusty Smith from the helmet of Nebraska nose tackle Ndamukong Suh. At least when Smith is under center.

    If Florida Atlantic has any chance Saturday, Smith must win the battle between those two players. Yes, between them.

    Good quarterbacks don’t hide behind an offensive line all night. Smith can’t and won’t expect his center to stuff Suh every time; it won’t happen. He can’t expect double teams all night, either. Smith and his coaches have to develop a quick rhythm passing game that stares right into the face of the Big 12’s baddest man and throws right over his head. If the Owls spend all night trying to scheme away from Suh, or run around him, the plan will fall to pieces.

    As for Suh – if he makes a blowup tackle or a big sack on the opening series or two, the Memorial Stadium crowd will lose its collective head and suck much of the energy out of the Owls. One memorable quality about Grant Wistrom, the last NU defensive lineman of this magnitude: He knew how to say hello on the first drive.

    Attack Zac, Zac Attack: When a defense is overmatched, as FAU’s most certainly is, the coordinator is wise to narrow down the number of players who can beat his crew.

    If the Owls’ strength is coverage, for example, and NU has relatively inexperienced wide receivers catching passes from a very inexperienced quarterback, the logic flows like this: Put eight guys in the box, dare NU quarterback Zac Lee to throw deep balls into one-on-one coverage, and dare the Huskers’ receivers to do something about it.

    "He's new and we want to test him, but to do that we have to make them put it in the air," FAU cornerback Torvoris Hill said.

    Western Michigan tried that last year, and Joe Ganz smoked the Broncos with a 61-yard touchdown bomb to Nate Swift that put away WMU for good. Baylor tried the same strategy to nullify Nebraska’s quick WR screen game. Once again, Ganz found Swift behind the coverage for a 60-yard backbreaker of a touchdown.

    Just because it burned Western Michigan and BU, doesn’t mean FAU shouldn’t try it. After all, Lee could crumble under the pressure. We doubt it – he’s got more physical skills than Ganz - but he could. Or Nebraska’s receivers, unaccustomed to running deep routes, might not be up for the challenge.

    Either way, Nebraska should expect an eight-man box. An option game can loosen it up. A properly timed zone read can, too. Or perhaps, when FAU picks its poison, Lee turns out to be more toxic than the Owls expected.

    Young Guns: Great movies, weren’t they? No, they weren’t, but Lou Diamond Phillips was in both of them. Lou also made a movie called “Sioux City,” set in, you guessed it – Nebraska? Apparently “South Sioux City” didn’t make the cut as a title.

    We digress.

    Nebraska’s roster is stuffed with freshmen, redshirt freshmen and sophomores, many of whom are “Bo guys” he either recruited, or found toiling as walk-ons (Lance Thorell and Mathew May fit this bill).

    The youngest of these will make mistakes Saturday. That’s not a specific indictment on them. That’s the nature of football. New guys screw up in their first handful of games, and hopefully they’re athletic enough to adjust on the fly. There probably hasn’t been a more dominant true freshman in NU’s history than Ahman Green, but the prevailing opinion upon his arrival was “Well, he’s no Lawrence Phillips.” Even though, two years later, he was most certainly was.

    The Specials: We tend to harp on special teams quite a bit around here, and it’s for reason: It’s a hidden, often misunderstood component of the game that should be won, game in and game out, by the bigger, deeper program.
    In the NFL, of course, mandatory roster sizes balance it out. But in college, home teams – especially home teams in major conferences – have the distinct advantage of using athletic specialists (talented redshirt freshmen like Alonzo Whaley and P.J. Smith, useful walk-ons like Wes Cammack, gunners like Rickey Thenarse) where Sun Belt teams are forced to use starters.

    So, fatigue, execution and field position becomes an issue. Throw in Nebraska punter/kicker Alex Henery, and NU should be able to create 7-10 points (directly or indirectly) off of this advantage alone.

    See also: Guess The Score!

    Tags: five keys, fau week, zac lee, bo pelini, ndamukong suh, rusty smith, alex henery, roy helu, rex burkhead, shawn watson

  9. 2009 Sep 02

    Inside the Mind of the Nation's Best Kicker

    135 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    Alex Henery talks about the special pointers and routines he goes through to become one of the best kickers in college football.

    Tags: alex henery, fau week, centerpiece

  10. 2009 Aug 22

    Bo Giveth...

    1,017 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    It’s one of the odder transitions you’ll ever find Nebraska head coach Bo Pelini make.

    Literally seconds after saying he’d kicked junior running back Quentin Castille off the team, Pelini pulled out a white index card and announced the dreams of six in-state Husker walk-ons had come true: They were put scholarship for the 2009 season.

    Senior linebacker Colton Koehler, senior wide receiver Wes Cammack, senior offensive linemen Derek Meyer, junior kicker Alex Henery, junior tight end Dreu Young and sophomore center Mike Caputo will be scholarship players this year. All six should play one role or another on this current squad. Henery is considered one of the best kickers in the nation, while Young, Koehler and Caputo played often in 2008. Cammack is one of NU’s best tacklers on special teams.

    “This is a great group of guys and it is great to be able to have the ability to recognize their contributions by placing them on scholarship,” Pelini said. “Each of those guys has shown a great commitment to our football program, and they do things the right way on and off the field.”

    Pelini said there were more walk-ons who were deserving of scholarships, and he continues to strive toward rewarding them eventually, as well. Sophomore WILL linebacker Mathew May and sophomore nickel back Lance Thorell would have to be, presumably, high on that list.

