login / sign up / content filter is: on

Home > Blogs > Search

Blog (1 – 30 of 88)

  1. 2009 Nov 08

    Own This Memory. NU 10 - OU 3. Get the DVD Now.

    90 views

    By DerHuskerFan

    Blog post image

    The memory is still strong. And keep it going. Buy the 2009 NU - OU DVD right here and own this memory forever. Click here to purchase.

    Tags: nebraska oklahoma, nu ou

  2. 2009 Nov 03

    Tom Osborne on Oklahoma-Nebraska Games

    307 views

    By DrNaumann

    Blog post image

    “The fans used to think Oklahoma was the enemy. They actually made us better.”

    -- former Nebraska Head Coach, now AD Tom Osborne.


    "Early in my coaching career we lost five straight times to Oklahoma which did not go over very well in Nebraska. But I can say each time we lost we learned a lot, we became a better team. We lost seven straight bowl games at one point and I think each one of those losses was very instructional. So sometimes losing can be the most important thing that happens to you. It depends on how you react to it."

    Tags: tom osborne, nebraska, oklahoma, football

  3. 2009 Oct 31

    Nebraska Culture

    305 views

    By DrNaumann

    Blog post image

    “I'm a strong believer in culture. My vision I have for this football team – that process is well under way. I cannot proclaim it has completely taken over yet. It is a process. And it's not something that happens overnight. I understood that coming in.”

    -- Bo Pelini, Nebraska Football Head Coach.

    Tags: bo pelini, nebraska culture, cody green

  4. 2009 Sep 25

    Nebraska Football!

    144 views

    By DrNaumann

    Blog post image

    “Our job is to play our football and celebrate that thing by us playing Nebraska football, and that’s with passion, great effort and executing to our standard.”

    -- Bo Pelini, Nebraska Cornhusker's Head Coach.



    Read the entire article in "ULL Week: Five Keys" on Huskerlocker.com

    Tags: quote of the day, bo pelini, nebraska football

  5. 2009 Sep 12

    Bo Knows Nebraska!

    218 views

    By DrNaumann

    Blog post image

    “I think that’s what makes the University of Nebraska unique over any place I’ve been coaching-how much it means to the state. It’s like one big family, and that’s what I want it to be.” -- Bo Pelini

    Tags: quote of the day, bo pelini, nebraska

  6. 2009 Aug 28

    Quote of the Day 8/28

    314 views

    By DrNaumann

    Blog post image

    “We have a responsibility as coaches to train athletes in a functional way. Our lifestyles promote poor posture, and our training methods develop imbalances in our athletes. Our goal at Nebraska is to develop functional athletes who play without pain and do not compensate on the court. If we can succeed with our program, the Huskers will always have an edge on the court.”

    -- John Cook, Head Coach of the University of Nebraska Women’s Volleyball Team

    Tags: john cook, nebraska volleyball, training, goals

  7. 2009 Jul 29

    Trivia 7/28

    35 views

    By TriviaClub

    Blog post image

    Which Husker offensive player was stopped on the climactic fourth down play in the 1984 game vs. Oklahoma?

    A. Travis Turner
    B. Craig Sundberg
    C. Tom Rathman
    D. Doug Dubose
    E. Jeff Smith

    The answer is Jeff Smith

    Tags: trivia of the day, nebraska oklahoma

  8. 2009 Jul 28

    RECRUITING: Huskers Pick Up a Kicker

    109 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    NU gets a potentially great walk-on kicker...who is he and what did his high school coach have to say? Find out with a 30-day free trial to the Husker Locker Pass. Note: Also a nugget in there about a current NU true freshman that might interest you!

    Tags: recruiting, nebraska

  9. 2009 Jul 27

    B12MD: Bo Says Nebraska's Not Back...Yet

    313 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    Nebraska’s back?

    Not yet, NU head coach Bo Pelini said Monday at the Big 12 Media Days, in Irving, Texas.

    While the Huskers certainly enjoyed improvement in 2008 with a 9-4 campaign that included a four-game winning streak to end the season, and while the Cornhuskers took big strides in shoring up the defense, Pelini repeated a mantra he wore out through much of last year: He’s still not satisfied.

    And neither are his players.

    “Our players don't feel Nebraska's back,” Pelini said to the assembled media. “Our expectations in the program are very, very high. I think (the team) is starting to feel the momentum from last season.”

    In an interview with a Big 12 TV reporter, Preseason Defensive Player of the Year Ndamukong Suh agreed.

    “Those wins were great to have, but now we have to carry that into fall camp,” Suh said. “And then we’ve got to move that forward into the fall season.”

    The big questions for Pelini and Co. at Media Day? Zac Lee, the running backs, and that gooey “are you back, really, really back?” question.

    Lee, not present for the event, got nothing but praise from his head coach, who called him a “natural leader.”

    Pelini dropped one of his lines when speaking about his defense, which never quit last year, but still gave up a ton of big plays, especially in the first quarter of games: “We're not in the same galaxy of where we want to be."

    On the team’s overall strength, Pelini said depth remains a weakness – especially on the defensive line – but that enough “resources” are in place to beat any team on the schedule.

    “How that equates to wins and losses, we'll see," he said.

    And the moment he will be satisfied?

    “When we’re playing for a national championship,” he said.

    Notes:

    *Jaivorio Burkes is no longer on the team, Pelini said. No further explanation. Don’t need any, really. Burkes wasn’t healthy enough to play, and Nebraska probably isn’t the best place for a guy who wants to play, but can’t, and is 1,000 miles from home.

    *Pelini confirmed that linebacker Matt Holt will likely redshirt this fall with a shoulder injury.

    Tags: big 12 media days, bo pelini, nebraska, ndamukong suh, matt holt, jaivorio burkes

  10. 2009 Jul 22

    More Missouri Jabs

    2,927 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    This time, it's Kansas City Star's Missouri beat writer Mike DeArmond, who declares, in his first official blog:

    "Those people picking Nebraska to win the Big 12 North are abso-tooting-lutely nuts."

    and

    "The only reason I can see anyone picking Nebraska to win the North over either Kansas or Missouri this fall is they think Tom Osborne is recruiting and coaching the Cornhuskers instead of recruiting and being the athletic director and boss to Bo Pelini."

    and

    Here’s where I shake my head in wonder at anyone picking Nebraska over Missouri but over Kansas as well.