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    Tags: fall camp, bo pelini, alex henery, derek meyer, dreu young, mike caputo, colton koehler

  11. 2009 Aug 17

    Podcast 8/17: Improvement in The Specials

    113 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    Please enable Javascript, or download the podcast here.



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    Tags: bo pelini, podcasts, alex henery, brett maher, fall camp

  12. 2009 Aug 15

    FC Day 7: 'We're Coming Along'

    144 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    Bo Pelini called the Nebraska football team’s Saturday practice/scrimmage a “good long go,” and indeed it was, a three-hour workout inside the empty Memorial Stadium, where workers are busy putting the finishing touches on the old ship before the 2009 season kicks off.

    “We got a lot accomplished,” said the NU head coach. “It was obvious to me that, after watching it, we have a long way to go as a football team, but we’re seeing some good things, too. We’re coming along, we’re well on our way, but we have a long journey ahead of us.”

    Pelini said the “effort was good” during the hour-long scrimmage but, “we were sloppy at times, especially with penalties.” NU ran around “50-60 plays.” It ended just before a warm, afternoon rain began to fall.

    Said offensive line coach Barney Cotton: “They came to work today. There were certain things we wanted to look at; it wasn’t a continuity kind of scrimmage as far as calling the exact same stuff you’d normally call. But they brought their lunch buckets to work today.”

    Quarterback Zac Lee, Pelini said is beginning to develop strong chemistry with the rest of the offense.

    “His confidence is growing every day, and as soon as that happens, you see the confidence growing around him,” Pelini said. “The offensive guys feel a sense that he’s ready to step in and lead this team. I think everyone would agree they’re seeing the right things from Zac.”

    Pelini also praised the special teams units, which expects to be better than they were last year, especially in kick and punt coverage.

    “Our steps are better,” Pelini said. “Our protection is better.”

    Preseason All-Big 12 kicker Alex Henery and Brett Maher are in “ongoing competition” for the starting punter job, and Pelini said new snappers trying to replace T.J. O’Leary have “done well.”

    “Alex has looked good,” Pelini said. “He’s really confident back there. He wants the job. I think it’s going to be a good battle as we go through camp.”

    Nebraska also has “a lot of options” at punt returner, as well.

    The Huskers now get a day off Sunday, their first of fall camp.

    “We’ll give them some rest,” Pelini said. “We have a lot to accomplish in the next week.”

    Tags: bo pelini, barney cotton, alex henery, fall camp

  13. 2009 Aug 05

    5 Fall Camp Questions - Special Teams

    407 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    It’s one of the three phases, right? And it literally saved Nebraska’s hide in a 40-31 win over Colorado.

    So of course we’ve got five fall camp questions for NU’s special teams units. Click here for the offensive questions and here for the defensive questions.

    Now – let’s get to it.

    What can Alex Henery do for an encore?

    He can punt, that’s what, and Nebraska needs a good one. Field position is a defense’s best friend, and too often in 2008, previous punter Dan Titchener wasn’t up to the task. We’ve seen Henery thump some real bombs in practice, but that’s just practice. NU will be better off if Henery wins the job over walk-on Brett Maher, but not if it distracts him from what he does well – which is boot game-winning, mind-boggling field goals.

    Snapper? Holder? Anyone?

    T.J. O’Leary and Jake Wesch have left the building, so these two jobs are as wide open as the Nebraska prairie. NU would like to see true freshman walk-on P.J. Mangieri – one of the nation’s best pure high school snappers – assume that role for four years for the Huskers, and maybe take that skill to the NFL. As for holder…well, if Henery’s the punter, too, then it can’t be him. We’d prefer a backup quarterback, but we won’t pitch a Joe Thiesmann fit if it doesn’t happen. Just know that, when you least want it to happen, these two little roles can botch a perfectly simple punt or field goal try.

    On punt returns - Niles Paul or the pups?

    Paul wasn’t exactly inspiring in the role early last year before Nate Swift took it over (again) and did a fine job. There would be seem to be plenty of candidates for this role – Antonio Bell, Tim Marlowe, Rex Burkhead, Khiry Cooper – but, of course, they’ll have to earn it. NU chose the conservative route with Swift in 2008, and it actually paid off.

    True freshmen on the coverage teams?

    Last year, Bo Pelini’s massive redshirting campaign probably kept some excellent candidates from helping out in the special teams department, although Alfonzo Dennard and Mason Wald (since departed) lent their hands to the cause. How does Pelini, and special teams guy John Papuchis, revamp that plan in 2009? Business as usual, use the redshirts from last year, or populate those units with true freshmen, presuming they’re ready? We wouldn’t be shocked if a guy like Dijon Washington takes on the Dennard/Rickey Thenarse role on this year’s squad.

    Can Adi Kunalic continue the magic?

    He’s the best kickoff specialist in the nation – when he kicks a touchback. When Kunalic doesn’t boot it beyond the end zone, his low, driving boots tend to be quite returnable. Supposedly he’s worked on angled kicks, pop-up kicks, and the like. Hopefully Nebraska fans see the fruits of his labor in 2009.

    Join today and get Husker updates every day throughout the fall!

    Tags: alex henery, adi kunalic, pj mangieri, dijon washington, khiry cooper, antonio bell, tim marlowe, alfonzo dennard, fall camp

  14. 2009 Jul 31

    Commentary: The Reality of NU's Modern Walk-On Program

    721 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    Every so often, you glance at the great history of college football, and you probably wonder, as I do: How did a flyover state full of sandy hills, prairie grass and homesteads ever fight its way into the royalty of the game? And, more than that, how did it do so a full decade after World War II?

    We don’t ask that question, I find, because we don’t know. In fact, we know the answer by heart. And, sometimes, it’s simply too long and rich to tell at a dinner party, right? We ask ourselves just as a reminder how extraordinary an achievement it really is. And how that achievement defined this state, spoke to its work ethic and pride and faith. It is not a small thing, what’s been done at NU. That’s why it’s so important. And that’s why, rhetorically, we ask.

    Unquestionably, a part of that answer is the walk-on program. As depicted in the newest NET documentary “Walk On: Huskers Edge,” you get a terrific sense of how and why those young, sacrificial men - often from dusty farm towns that hug our state’s two-lane highways - volunteered to serve the Cornhuskers with little reward and no guarantees. They took that famous admonition from President Kennedy and made it their own: Ask not what Nebraska can do for you, but what you can do for Nebraska.

    And as scholarship limits got tighter, the need for the walk-ons went up. You know the scores of guys who came through here, on their own dime, and won games, awards, jobs in the NFL. We won’t list them again.

    Now, in this era of 85 scholarships, and an era when technology allows high school players to reach out and touch their dream of college football, every team – not just Nebraska – has to use its walk-on program wisely.

    It’s an excellent place to develop kickers, punters, long snappers, coverage gunners and holders. It’s helpful for overall depth when injuries strike. Occasionally the walk-on pool will produce a dynamic athlete like Matthew May, an Imperial kid who played for a great football program out near Panhandle, and didn’t get the attention he deserved.

    Some would argue walk-ons provide a character boost, that “Rudy” quality that wills the more talented scholarship players to excel. That can be true, and has been true, often, at Nebraska. And that can be false. After all, walk-ons are 18-22-year-old kids, just like the rest of the players.

    The best possible scenario is that the walk-on pool is a combination of all those things. A launching pad for late bloomers. A training ground for future coaches. An inspiration to the fans. A way to keep NU connected to the high school programs, and the state in general. You get excellent stories, like that of Derek Meyer, who left Kansas State, and turned down transfer offers to Western Michigan and San Diego State, for a shot at one year with the Big Red.

    But the walk-on industry, like anything else, has changed. The economy has changed, recruiting has changed, the world has changed. The romance is largely gone.

    Let’s be clear: Head coach Bo Pelini, undoubtedly with the guidance of athletic director Tom Osborne, has improved the perception of walk-ons at NU. Pelini produces a list of committed walk-ons on Signing Day. Then, he refuses to talk about any one player – scholarship or walk-on - individually. He integrates preferred walk-ons into summer conditioning. There’s a Walk-On Club designed to support the funding of walk-on program. To his credit, Pelini neither patronizes walk-ons nor pretends to merely tolerate them. They’re just part of the group. As it should be.

    But it’s getting harder to draw walk-ons to Nebraska – or anywhere, for that matter. Division I FCS and Division II programs are getting more sophisticated, more savvy, with their recruiting tools. Especially schools in the Dakotas. South Dakota State can offer a talented Nebraska kid a chance to play Division I competition on scholarship, rather than the kid footing the bill at NU. (This is one of the reasons Nebraska shouldn’t play SDSU). And UNO, with new AD Trev Alberts, will make some waves with its future recruiting classes. Just watch.

    Why? With the rising cost of college, kids, and their parents, are going to listen. They have to listen. Their 401k has been raided by the stock market. Half of their investments have vanished. And God didn’t make every kid to be a classroom whiz who can cobble together a bunch of academic scholarships.

    Walk-ons have always been about sacrifice. But, for some of them, the off-the-field price may be too high.

    Another issue: I’m not sure, with the present state of high school football in Nebraska, that NU actually can draw as many players as it would like. Pelini and Co. wants speed. Track guys. Shawn Watson’s offense requires gifted tight ends and receivers, and that’s still not something the state provides in great supply. Nebraska’s gone to recruiting absolutely giant offensive linemen – almost all of them taller than 6-5 – and the state’s just not going to provide many of those. NU’s lone in-state recruit, 6-6 tackle, Andrew Rodriguez, is originally from New York City.

    Finally, there’s this: High school programs are no longer tied at the hip to NU. They’ll send their kids where they can play. Pelini can’t just waltz into Omaha and have his pick or scholarship or walk-on players. Iowa has a relationship at a few schools, including Millard North. Kansas has connections within the city, and at the most consistent program in Western Nebraska, McCook. Now Oregon, after offering a scholarship to Daryle Hawkins, has an in at Omaha Central.

    So we’ll see. Nebraska’s done well, so far, with its rhetoric about reviving the program. Bill Callahan didn’t exactly kill it, mind you – after all, Matt O’Hanlon and Colton Koehler, both potential starters on the 2009 NU defense, began as Callahan-era walk-ons – but he…well, you know the story.

    Point is – even if Nebraska wants a return to the halcyon days of the walk-on program, it may not be possible. And utopia shouldn’t be the goal, anyway.

    Rather, NU should use its walk-on program wisely and efficiently. Now that Callahan is gone, Husker fans don’t have to argue its importance anymore. Pelini, Osborne and director of football operations Jeff Jamrog all appreciate its worth.

    It doesn’t matter how small or large the walk-on program at Nebraska is. It doesn’t need to be our version of the Peace Corps. It just needs to be strong. And if it’s that – then it’s the right size.

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    Tags: walkons, alex henery, bo pelini, tom osborne, bill callahan, uno, trev alberts

  15. 2009 Jul 24

    7/24 Podcast

    102 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    Enjoy today's podcast for free. Listen to other podcasts via a Locker Pass. Click here for more information.

    Please enable Javascript, or download the podcast here.