    The Cornhuskers have an inexperienced quarterback, lost just as much as Missouri on offense, don’t have a running back of the caliber of MU’s Derrick Washington. Shouting The Blackshirts Are Back! seems based more on t he hope that Bo Pelini is a defensive genius rather than a first-year college head coach that was simply better than Bill Callahan.


    He goes on to make fun of some Nebraska from London.

    His rationale for picking Kansas tends to be the same rationale used by many: The return of Todd Reesing, Kerry Meier and Dez Briscoe.

    Reesing we get. Great QB. Better leader.

    But two wide receivers, however talented they might be, have never, not ever won a championship by themselves. They are, after all, receivers. Someone has to throw the ball to them. And that someone, Reesing, has to have enough time to do it.

    In other words, pooh-poohing a weak offensive line that gave up 31 sacks as it was last year doesn't reflect well on your analytical abilities.

    As for Nebraska v. Missouri, we'll see. But Mizzou has an awful lot to replace on both sides of the ball, plus the best kicker in school history, plus their return guy.

    Want to comment? Join today - it's free!

    Tags: missouri, nebraska, mike dearmond, todd reesing, zac lee, blaine gabbert

  11. 2009 Jul 14

    When Bo Pelini Says...

    3,923 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    Nebraska's not where he wants to be, maybe he's referring to stuff like this.

    That's a listing of all major college football programs over the last five years. In that time, 2004-2008, NU was surpassed in record five Big 12 teams: Texas, Oklahoma, Texas Tech, Missouri and Kansas.

    But most sobering is that record against AP top 25 teams during that span: 1-16. Or maybe it's the 39% winning percentage on the road. Or maybe it's the 13-24 record against teams that also have winning records.

    Translation: Throughout the Callahan era and in the beginning of the Pelini era, Nebraska nearly struck out against the top quarter of college football and struggled mightily on the road.

    Why did it happen? We've hashed and rehashed all of that. What's important now is doing something about it. Recruiting, winning big games on the road, and showing up vs. OU this fall...all of them will matter.

    Other conclusions drawn from the stats list:

    *We've said this before, but Texas has surpassed Oklahoma as the Big 12's premier program. In fundraising. In recruiting. And on the field. UT getting jobbed out of the national championship game in 2008 doesn't change that. The Longhorns are 13-4 against AP Top 25 in the last five years. OU is 12-11. The Horns win 86% of their road games. OU only wins 76%. UT is 32-7 against teams with winning records. Oklahoma is 29-12.

    When does the media catch up to this reality? When does ESPN? Texas is the better program. About this there can be little debate.

    *Mike Leach has built remarkably consistent program at Texas Tech in every area but one: Road wins.

    *Virginia Tech is one of the nation's best programs, and has been since 1999. The Hokies come in fifth on the total list here, with numbers quite comparable to Oklahoma. Again, some Nebraska fans don't want to hear that - they hold up OU as some supernatural force when, in fact, the Huskers should have taken the Sooners in 2005 and arguably 2006 - but it's not hard to argue that Nebraska's best opponent in 2009 will be in Blackburg, not Norman.

    *Oklahoma State may arrive this year, but, overall, not just yet. The Pokes lag behind Nebraska in overall wins and are just 3-16 vs. the top 25.

    *Baylor just may surpass Iowa State in 2009, making the Cyclones the consistently worst program in the Big 12 over the last five years.

    *Tyrone Willingham may have been unjustly fired from Notre Dame, but he turned Washington into one of the worst programs in America.

    Join Husker Locker today for FREE

    Tags: bo pelini, nebraska, oklahoma, texas, virginia tech, big 12

  12. 2009 Jul 09

    Ten Upset Alerts In Big 12

    3,563 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    Texas Tech at Nebraska, Oct. 17: The line might be even by the time this game is played, but, for now, Nebraska is the presumed favorite. But the Red Raiders have been consistently efficient against NU defenses – whether Bo Pelini called the plays or not – and that includes 2008, when Nebraska’s extraordinary ball-control kept it in the game vs. Tech, but still wasn’t enough. Fact: Tech only ran 43 plays in last year’s game. It averaged 8.79 yards per play. In other words: Watch out.

    Missouri at Oklahoma State, Oct. 17: Playing a hunch here. If Mizzou sticks to the running game, and challenges OSU’s defensive line, it can keep up in track meet in Stillwater. The Tigers got suckered into too many passes (52) in last year’s 28-23 loss. The teams that best challenge OSU don’t abandon the run.

    Kansas at Colorado, Oct. 17: Kansas has the better team, but it’s the mountains, it’s one of CU’s few winnable games, and, every year, it seems like the Buffaloes catch somebody gasping for breath up there. Truth be told, even though KU’s on a three-game winning streak in this series, each of them have been quite competitive.

    Baylor at Iowa State, Oct. 17: ISU is the league’s worst team, but Baylor isn’t so much better that the Cys couldn’t catch the Bears looking ahead to a brutal four-game stretch of Oklahoma State, Nebraska, Missouri and Texas. BU has nice individual pieces on defense, but it remains to be seen if it can function as a whole.

    Texas at Oklahoma State, Oct. 31: The Pokes haven’t beaten UT since 1997, and have blown two giant leads (in 2004 and 2006) in the interim. Here’s OSU’s chance to exorcise some pain against what should be an undefeated Longhorn team. Expect the Cowboys to pour a lot – maybe too much – into winning it. Expect a ton of points, too.

    Nebraska at Baylor, Oct. 31: The one you’ve already worried about five times, and for good reason. Baylor’s half-empty stadium is always a weird place to play, BU quarterback Robert Griffin is the real deal and the Bears competed better than most expected in Lincoln last year. It’s a long way to Waco. Long, boring way. Missouri made the jaunt last year, and barely came out alive.

    Oklahoma at Nebraska, Nov. 7: Even if OU drops a game to Texas (and we expect that) Memorial Stadium will be an electric zoo on that first Saturday in November. And the Huskers will pour more energy and creativity into that game than any on the 2009 schedule. This is NU’s “we’re back” game, the launching pad for 2010. We’ll see if Nebraska’s clear for takeoff.

    Kansas at Kansas State, Nov. 7: It’s still a rivalry, it’s in Bill Snyder’s house and the Wildcats have enough special teams weapons to make this game. KU plays Oklahoma and Texas Tech before this game, and Nebraska, Texas and Missouri after it. You wonder how much will be in KU’s tank. And, KSU’s pretty good at home in this decade: 45-18.