    See also: The Huskers in Hell's Kitchen

    Tags: podcasts, big 12, big 12 media days, alex henery, ndamukong suh

  16. 2009 Jul 24

    More Love for Suh, Henery

    194 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    One day after the media selected Nebraska to win the Big 12 North, it tabbed NU defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh its Preseeason Player of the Year in the league. Suh finished 76 tackles, 7.5 sacks, 11.5 tackles for loss and two defensive touchdowns.

    No Blackshirt has won the award since Grant Wistrom in 1996 and 1997.

    Suh is also on the Big 12's preseason first team.

    He's joined there by kicker Alex Henery. Henery made 18-21 field goals last year, including a 57-yarder - The Kick Heard Round Nebraska - to help beat Colorado 40-31. Henery has a shot to be NU's punter in 2009, as well.

    Sam Bradford beat out Colt McCoy for Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year. Baylor defensive tackle Phil Taylor - featured in our BU breakdown - won Newcomer of the Year.

    On the entire first-team itself, there are only four players from the entire Big 12 North: Henery, Suh, Kansas receiver Dez Briscoe and KU defensive back Darrell Stuckey. Texas, surprisingly, only has four players. Oklahoma has twice as many, with eight. Oklahoma State boasts five.

    Read the entire list here.

    Tags: ndamukong suh, alex henery, big 12 media days, big 12, texas, oklahoma, sam bradford

  17. 2009 Jul 19

    Assessing NU's Fantasy Football Potential

    194 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    College football fantasy enthusiasts are starting to crop up all over America. While smaller conferences with awful defenses, such as WAC and the Sun Belt, are often loaded with players picked (along with the three Heisman Trophy contenders, Sam Bradford, Colt McCoy and Tim Tebow) for picks, we decided to look at some potential value of Nebraska players.

    We examine presuming that a fantasy league starts one quarterback, two running backs, two-three wide receivers, a tight end, a kicker and a defense.

    QB Zac Lee: Hard to say at this point. Lee is unlikely to produce the same number of yards as predecessor Joe Ganz, especially with a tougher schedule in the Big 12 North. But, given Lee’s running ability, he might match the touchdown count.

    Fantasy Verdict: It’s no shot to Lee, really, but there are better stat options out there. He might be a guy you pick up on a flyer vs. Iowa State or something.

    Best QB (overall): Tebow. Gotta be. Yeah, Bradford threw for a truckload of TDs last year, but Tebow is a threat to score 10-15 rushing touchdowns. You know, week in and week out, he’ll get the scores.

    Sleeper QB: Case Keenum, Houston. Threw for 5,011 yards and 44 touchdowns in 2008.

    RB Roy Helu: Because he’ll split carries with Quentin Castille, Helu isn’t going to gain as many yards and score as many touchdowns as, say, Oklahoma State’s Kendall Hunter. But he’s not a bad choice if your fantasy league has two or three slots for running back, or if it awards points for yards per carry.

    Fantasy Verdict: Roll the dice and spend a late pick on Helu.

    RB Quentin Castille: See Helu, although Castille may get more carries in the red zone, and thus may have a better shot at scoring touchdowns. Castille tends to get more carries in short yardage situations, where the goal is three or four yards, so his yardage count is bound to be a little lower than Helu’s.

    Fantasy Verdict: You may get touchdowns, but not as many yards. Castille is a gamble.

    Best RB (overall): Hunter. He rushed for 1,555 yards and 16 TDs last year.

    Sleeper RB: Charles Scott, LSU. Gained 1,174 yards but, more importantly the big man (5-11, 235) scored 18 TDs. He’s the Tigers’ short-yardage man.

    WR Niles Paul: We anticipate Paul having more total receptions than any other receiver on NU’s team, plus he gets the added value of kickoff and possibly punt returns. He could be a keeper as a No. 3 receiver, but nothing more.

    Fantasy Verdict: Not enough production at this time to take the plunge. Ditto for any other NU receivers.

    Best WR (overall): Dez Bryant, Oklahoma State. Yards and TD machine. He may be the first non-QB taken in most leagues.

    Sleeper WR: DeAndre Brown, Southern Mississippi. The spectacular freshman WR (1,117 yards, 12 TDs) who broke his leg late last season will not probably be drafted before the season. But what a midseason pick-me-up he could be.

    TE Mike McNeill: Excellent value pick here if the top Big 12 guy, Jermaine Gresham, isn’t available. There is good potential that McNeill will lead the team in yards, receptions and touchdowns. If your league has a tight end slot, McNeill is a great pick.

    Fantasy verdict: A top ten TE. Somebody in your league will get him; if the timing is right, go for it.

    Best TE (overall): Jermaine Gresham, Oklahoma. He won’t catch the most passes as a tight end - that’ll be BYU’s Dennis Pitta – but we’re guessing he catches the most touchdowns.

    Sleeper TE: Rob Gronkowski, Arizona. Caught 10 TDs last year. Nice player.

    K Alex Henery: As good of a pick as there may be at this position. Not only because of his accuracy, but, if your league offers extra points for field goals over 50 yards (and it should) then Henery is your man.

    Fantasy verdict: The top returning pick, statistically, whenever you want to draft a kicker.

    Best K (overall): Henery

    Sleeper K: Oklahoma State’s Dan Bailey made 15 of 19 field goals, and you know he’ll kick a lot of extra points on that team.

    Defense: Nebraska has a potential for sacks, which most leagues tend to track. The turnover situation wasn’t so pretty. The Huskers failed to come through in a number of circumstances to cause fumbles and get interceptions. But NU did OK with the defensive touchdowns – thanks to Ndamukong Suh. Your call here.

    Fantasy verdict: Not in our top 20, but that may change after a few games.

    Best defense (overall): For sheer points, it has to be Oklahoma, which was +23 in turnover margin last year and recorded 42 sacks. Both numbers may go up in 2009.

    Sleeper defense: Virginia Tech. Three returner starters in the secondary and along the line for a bunch that was pretty darn good in 2008 with a +14 TO margin and 35 sacks.

    Tags: fans, mike mcneill, zac lee, roy helu, quentin castille, alex henery, blackshirts, niles paul

  18. 2009 Jun 26

    Big 12 Position Rankings: Special Teams

    175 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    In our Locker Pass position rankings, we try to take into account four things. We may not mention all four with each team, but it’s our criteria for ranking. Quality Experience: Does the unit or...

    Tags: hlss, locker pass, big 12 rankings, alex henery

  19. 2009 May 05

    Quote of the Day 5/6

    128 views

    By DrNaumann

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    "We worked hard on stopping their running game. We worked hard on stopping their passing game. How hard can you work on stopping a kicker?" -Erik McMillan


    Missouri safety Erik McMillan commented after his 1985 Tigers lost 28-20 at home to the Cornhuskers. Twenty-one of the Huskers' points came on seven field goals from NU kicker Dale Klein.


    Special teams is usually the most forgotten aspect of football. We are reminded of the the kicking game's importance as we watch Alex Henery making a 57 yd FG with under 2 minutes remaining to win over Colorado in 2008.


    The special teams players are not on the field as much as the offensive and defensive units. But special teams often make the most pivotal plays of the game.


    As you are watching, remember that the length of the end zone is ten yards, and the distance of the snap is about seven yards. So a field goal attempt distance can be figured by adding 17 yards to the yard line where the ball rests. Therefore, if a ball is being snapped from the 25 yard line, a field goal attempt will be from 42 yards out.

    Tags: quote of the day, dale klein, alex henery, kicking game

  20. 2009 Apr 29

    Breaking down NU's Future NFL Draftees

    2,904 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    It was the second straight season that zero Nebraska players were taken on the first day of the NFL Draft and only three were taken overall. It served as a death rattle for the Bill Callahan era.

    Will the trend change in future years? We look at the potential Draft prospects of current Huskers:

    2010 Draft

    Defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh: If Suh stays healthy and continues to improve his technique – whether or not his statistics are comparable to 2008 – he’s a sure-fire first-round pick, and possibly a top-ten or top-five pick, depending on team need. At 6-foot-4, 300 pounds, Suh probably isn’t a 3-4 nose guard – those guys are usually squatter and, well, fatter – but he fits into a 4-3 scheme as a 1, 2 or 3 technique, depending on how a defense chooses to play him. He already makes the flashy plays behind the line of scrimmage, and has since his sophomore year.

    Defensive end Barry Turner: Teams will look over Turner’s broken leg injury, and since we’re not doctors or insurance specialists, we couldn’t say whether that would prevent Turner from getting selected. As an end, Turner has a good first step and can beat slower linemen to the corner. He’s not as adept at swim and rip moves as he should be. On the flip side, Turner’s received average coaching at best from John Blake. He’s got room to grow.

    Center Jacob Hickman: He’ll be helped by his versatility to play either guard spot or center. Hickman, 6-4 and 290, is agile when pulling and skilled at getting to the second level. Probably not the nastiest guy on the planet, but he’s smart, and he knows a number of positions. You could see some team taking him with a late-round pick and developing him as a valuable reserve.

    Strong safety Larry Asante: Depending on whether some NFL team thought they could put 20-30 pounds on Asante, he could play linebacker at the next level. Asante hits hard, and he’s generally decent in run support. Where’s he’s struggled is in the passing game. As a safety, we’d see him as a free agent; Clemson’s Michael Hamlin, a much better college player, lasted until well into the second day in the 2009 Draft.

    Wide receiver Menelik Holt: Longshot here, but one never knows. Holt has the speed, and he’s a good enough blocker. Nobody knows if he can catch balls and get open consistently, however. He’ll get only one year to prove it and he’d better have big-time numbers. Otherwise, he’ll be a free agent, if that.

    For now, we don’t consider middle linebackers Phillip Dillard and Colton Koehler, free safeties Rickey Thenarse and Matt O’Hanlon or receiver Chris Brooks as likely selections, although they may sign as free agents.

    2011

    Left guard Keith Williams: At 6-5, 305, Williams has the size and strength to become a very good NFL guard. He needs to get more consistent, and cut out wasteful penalties. He’s quicker than recent draftee Matt Slauson and he’ll get two more years of coaching under Barney Cotton. Too hard to project a specific round right now, but Williams would be in the Draft.

    Safety Eric Hagg: Could be a quality safety for some NFL team; his size and anticipatory skills are a good fit. Nebraska coaches finally seem set on putting Hagg at safety and letting him blossom there. Two years of good development puts him right in the crosshairs of being drafted. Sometimes, though, it seems like Hagg isn’t aware of how good he could be.

    Running back Roy Helu: We fully expect Helu to play four years at NU, if he stays healthy. As a pure runner, Helu is instinctive, quick and hard to bring down. He’s a decent pass-catcher and should improve his blocking. If you were projecting way out, you could see Helu getting picked in the 3rd-4th rounds, maybe even the first day.

    Tight end Mike McNeill: We could definitely see a guy like McNeill taking that Dallas Clark role with the Indianapolis Colts. McNeill is sure-handed and athletic, and pretty fast for a tight end. His best skill is open-field running. In two years, he’s a 4th-6th-round selection, and better if he improves his blocking.