    Oklahoma at Texas Tech, Nov. 21: OU hasn’t won in Lubbock since 2003, so matter what tricked up Schooner the Sooners roll in there, expect a tough game at Jones Stadium. In this decade Tech is 47-10 at home. Hard to mess with those numbers.

    Texas at Texas A&M, Nov. 26: We reserve the right to rescind this pick later, if the Aggies are limping home with 3 or 4 wins and getting ready to give Mike Sherman the heave ho. But, if A&M is within striking distance of a bowl – and we think, with games vs. Iowa State, Colorado and Kansas State, it just might be – then it’ll be the same fevered rivalry it usually is. Remember that Texas – even when it has a lot to play for – struggles in College Station. A thoroughly average team, with a freshman quarterback no less, took Texas’ national title squad to the fourth quarter in 2005.

    Tags: big 12, nebraska, oklahoma, baylor, texas tech

  13. 2009 Jun 18

    Quote of the Day, 6/21

    218 views

    By DrNaumann

    Blog post image

    "This program is very important to the state. One thing that tends to unify those 93 counties out there is athletics. The football program particularly. It's provided an identity to the state. It's part of the psyche." – Tom Osborne

    Tags: quote of the day, tom osborne, nebraska

  14. 2009 Jun 17

    Eight Keys to Toppling Texas

    5,246 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    (see also: The Troubling Gap Between Texas...and Everyone Else)

    Smaller is better: Athletic director Tom Osborne may not enjoy doing it, but he needs to ask whether golf and tennis programs, which ate up more than $2 million in expenses compared to a little over $100,000 in revenue, are truly necessary, especially when fan support is scant and the men’s golf team conducts its home meets in Nebraska City.

    A no-spin zone on baseball: Osborne needs to closely watch Nebraska’s baseball program over the next year and assess whether Mike Anderson has the coaching skill and recruiting acumen to lead NU into the next decade. Not whether he did or didn’t make the grade five years ago.

    Volleyball bucks: Osborne needs to consider whether Nebraska’s volleyball team should make the full-time leap from the NU Coliseum to the Bob Devaney Sports Center, where the Huskers can draw twice as many season-ticket holders and the sport can pay for itself. The Coliseum can still be used once or twice a year, for specific big matches, and Osborne can institute a tiered season ticket system for those coveted seats.

    Grapplers: He needs to promote the Nebraska wrestling team smarter and harder, especially considering Omaha’s Qwest Center is hosting the 2010 NCAA Championships. NU’s squad has an outside shot at the national title next year, and a solid first semester schedule. Bo Pelini’s a good friend of wrestling coach Mark Manning; maybe it’s time for a TV ad.

    Tough questions: He needs to ask, now that Nebraska has a terrific coaching staff, whether the operational side of the football program is being run as efficiently as it could be. Osborne is respected enough to make hard inquiries and necessary adjustments.

    Help hoops: He has to figure out some way, any way, to get 10,000 Husker basketball fans inside Devaney before Kansas comes to town. The men’s basketball team was ninth in the Big 12 for revenue while the women’s team was 11th. If that means a better schedule for men and free tickets for the women, so be it. People have to see the product before they buy the product.

    To that end, Osborne has wisely vowed to resolve the arena issue within the next year, whether it’s full-speed ahead on some Haymarket palace, or a revamp of Devaney. Wisely, Osborne won’t allow the athletic department to get dragged into city politics and the mercurial nature of Lincoln voters. Lincoln will do what it does, and considering the city can’t devise a way to get across town in 15 minutes, the arena may end up being a long shot. Good to see Osborne has a contingency plan at Devaney. Now, if he can just get some reasonable parking around it.

    Spend football donor dollars wisely: Not blow them on baubles and trinkets, like ribbon boards inside Memorial Stadium. Enough of that stuff. The stadium experience is fine. It’s a football game, not a light show. Dump the media guides if you have to do it. Reporters know how to go online, and Huskers.com is a fine Web site anyhow. Spend it on people – coaches, administrators, down-the-line support staffers. Nebraska can’t afford to lose talent over a thousand here or there. In other words: Do what it takes to retain offensive coordinator Shawn Watson.

    Beat Texas – and the rest of the Big 12 - where the Longhorns haven’t thought to fight: Osborne’s ahead of the game there with his student life complex initiative, which can be turned into one of Bo Pelini’s best recruiting tools when it is completed.

    Follow us on Twitter!

    See also: A Conversation with Phil Steele

    Tags: tom osborne, nebraska, texas, doc sadler, haymarket arena, mark manning, wrestling, volleyball, baseball, mike anderson

  15. 2009 Jun 10

    Quote of the Day, 6/10

    238 views

    By DrNaumann

    Blog post image

    “The fans used to think Oklahoma was the enemy. They actually made us better.” -- Tom Osborne.

    Rivals are not always rivals, but challenges and opportunities. This is something to consider as we go through the early stages of Bo Pelini's head coaching career. We will be better if the coaches learn from their wins and losses.


    "Early in my coaching career we lost five straight times to Oklahoma which did not go over very well in Nebraska. But I can say each time we lost we learned a lot, we became a better team. We lost seven straight bowl games at one point and I think each one of those losses was very instructional. So sometimes losing can be the most important thing that happens to you. It depends on how you react to it."

    Tags: tom osborne, oklahoma sooners, nebraska cornhuskes

  16. 2009 Jun 02

    A Bizarre Request...and Nebraska's Response

    874 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    A person on one end of the spectrum could call it a newspaper stunt. A person on the opposite end? A call for accountability.

    Either way, the Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, in an investigative series entitled “Secrecy 101” chose to request, from all of the 119 Division schools in football a whole slew of documents, including the following:

    *Team flight manifests. A record of all students and non-students aboard flight to athletic events.

    *Complimentary ticket lists. A record of whomever a student-athlete chose to give their allotment of free tickets, if they chose to give them out at all.

    *Summer Job forms. A list of where athletes took summer jobs, with whom and how much they’ll earn.

    *All NCAA violation records.

    The request was a way of testing each school as to how it interprets a federal law protecting the "educational record" of students.

    Two schools, notably Texas A&M, provided mostly unedited records for all four requests. Most private schools did nothing, as they are not state institutions and thus not required to produce any documents.