    Defensive end Pierre Allen: Very good sophomore campaign could lead to big things in 2009 and 2010. Allen needs to keep grinding away as a pass rusher so that he can fit into a 4-3 system, which requires good pass-rushing skills out of its ends. He’d need to gain 20-30 pounds to play end in a 3-4.

    Kicker/punter Alex Henery: If he continues to kick like he did in 2008, he’ll be one of a handful of kickers selected in the Draft. Henery’s punting skills may also help him make a roster. The kid’s a bit of a kicking savant; many of his field goal tries are perfectly shaped into the middle of the goalposts, looking like a Phil Mickelson wedge shot.

    Running back Quentin Castille: Credit where it’s due: Castille has lost enough weight to be a viable player in a one-back, one-cut outside zone NFL system. No the lead guy, necessarily, but a bruiser type. He gets downhill quickly, strides nicely for a big guy, and seems more comfortable in the open field than he does traffic. Blocks and catches pretty well. Hasn’t shown himself to be a great short-yardage back, but he could develop into one. Castille isn’t a fullback, and NFL teams will quickly notice that watching him on film. The right team with the right need could draft him.

    Cornerback Prince Amukamara: If this kid picks up the red the courtesy phone and figures out the position, he’s as intriguing a prospect as any on NU’s team. Naturally gifted, huge vertical leap, tall and fast, not afraid to tackle. Amukamara’s stumbling block isn’t physical stuff. But can he play, drive after drive, without mental errors?

    Cornerback Anthony West: Steadier than Amukamara, not quite as gifted, and not quite as big. Gambled and lost a couple times in 2008. Needs to close better and be more aggressive to the ball, as his allowed touchdown in the Red/White Spring Game showed.

    Wide receiver Niles Paul: Needs to play more often, and more consistently. Paul would be a slot receiver in the NFL, so route-running, savvy and elusiveness would be important to develop.

    Guard Ricky Henry: Strictly a project right now, but the clay is there to be molded. We’ll see.

    Cornerback Dejon Gomes: See Ricky Henry.

    Quarterback Zac Lee: Too early to tell. The skillset and height suggests he’ll fit into the Joe Ganz category.

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    Tags: 2009 nfl draft, bill callahan, bo pelini, barney cotton, ndamukong suh, roy helu, mike mcneill, jacob hickman, menelik holt, larry asante, keith williams, ricky henry, niles paul, quentin castille, anthony west, prince amukamara, alex henery, pierre allen, barry turner

  21. 2008 Dec 14

    Chicken Dinner Winners

    89 views

    By SMcKewon

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    Nebraska quarterback Joe Ganz took home many of the biggest awards at NU's season-ending banquet Saturday night, as he was named one of four captains and Team MVP. Ganz also won the Tom Novak Trophy.

    Ganz was joined senior defensive linemen Zach Potter and Ty Steinkuhler, and senior receiver Nate Swift as NU's four named captains for the 2008 season. Instead of voting before the season, new head coach Bo Pelini had the voting occur after the games had been played.

    Not surprisingly, junior defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh was named Defensive MVP. He also won, along with offensive guard Matt Slauson, lifter of the year. Swift received the Offensive MVP trophy and the Guy Chamberlain Trophy. Kicker Alex Henery won Special Teams MVP honors and and Walk-On MVP honors.

    One of the most interesting awards - and maybe a peek at some of the Huskers who may contribute in 2009, were the scout team awards. Defensive back Courtney Osborne and linebacker Alonzo Whaley were named Defensive Scout MVPs. On offense, it was KSU transfer Derek Meyer at offensive tackle and speedy receiver Tim Marlowe.

    Senior receiver Todd Peterson was given the Native Son Award, presented to a player from the Cornhusker State.

    Tags: joe ganz, ndamukong suh, nate swift, alex henery, todd peterson, zach potter, ty steinkuhler

  22. 2008 Dec 02

    Suh Gets Scr...Ripped Off

    164 views

    By SMcKewon

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    Despite leading all Big 12 interior linemen in tackles and scoring two defensive touchdowns, Nebraska junior nose tackle Ndamukong Suh was not named to the coaches’ All-Big 12 first team. Neither was any other NU football player.

    Suh was, however, just one of two Cornhuskers named to the second team. Nebraska offensive guard Matt Slauson was the other.

    Junior safety Larry Asante, sophomore Roy Helu Jr, sophomore kicker Alex Henery, junior center Jacob Hickman, senior defensive end Zach Potter, senior defensive tackle Ty Steinkuhler and senior wide receiver Nate Swift were named honorable mention.

    Because of a glut of great quarterbacks in the Big 12, senior Joe Ganz didn’t get named to any team, despite having better overall statistics than Zac Taylor did in 2006, when he was named Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year.

    Oklahoma quarterback Sam Bradford got the nod this season over Texas’ Colt McCoy. Texas defensive end Brian Orakpo won Defensive Player of the Year.

    The head-scratcher is Suh’s place on the second team, even though all of the five defensive linemen on the first team have fewer tackles than Suh, and Oklahoma’s Gerald McCoy has only 25.

    Henery, too, seemed better than honorable mention considering he led the Big 12 in field goal percentage (14-of-17) and made a 57-yarder to beat Colorado, easily the longest field goal in the league this year.

    Tags: ndamuking suh, alex henery

  23. 2008 Nov 30

    Husker Monday Review: CU Game

    755 views

    By SMcKewon

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    Related photos

    Cover photo for the NU-CU Game Photos album
    NU-CU Game Photos
    28 photos
    Trophies: 62
    If we had to pick one word to summarize Nebraska’s 40-31 win over Colorado it’d be this: Whew!

    NU kept a lot of irons in the fire when Alex Henery made that 57-yard field goal and Ndamukong Suh returned an interception for a touchdowns. A New Year’s Day Bowl? Still alive? Nine wins are still a possibility. Crucial momentum for next spring is still intact. And the bitter taste pill stayed on the shelf.

    Was a win like this over CU better than a blowout? For sheer entertainment value, sure, yes, of course. In time, coaches and players will probably savor it more, too. In the short term, it gives NU a lot to fix during bowl practice and lot to chew on for 2009.

    We’ll get to the season review and all the superlatives later this week. For now, the Colorado review.

    Five Players We Loved

    Sophomore kicker Alex Henery: Henery could be vying for a national championship on Creighton’s soccer team right now. Instead, he’s saving Nebraska’s hide against Colorado and setting himself up for a potential NFL career. The kid can kick. Parents: This is a prime example of why you let your kids play more than one sport.

    Sophomore running back Roy Helu, Jr: Helu’s a keeper, especially out of the shotgun, where he has just the amount of patience and aggression to run the zone read effectively. Roy’s a tricky one to tackle.

    Junior defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh: Just a beast of a football player and a gifted athlete for a guy his size. He could be special in the NFL. He has all the tools, and he’s added the attitude and effort in 2008.

    Senior defensive end Zach Potter: His hands are like tennis rackets this season. Two more deflections turn into interceptions. Potter now carries himself like a player who knows he can dominate his opposition.

    Senior defensive tackle Ty Steinkuhler: A total scrapper who played one of his best games on Senior Day. His sack of Cody Hawkins in the fourth quarter was as important as any play in the game aside from Henery’s kick.

    Three Concerns We Still Have:

    Hello, McFly? First quarter? Nebraska seems uniquely ill-equipped on defense on the first couple drives, as week after week teams have burned the Huskers for big plays. What is that about? Shall in continue in the bowl game?

    Special teams roulette wheel: Spin and see what you win! Or lose! NU needs to tighten up its kickoff coverage schemes in the offseason. And no more fancy fakes. Please.

    No raw jets: The Huskers have a lot of athletic, slippery skill guys. But, other than a developing Helu, they lack a true home run hitter – a guy you absolutely have to account for on every passing or running play. Without Joe Ganz next season, NU better find a way to get more speed on the field. Pat Witt and Zac Lee aren’t going to have Ganz’s command of the offense or sixth sense on the scramble.

    Reviewing The Five Keys

    Play Not to Lose: You know, Colorado did just that after coming out the gate with three big plays on two drives and a wide receiver pass. In the second half, CU retreated into a shell of running the same counter sweeps, quarterback draws and combo routes it had run in the first half. The Buffaloes had 104 yards in the second half. That won’t beat many teams.

    Fire In the Hull: CU did a fair job of protecting its two quarterbacks until, again, the second half, when NU’s front four simply overwhelmed Colorado’s line and caused all kinds of trouble for Hawkins, who played most of the game.

    Tricky: Nebraska was indeed fooled by CU on the first couple drives, then the Huskers settled in and did a solid job of shutting down the Buffs.

    Blood Boiling: Nebraska offensive lineman Matt Slauson was presented with the game ball after the win by head coach Bo Pelini, and you have to think that’s in part because beating CU meant so much to him. Still, Colorado’s players gave Nebraska everything they had – maybe the CU coaches could have given a little more – and showed that the Buffaloes are hardly irrelevant in the Big 12. Down, maybe. Not irrelevant.

    Senior Day: A sophomore delivered the Huskers’ seniors an unforgettable win, but those seniors – Ganz, Steinkuhler, Potter, Slauson – were a big reason why NU won eight games this year instead of five or six. NU had to battle adversity in a number of its wins this year – Baylor, Kansas, CU – and without those seniors to keep things steady, who knows how things might have been different.

    Three Questions We Have

    Whither Bowl? The smart money is on the Gator Bowl, which would select Nebraska over a presumed four-loss Missouri in a hot minute. It would get a little more interesting if Mizzou upset Oklahoma in the Big 12 Championship, though. Presuming the Holiday selects Oklahoma (it would), would the Gator roll the dice with OSU, or call Nebraska’s number?

    And if Oklahoma wins – would the Holiday even think to ask Nebraska over Oklahoma State? Well, the 1998 Holiday Bowl was one of the most successful in the game’s history…

    Still – smart money is on the Gator Bowl against Florida State or Georgia Tech. Tech would be a particularly cool opponent, given its option offense.

    Which QB – if any – emerges during bowl practice? Pat Witt or Zac Lee? Lee, by all reports, has closed the gap. He has the speed and athleticism to run the zone read more effectively than Witt, but Witt is reported to be the more accurate passer and more natural in-the-huddle leader. Now that Lee has a clear shot at the job, will he turn up the heat?

    Can Bo Pelini and staff score some recruiting coups over the next month? It’s time for Bo’s bunch to capitalize on a successful season and the possible firing of Notre Dame’s Charlie Weis, which could many of ND’s top recruits back in play (and, well, Florida’s, because ND would try to hand Urban Meyer as much money as possible to coach in South Bend). Can the Huskers get two wide receivers, another safety, another running back and maybe another defensive end? Can the star recruiters Tim Beck and Mike Ekeler land a big fish? Can Pelini walk into some kid’s home, look him in the eye, and close him on the Nebraska Way?

    Check out the best NU offensive plays of 2008!