    Nebraska? Here arehttp://www.di...7689939997767 the Huskers’ results. The athletic department produced the team flight logs, but, claiming student privacy laws, did not disclose any information on the final three categories.

    In the course of the series, the Dispatch consulted the U.S. Department of Education, which advised that flight manifests and ticket lists were not private educational records, while NCAA violations probably were, and summer job placements could be. The Dispatch also interviewed the original author of the student privacy law, former Sen. James L. Buckley, who said most academic institutions were using the shield rule improperly, and withholding more than they had a right to.

    In the Big 12, A&M – home to former NU athletic director Bill Byrne – provided the most “open book,” if you will. Kansas, Kansas State and Texas, according to the Dispatch, either “ignored the request or wanted too much money to comply.” The money for copying the documents, we presume. Baylor, a private school, didn’t have to provide documents, and did not. Nebraska, along with the five other Big 12 schools, were somewhere in the middle.

    Pittsburgh, now home of former NU athletic director Steve Pederson, provided nothing, citing, across the board, student privacy.

    The Dispatch editor explained the paper’s query, and series, in an editorial, beginning with this problem:

    “Two 20-year-olds illegally park their cars on the Ohio State University campus.

    One is an OSU student, the other attends Columbus State

    Both get tickets from an OSU campus police officer.

    You can see the Columbus State student's ticket if you want, but the OSU student's ticket is off-limits.”

    The hypothetical begs, of course, the question: Why would anyone want, need or care to know which student did or didn’t get a parking ticket, and whether or not they paid for it…unless that student were minor athletic celebrity known as a college football or basketball player?

    The difference between the two students is negligible, unless it’s an athlete. Then it would be of some public interest. And worth protecting if you’re a university’s athletic department.

    Let us know what you think of the series, and Nebraska’s response to it. Is a stunt? A clever gambit? Should schools turn over info just for the sake of being tossed in the trash bin once the Dispatch realized it was all there? Are summer jobs any business of the local reader unless there’s something untoward after the fact about the jobs? What about complimentary tickets? Should the reader know, or even get to know, if a player has a girlfriend he gives the tickets to? A cousin? On the flip side of the coin: Does an open book policy encourage accountability to such a degree that nobody messes up?

    Discuss in our comments section.

    Tags: columbus dispatch, nebraska athletic department

  17. 2009 May 27

    Fan Photo, 4/28

    122 views

    By DrNaumann

    Blog post image

    This comes from the Locker of GoHusker. Nancy and Tom were on their way to the Missouri game. The album is called Missouri Tailgates. Enjoy and upload your own photos today!

    Tags: fan photo, cornhuskers, nebraska vs, missouri 2008

  18. 2009 May 27

    Well-Aged Beef

    386 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    Nice little piece this mornin in Corn Nation, vis a vis the Wall Street Journal regarding the experience (or lack thereof) of offensive lines in the Big 12.

    The theory: The more experienced a team's line, the better that team's offense will be.

    Generally, we agree with that axiom, unless the experience returning on the offensive line wasn't all that good during the previous. That might go for every position, of course.

    At any rate, in terms of combined starts, Texas leads the Big 12 with 91. Oklahoma State has 86. Nebraska is somewhere in the middle with 61, but that includes seven starts from Jaivorio Burkes, and he's not likely to play next year.

    Oklahoma, as most Husker fans know, is near the bottom, with 29.

    In last? Kansas. With 26.

    Now let it be said that Jayhawk quarterback Todd Reesing cancels out a lot of that inexperience with his own seasoning and scrambling skills. Let it also be said that, in KU zone-read scheme, linemen aren't necessarily charged to do quite as much, or learn quite as quickly, as they are in a West Coast Offense. Plus, the running back in a zone-read scheme - in this case, Jake Sharp - has the freedom to choose the holes with the most running potential.

    Finally - by the time Kansas plays Nebraska, in November, experience simply won't be an issue. Not for KU's line. And not for NU quarterback Zac Lee.

    But is it something to chew on during the summer? Sure.

    Tags: nebraska, kansas, big 12 conference

  19. 2009 May 15

    And So It Is...The Shorter Story...No Love, No Glory

    81 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    Those lines of Damien Rice's "Blower's Daughter" seem appropriate for the Nebraska baseball team's 2009 season as it closes with a three-game homestand vs. Baylor.

    What happened to what had become a lovely spring pastime in Lincoln? You can ask five different Husker baseball aficionados, and you might get the same initial answer - a bad bout of pitching. Some might leave it at that.

    Head coach Mike Anderson, in the middle of this season, essentially chalked it up to his "honesty and integrity" in recruiting. Whether he meant for that to energize his team, or merely explain away temporary misery, the Huskers didn't exactly improve after that April 24 proclamation.

    NU was 18-21-1 at the time; it's now 22-28-1.

    An excellent story by Mitch Sherman in the Omaha World-Herald suggests a pattern stretching back to 2004 (and obviously excluding 2005, when Anderson took NU to the College World Series).

    What the story reveals is a coach and team searching for answers - sometimes prematurely, as was the case in moving ace Mike Nesseth to the bullpen, and sometimes retroactively, after it was too late - and never finding them. Maybe Anderson tinkered too much with lineups. Maybe he didn't trust his pitching enough. Maybe he saw another swoon coming, and tried to head it off any way he knew how.

    It just didn't pan out. And the fans didn't come out to Haymarket Park, either.

    Close your eyes for a second and remember that 2005 regional and super regional held in Lincoln. Almost 9,000 fans stuffed into Haymarket, which only holds about 7,000 comfortably, not an inch of grass leff on the berms as NU dueled rival Creighton in the regional. That first game against the Jays went deep into the night, broken up by weather delays. And the crowd that night, and the next night, was electric, alive with the mood of great baseball.

    Those games, and subsequent wins over vaunted Miami the next weekend, were the apex of Husker baseball, and, short of that epic volleyball match staged in Omaha four months ago between NU and Penn State, the best moment for Husker athletics, period, since 2000.

    If you need a reminder of what that looked like, click here.

    When assessing a tenure and a season, it helps to remember those emotions, and not merely as a means of forgiving the current state of things, but as a distinct reminder that, if it was once that good, it can be again.

    You'll hear the cries of "it was bound to happen" and "one can't expect too much." And those are useful axioms after a season like this.

    But they aren't absolute.

    Tags: nebraska baseball

  20. 2009 May 13

    Paulus Picks The Cuse

    776 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    Greg Paulus decided to go home after all.

    Weeks after speculation had the former Duke point guard returning to his high school stomping grounds to play one season of quarterback for Syracuse, Paulus officially announced he would indeed be playing for the Orange in 2009.

    Paulus will be studying broadcasting at the Newhouse School, considered one of the better broadcasting schools in America.

    "Syracuse has a lot of great things about it," Paulus said. "You grow up in a culture and realize there's a lot of great things out there. My gut and my heart were telling that was the best place for me."

    Paulus had take a two-day visit to Nebraska nearly two weeks ago, and seemingly had the Cornhuskers as a finalist.

    I had a great visit there," Paulus said. "Nebraska is a place where there’s so much tradition. They have great people there. I had a great conversation with Coach Pelini and spent a lot of time with the guys, and Coach Watson. But my heart and my gut told me Syracuse was the best place for me."

    Tags: greg paulus, nebraska football

  21. 2009 May 08

    For Doc, The Future is Now

    1,097 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    The event came and went without much fanfare, at least when it comes the hype, hope and optimism that tends to surround college recruiting.

    Nebraska’s basketball team signed three junior college transfers – Lance Jeter, Quincy Hankins and Myles Holley – on Wednesday, and NU head coach Doc Sadler, eschewing the typical press conference, instead issued a general statement.

    “Lance, Quincy and Myles are excited to join our program and we’re definitely excited to have them,” Sadler said. “Each of them will bring something to the table that we need next year at their positions. Just as important, they’ll have some experience and maturity both on and off the court. We’ll still be a young team next year, but we feel like they will be able to help us right from the start.”

    It’s not Sadler’s style to gush over guys who have yet to produce as Cornhuskers. He’s not much of gusher, period, unless it’s about his team’s effort. He also may not be finished recruiting; depending on whether German import Christian Standhardinger decides to turn pro in Europe – and that itself may be dependent on whether the NCAA makes him eligible for the 2009 season – Sadler could theoretically be signing one more player later this summer, and transitioning oft-injured Chris Balham to a medical exemption.

    But Nebraska hoop heads shouldn’t let this week pass without acknowledging that Doc’s most recent class, combined with fall signees and yet-to-play 2008 recruits Brian Diaz and Christopher Niemann, are the guys who will define Sadler’s tenure at NU.

    After wringing about as much as he could out of the Huskers in his first three seasons, leading them to two NIT appearances, Sadler enters the next two campaigns with a squad full of his guys, a roster of his molding.

    Doc wanted size to consistently compete with the upper half of the Big 12 Conference, and to finish off teams like Texas A&M. Now he’s got it. Niemann, Diaz and Hankins should all be above-average rebounders. Holley, at 6-foot-5, has the reputation for being a leaper. If Standhardinger actually arrives in Lincoln, he could be the best of the bunch.

    Doc wanted a big, physical point guard to the run the show, and especially needs a point guard of any kind after Cookie Miller left the team. Jeter fits the bill. He needs to lose weight, yes, but Jeter shouldn’t be outmuscled by anyone. And, from high school through junior college, he was a winner, which counts for something. Point guards, like quarterbacks, are better once they get used to closing out games.

    Doc wanted guys who can create their own shots and get points. He’s got them. Holley, by all accounts, is an effective scorer inside the arc. Eshaunte Jones, who sat out last year with an injury, is a terrific shooter, if his off-to-the-side practice sessions were much of an indication. And Sadler’s pretty high on incoming recruit Rayes Gallegos, a 6-2 off-guard who changes directions and gets off the floor pretty quickly. And, of course, there’s the enigmatic sophomore Toney McCray.

    No, it’s not Kansas talent. Or Texas talent, although Sadler outcoaches Rick Barnes anyway. But it’s NCAA Tournament talent. Gallegos and Diaz should be regarded as sleepers. Medical situations prevented Holley and McCray from being hotter commodities out of high school. Jones and Hankins weren’t academically ready. Niemann and Standhardinger are from Germany, scared teams off because of potential eligibility issues.

    Credit Doc for talking to the right people and turning over the right stones. A lot of BCS schools wouldn’t have made the effort.

    Nebraska, of course, isn’t a lot of BCS schools.

    While Barry Collier didn’t fully appreciate that in his first couple seasons, Sadler did from the jump, and has made few bones about taking risks, when necessary, to cobble together a team that doesn’t fade in the Big 12, or falter against lesser foes in the non-conference slate.

    Well, Doc’s done cobbled it, as one might say. Now, he got to coach it.

    Consider me intrigued to see how Sadler creates and maintains basketball chemistry among guys with such disparate backgrounds and playing experiences. It’s not just where they’re from – and they’re from all over, from New York to Utah to California to Puerto Rico to Germany to Washington D.C. – but who and how they’ve played the game for last two years, if they’ve played much at all.

    He must find “dirty work” replacements for Paul Velander and Ade Dagunduro and an “energy” replacement for Miller, whose joy for the game rubbed off on his teammates. He must decide whether senior Ryan Anderson – presuming Anderson takes his name out of the NBA Draft – stays at a power forward spot, or moves back to his role two years ago. And I predict that Sadler will be having “the talk” with McCray, and determining whether McCray’s ready to make the leap forward his talent suggests.

    A sculpture in process. But fine clay is there.

    I had an interesting conversation recently with a Husker hoop head, who compared Sadler’s early years to that Kansas football coach Mark Mangino.

    Like Sadler followed Danny Nee and Barry Collier, Mangino followed the reasonably successful Glen Mason – who, like Nee at NU, was looking for a way out of KU, and eventually found one – and amiable failure Terry Allen.

    Like Mangino learned under one old master (Bill Snyder) and one young one (Bob Stoops), Sadler served as understudy to Eddie Sutton and Billy Gillispie.

    Like Mangino, Sadler recruits players other Big 12 schools don’t want and coaches them up.

    Like Mangino, Sadler often outcoaches his Big 12 counterparts.

    Like Mangino, Sadler has a blue collar “I’m-gonna-earn-this” style about him.

    Like Mangino, Sadler finally convinced NU’s athletic department to raise money for the kind of facilities needed to compete in a BCS conference.

    What Mangino had, the fan said, that Sadler doesn’t, is a program-transforming talent like Todd Reesing. But maybe Sadler has that player among his crop now.