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    Tags: colorado week, alex henery, ndamukong suh

  24. 2008 Nov 30

    Aaah! The Video of The Failed Fake Field Goal

    227 views

    By SMcKewon

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    115 views
    Trophies: 0
    Here it is in all its lack of glory...

    Tags: failed fake field goal, alex henery

  25. 2008 Nov 29

    Video: The Kick Heard Round Nebraska

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    By SMcKewon

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    Trophies: 5
    Here's video of Alex Henery's 57-yard field goal against Colorado, the longest field goal in NU history.



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    Tags: colorado week, alex henery

  26. 2008 Nov 29

    A Heap of Criticism, Saved By a Kick

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    By SMcKewon

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    Cover photo for the NU-CU Game Photos album
    NU-CU Game Photos
    28 photos
    Trophies: 62
    So we were 58 minutes into Nebraska v. Colorado, and the Buffs were one longshot field goal try away from sucking the air right out of Memorial Stadium and the wind right from the sails of NU’s winning streak. At that moment, the Cornhuskers had played one of their sloppiest games of the year on a true national stage, with very few football teams vying for the viewer’s attention.

    Any casual college football lover who tuned in to see if Nebraska was “back with Bo” saw the ghosts of Bill Callahan: Bizarre, inexplicable defensive busts. The perfectly ill-timed trick play on special teams. The bewildering habit of taking the hot running back out of the game right when he’s needed most. The inexcusable sack.

    Yep, the sirens were ready to whoop whoop whoop from Omaha to Scottsbluff.

    But you already know the best antidote for criticism: A miracle.

    Hello, Alex Henery, the kid who laced a 57-yard field goal and saved NU from a weekend-long riot act. Call it the Kick Heard Round Nebraska. There’s never been one bigger – and there may never be one longer – than that one.

    “I don’t think it’s set in,” Henery said.

    Based on Henery’s reaction in the post-game press conference – he quaintly equated the greatest kick in Nebraska football history with a goal he’d scored in high school club soccer – yeah, it’s safe to say he didn’t exactly grasp the magnitude of it.

    Here’s how big that boot was:

    *Henery’s kick might have just landed him on the All Big 12 team. Maybe not the first team – that will probably go to Missouri’s Jeff Wolfert. But you tell us who else in the league won a game this year with their foot. We’ll wait awhile.

    *It saved Senior Day for a bunch of guys who deserved to be sent out the right way, especially quarterback Joe Ganz and defensive end Zach Potter, who sustained a terrific effort all year, but especially turned it on after the Missouri game.

    “I wish it was a little easier,” Ganz said, “but it kind of sums up my career and the careers of these seniors, getting a win like that. I'm just so glad we could go out winners, instead of going out the other way. Especially the way things ended last year, this year, I didn't want to leave that bitter taste in my mouth."

    Ganz set the single-season passing yardage record Friday, and it wouldn’t have felt quite the same if NU hadn’t closed the deal against CU.

    *Bo Pelini narrowly escaped a trip through wringer on the call-in shows for that fake field goal play. He admitted it was a “boneheaded” call, and honesty is one of the great virtues of this coach, but it was the kind of decision that would have followed him, and this team, throughout the offseason.

    And, no it doesn’t matter that it was a fake field goal pass. The flip from Jake Wesch to Alex Henery was the same flip from three weeks ago. Of course Colorado knew it was coming.

    *It preserved Roy Helu, Jr’s terrific performance, the best of his young career. Colorado played a deep cover two, guarding against the pass – one of the first teams to employ that strategy against NU this year – and it fell to Helu to make the runs in the zone read game. And he came through, getting stronger as the game progressed despite taking some big shots from CU defenders.

    So why was he removed nearly every single time the Huskers moved inside the 20-yard line for Quentin Castille, who’s not nearly the runner, short yardage or otherwise, that Helu is? It’s not that Castille is a bad player – he brings some strengths to the table. It’s that, in the running game, Helu does the extra little things so right. To stick Castille back there in the red zone where Colorado is supposedly so stingy just didn’t wash. Thankfully, Helu’s great effort wasn’t wasted.

    *It bailed out Nebraska’s linebackers and secondary, which continue to struggle in the first quarter. Colorado is not an explosive offense; in fact, it’s exceedingly conservative, as proven by a second half performance in which the Buffs practically crawled into a shell. But CU sure looked like an offensive juggernaut in the first five minutes. Can it be explained? Why do the Huskers routinely need a couple drives to adjust to what an offense is doing? Are mental busts as astonishing as the ones Nebraska committed on the first two drives common in the 12th game of the year?

    *It put NU in the Gator Bowl driver’s seat. What a terrific roll of the dice for the Big Red, to get a shot at New Year’s Day, potentially against a name team like Florida State. New Year’s has been so watered down because of the BCS that a spot on that day is even more exclusive than it once was. It’s a recruiting opportunity, for certain, a chance to catch the eye of some big-name prospect looking to shake things up late in the process.

    *It gave the Memorial Stadium crowd a much-needed jolt of electricity. Dunno about you, but the old joint didn’t always seem too alive in 2008. Maybe it was left over from 2007. Maybe it was the students getting shoved to the top of South Stadium. Whatever it was, the empty seats – all over the place – during an exciting, important Kansas game were a little unfortunate.

    No such thing happened Friday. The seats were packed. The crowd made a visible difference in the second half. And when Henery’s kicker cleared the uprights, the stadium sounded like, well, the old days. And it felt good.

    Funny, what a soccer player from Burke can do.




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    Tags: alex henery, colorado week, roy helu, bo pelini

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