    It was a compelling argument, really.

    “With one difference,” I said.

    Sadler’s not competing in the Big 12 North Mangino entered in 2002, with Nebraska in decline, Kansas State nearing it and Colorado on the verge of total disaster with a recruiting scandal. Football stunk in the Big 12 North for a good five years. That’s no secret.

    Sadler coaches 100 miles from supernova Kansas, which, unlike NU’s football program, never lost its death grip on the division when Roy Williams left for North Carolina. Sadler coaches against awakening power Missouri and Kansas State assistant Dalonte Hill, who is paid gobs of money to draw some of the nation’s best prep talent to KSU for one or two years.

    Mangino, as it turned out, got to build his program slowly while the Big 12 North, collectively, sat asleep at the wheel.

    Sadler has no luxury.

    And yet – now is the time. Athletic director Tom Osborne is making the commitment in NU basketball. The practice facility has a $10 million starting gift. And either the new arena’s getting built in the Haymarket in the next five years, or the Bob Devaney Sports Center is getting a major facelift. Osborne appreciates that Nebraska can either choose to join teams like Missouri, Kansas State, Texas A&M and Baylor as yearly contenders for the NCAA Tournament, or join Colorado in the perennial cellar.

    The next two years are crucial. These are Doc’s guys, and they’ll play his style.

    If he successfully integrates their styles and personalities, and develops a go-to guy for that last shot, NU is nationally relevant again for the first time since the early 1990s. And Sadler, who works so hard and handles so much of the day-to-day and game coaching, becomes a guy Nebraska will have to pay handsomely to keep.

    But if these guys don’t fit Sadler’s system or he can’t adjust to them, well, they arrived on his watch.

    We’ll see if it makes for good basketball.

    Either way, it’s going to be good drama.

    See also: Rock Bottom for Nebraska baseball?[/b]

    Tags: nebraska basketball, doc sadler, lance jeter, quincy hankins, myles holley

  22. 2009 May 05

    BASKETBALL: Huskers Have a Holley

    101 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    Doc's apparently landed another one.

    Myles Holley, a 6-5 swingman who attends junior college in Virginia but plays basketball for The Heat Academy, will be signing with NU, he told the Lincoln Journal-Star Monday.

    Holley was an academic casualty coming out of Booker T. Washington high school in Norfolk, Va.; otherwise, he likely could have been a ACC recruit. He spent the last year playing The Heat Academy, a club team with no college affiliation, to save a year of eligibility for Division I.

    The Heat Academy drew national attention for having one of the nation's most coveted, and mysterious, frontcourt recruits, 6-10 Sudanese refugee Ater Majok, who committed to Connecticut in 2008. Majok was deemed ineligible by the NCAA until the end of the first academic semester in 2009, so he declared for the NBA Draft two weeks ago without hiring an agent.

    The joint is, well, interesting. Not bad. Just interesting. Here's a story written on it back in 2007 for the Washington Post. The last few paragraphs are a mixture of sadness and unintentional humor, but the overall mission of The Heat Academy isn't a bad one.

    Should Holley sign, that means NU is one player over the 13-scholarship limit. At this point, either German import Christian Standhardinger isn't showing up, Ryan Anderson is staying in the NBA Draft or Sadler has to remove somebody from the scholarship rolls. Chris Balham, perhaps?

    Tags: nebraska basketball, myles holley, doc sadler

  23. 2009 Apr 30

    Big 12 Schedules In The Cellar, and Mizzou's Squarely Under The Stairs

    1,148 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    At least when it comes to scheduling BCS opponents in non-conference games.

    Prop-a-la-drops to the Daily Oklahoman's Berry Tramel for doing the research that shows Big 12 teams scheduled only 23 percent (11 of 48) of its non-league games against BCS foes from the ACC, Big East, SEC, Pac 10 and Big Ten conferences. Compare that to:

    50 percent in the Pac 10
    41 percent in the ACC
    40 percent in the Big East
    32 percent in the Big Ten
    29 percent in the SEC


    Texas and Texas Tech don't play any BCS schools. UT's platter of Louisiana-Monroe, Wyoming, Central Florida and UTEP is particularly indefensible.

    Nebraska, still operating under the old Steve Pederson scheduling standard, plays three Sun Belt teams - Florida Atlantic, Louisiana-Lafayette and Arkansas State - along with a game at Virginia Tech. It gets worse in 2010 with games vs. Idaho, Western Kentucky and, God help us, South Dakota State. Hopefully, Bo Pelini tries to get out of that game, even though he's said, in the past, he wouldn't. NU has no business hosting SDSU. None.

    But credit where it's due: Pelini and Director of Football Operation Jeff Jamrog have been pretty aggressive in the last year, notching deals with Wyoming, Southern Mississippi and Fresno State, along with a tentative deal with Miami (Fla.), which still isn't officially on the schedule yet. While Fresno and USM aren't BCS schools, they could compete consistently in one. Wyoming, while no one's idea of a powerhouse, is at least a regional opponent with solid standing in Division I for many years.

    At any rate, NU, even under Pederson, always maintained some integrity. The 2007 schedule - road game at Wake Forest, home with USC, Ball State and Nevada - involved four bowl teams. Even if a year like 1986 never comes around again - the Huskers faced Florida State and Oregon at home and Illinois and South Carolina on the road that season - Nebraska can hold its head up. Ditto for Colorado, which doesn't shy away BCS teams, and Oklahoma, which schedules one pastry per year, but balances it with two solid games (in 2009 it's BYU and Miami).

    But can one really, at this point, excuse Texas Tech and Missouri?

    The Red Raiders actively avoid tough non-conference games season after season. They haven't played a non-league BCS foe since 2003. Why? Mike Leach's bunch carries itself like a Mountain West or WAC program. There are currently, through 2011 no BCS opponents at all on Tech's schedule. Surely the Red Raiders have had offers. Is New Mexico and Houston the best Leach can do?

    The Tigers, meanwhile, tout themselves as a national program that's apparently "arrived."

    OK then - when will they start scheduling like it?

    Here are the teams Mizzou has scheduled from 2010 until 2015:

    Illinois
    McNeese State
    Toledo (head coach Gary Pinkel's former school)
    Wyoming
    Southern Illinois


    Now, here are the teams Nebraska has scheduled thus far in that same time:

    Washington
    UCLA
    Miami (Fla.)
    Fresno State
    Wyoming
    Southern Mississippi
    Idaho
    South Dakota State
    Western Kentucky


    You tell us: Which one looks like the team that just won two consecutive Big 12 North titles?

    Mizzou likes to hide behind its neutral game with Illinois and call that a sufficient challenge. The Illini aren't bad - they went to the Rose Bowl after the 2007 season - but if St. Louis is as far as Pinkel's boys are willing to go...

    Since former head coach Larry Smith left the building Mizzou has scheduled two non-league BCS opponents - Ole Miss and Illinois. That's it.

    Folks, that's not arriving.

    We save a special place for Bill Snyder, whose Kansas State teams will now actively pursue dogs and actively attempt to reverse the one good thing Ron Prince did, which was schedule better non-conference opponents.

    The Big 12 administrative folks have brayed at league schools to schedule better teams. Certain coaches won't out of nothing more than fear of losing. Whether that's money or victories, what lesson does that send to the student-athletes? On the one hand, you tell them to compete at the highest level. On the other, you hide in an ivory tower and wait for October.

    If the league really wanted to make an impact on this issue, it would build in number of BCS teams scheduled in the non-conference season, and the records of those teams, into the tiebreaker system.

    HuskerLocker is now on Twitter. Follow us!

    Get free updates on NU football! Sign up for Husker Locker for free today!

    Tags: big 12 conference, texas, nebraska, missouri, pinkel factor

  24. 2009 Apr 22

    Quote of the Day 4/23

    186 views

    By DrNaumann

    Blog post image

    "I'm flattered that so many baseball people think I'm a Hall of Famer. But what's hard to believe is how one-hundred and fifty plus people have changed their minds about me since I became eligible, because I haven't had a base hit since then." -Ritchie Ashburn




    Major League Baseball Hall of Famer, Ritchie Ashburn was raised in Tilden, Nebraska. He was one of the famous “Whiz Kids,” a lineup of young players, brought up through the Phillies' farm system. As an expert centerfielder, the Phillies have named centerfield Ashburn Alley and have erected a bronze statue (pictured above) in his honor. His .308 lifetime batting average helped lead the team to the 1950 World Series where the Yankees took the trophy.


    As a player, he often said: "To cure a batting slump, I took my bat to bed with me. I wanted to know my bat a little better."

    Tags: mlb hall of fame, ritchie ashburn, nebraska baseball, quote of the day

  25. 2009 Mar 15

    NU's in the NIT. And look who else is in its bracket...

    237 views

    By HuskerLocker

    Blog post image

    Nebraska basketball coach Doc Sadler figured an 18-12 record and an 8-8 finish in the Big 12 would be enough for a NIT bid.

    Turns out he was right. If the Huskers could get on a run - oh, what a juicy game could await in 10 days.

    NU received a No. 6 seed in the "Creighton bracket" of the 32-team field, and will play at New Mexico Tuesday in a 9 p.m. game to be televised on ESPNU.

    "I’ve said since the first day of this season that this team has given me everything it has, every day, every practice, every time they step on the floor. They deserve the chance to keep competing,” Sadler said. “We didn’t reach our primary goal which every year is to be in the NCAA Tournament, but getting to the postseason two straight years -- and especially this year against such a strong NIT field -- is another step forward in building this program. We’re excited to have the chance to get back to work and see what we can accomplish the rest of this season.”

    The Lobos are 21-11 and finished 12-5 in the Mountain West Conference. UNM and NU share three common opponents from the regular season: The Lobos lost to Creighton and Texas Tech, while Nebraska beat those teams. UNM beat TCU twice, while NU won in Forth Worth early in the season.

    Should the Huskers win that game they would face the winner of UAB-Notre Dame. The Irish received a surprising No. 2 seed despite a 17-14 record and a lower RPI (77) than Nebraska (75). UAB, meanwhile, has an RPI of 46, and beat NCAA Tournament qualifier Arizona earlier this year.

    The marquee game lurks in the third round, where top-seeded Creighton could host Nebraska in the Qwest Center to determine who would travel to New York City for the NIT semifinals. CU will have to beat Bowling Green and the winner of the Kentucky/UNLV game, though, while NU would possibly have to win two games on the road.

    Kansas State received a four seed in the "San Diego State" bracket, facing Illinois State in the opening game. Baylor, with its late run through the Big 12 Tournament, received a No. 3 seed.

    Tags: nebraska basketball, nit

  26. 2009 Mar 14

    The Second Coming of Sam Keller?

    6,605 views

    By SMcKewon

    Blog post image

    OK, so this one comes way out of left field - former starting Miami quarterback Robert Marve, who was involved in a real mess trying to get out of the Hurricanes' program and transfer to the schools he preferred, has apparently whittled his list down to six finalists - and Nebraska is one of them.

    Other finalists: Michigan, Purdue, Texas Tech, South Florida and UCLA. The story mentions Marve has visited Nebraska, as well.

    Marve, who started 11 games last year threw for more than 1,200 yards and nine touchdowns, would have to sit out 2010, but would have two years to play after that. Marve presumably flew onto the Husker radar after backup Patrick Witt left the program.

    The Tampa, Florida, native redshirted in 2007 - after sustaining injuries in a serious car crash prior to fall camp - then got the starting nod in 2008 before while sharing time with Jacory Harris. Marve was suspended twice for violation of team rules, and chose to leave the program, with he and his parents giving the distinct idea that Marve has been poorly treated by UM coach Randy Shannon.

    Shannon certainly seemed to hold a grudge, initially forbidding Marve from transferring to any ACC or SEC school, as well as any program in the state of Florida. Eventually the transfer order was changed to any ACC school, along with Florida, Tennessee and LSU. Shannon had already told Marve that, no matter what, he wasn't starting in 2009, and that Harris would be named the starter in the spring.

    Rivals rated him the No. 8 pro-style quarterback coming out of high school in 2008. In his final year of high school play, Marve threw for 4,380 yards and 48 touchdowns. He's identifiable by the glove he wears on his non-throwing hand.

    The best game of his short career at UM was against Texas A&M, when he threw for 212 yards and two touchdowns in a 41-23 win.

    We'll keep you up to date on this one. It ought to be interesting.

    Do you want the best updates on Nebraska football? Sign up today - it's as free as it can be!

    Tags: robert marve, nebraska football

  27. 2009 Feb 21

    Husker Wrestlers Hope to Paint It Black

    101 views

    By SMcKewon

    Blog post image

    It's pretty rare that Nebraska's wrestling team goes through a conference season undefeated. OK, well, it's more than rare. NU's never done it its 99-year history.

    No time like the present, then, as the No. 3 Cornhuskers (17-2-1) host No. 4 Iowa State (13-3) Sunday at the NU Coliseum. It promises to be one of the biggest crowds of the year - if not the biggest - with Nebraska fans expected to wear black to the proceedings.

    jweir48, our fabulous fan who runs the Wrestling Fans group, had provided a fine preview of this match. Highly recommended reading, with breakdowns of the matchups.

    Hope to see you there if you're in town!

    Tags: nebraska wrestling

  28. 2009 Feb 19

    BASEBALL: The Optimist, Mike Anderson

    236 views

    By SMcKewon

    Blog post image

    His No. 1 pitcher threw all of 14 innings last season. He likes to fill out lineup cards as a hobby, and one of them includes five freshmen. His ballclub is in a Murderer’s Row of a league this year in the Big 12, where five teams are ranked in the top 20 of the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll, and three of them featuring arguably the best pitchers in the nation.

    In the face of all this, Nebraska baseball coach Mike Anderson smiled Tuesday in front of the media. Dressed in a blue suit – refreshing, by the way, to see a coach not decked out in official team gear for the occasion – he described NU’s 2009 campaign as a challenge, yes. But he strained to qualify it, several times, as the right kind of challenge – an opportunity.

    “It’ll be a fun year for us,” he said.

    Fun? That’s what the man said. One of “adverse situations” and surprise contributions. One he thinks his young pups – some of these guys look like they ought to be renting a limo for prom instead of facing down Texas and Wichita State – are ready for. The goals remain the same across the train tracks at Hawks Field. Win the Big 12 Conference and see you in Omaha for the College World Series.

    “Are we young? Yes,” Anderson said. “Is it possible? Yes. Everybody else can tell we can’t do it.”

    Well, count on naysayers. As the Cornhuskers open the season with a four-game series at Louisiana-Lafayette Friday, they’re already picked to place seventh in the Big 12 by league coaches. Once rulers of the roost among teams in the Big 12 North – Iowa State and Colorado don’t field squads – NU has been evenly matched in recent years by Missouri.

    You’d think the coaches would learn, considering NU was picked sixth last year, and turned that same disrespect into a 41-16-1 season, far beyond most expectations, even if the Huskers ran out of steam in the regional. Nebraska had a shot at the league crown going into the final weekend. The snub made little sense last year, as NU trotted out three strong pitchers, including ace Johnny Dorn, who averaged nearly a strikeout an inning and battled with the Big 12’s best.

    This year, Nebraska must rely on two sophomores – one of them about as a green as a starter can be – to carry the load as the young offense slips into gear. Michael Mariot, the No. 1 starter , pitched in spot duty last year – all of 14 innings on the Huskers’ strong staff – but grabbed the ball and threw effectively in two summer leagues, including a stint for the Beatrice Bruins.

    “It’s a little unexpected,” Mariot said of the start. “It’s kind of like a shock.”

    Mike Nesseth, the No. 2 guy, sure looks the part, at 6-5 and 220 pounds. He pitched in relief last year, is rated the 63rd best prospect for the MLB Draft by Baseball America, and might be the No. 1 guy if he hadn’t spent part of February sick.

    Anderson seems to love them both. Mariot, who employs four pitches, is “unassuming and deadly,” Anderson. Nesseth is easy with a smile. Both of them, Anderson said, “are going to try to cut your knees out.”

    “I’ll sure take those two guys,” he said.

    And the coach who frankly loves big offense seems excited about his potential lineups, which could include, if Anderson so wishes, only righties or lefties. Nebraska has four switch-hitters, and “lots of versatility.” He wants more power out of this lineup – last year’s bunch was efficient in small ball for much of the season, but went arid in the regional.

    What are Anderson's plans for Khiry Cooper?

    Tags: nebraska baseball, mike anderson

  29. 2009 Feb 19

    HuskerVision Upgrade, and a Slight Ticket Hike for 2009

    168 views

    By SMcKewon

    Blog post image

    Nebraska’s HuskerVision is getting an upgrade to HD, and Memorial Stadium will be adding two more video boards for the 2009 season.

    The improvement and additions were announced Thursday by Nebraska athletic director Tom Osborne.

    “Our fans should really enjoy the new features planned for Memorial Stadium,” Osborne said. “We have heard from fans who were concerned about not having a clear view of the replay screens and we have addressed that. The high-definition format will really add to what HuskerVision does.”

    The new boards will be the same size - 21 feet x 24 feet - as those currently hung on the columns in South Stadium. They will be placed on the towers in North Stadium, which will put a video board at every corner of the stadium.

    The HD upgrade should provide fans with crisper video replays and more readable graphics on the main board in North Stadium. Some college football programs – including Texas and its “Godzillatron” -already had HD video boards. The upgrades will cost $3 million and be partially funded by the contract with NU’s marketing partner, IMG.

    Season ticket prices were also set for next year’s seven home games. Not including seat donations, they are:

    Season Ticket Total (Average) $378 ($54 per game)
    UNL Faculty and Staff (Average) $357 ($51 per game)
    UNL Student Ticket Total (Average) $147 ($21 per game)


    The $54 per game is a $2 increase from last year. Today's annoucement doesn't necessarily connect the price of the video boards to the ticket increase, however.

    Tags: tickets, nebraska football, huskervision

  30. 2009 Feb 18

    No Love for Husker Baseball?

    103 views

    By SMcKewon

    Blog post image

    Nebraska was picked to finished seventh in the preseason coaches this year, predictably behind Texas A&M, Texas and Baylor, but also behind Missouri and Oklahoma.

    Mizzou is getting its juice off what might be the best position player in the Big 12, Aaron Senne. A&M, coached by former NU pitching coach Rob Childress, got the nod as the league favorite, the first time since 2001 that Texas was not tabbed. The Aggies and Longhorns arguably have the league's two best pitches in Kyle Thebeau and Chance Ruffin, respectively.

    Nebraska, meanwhile, has to find a replacement for stud ace Johnny Dorn, who was second in the Big 12 last year in strikeouts. The Huskers will turn to two "Mikes" - Michael Mariot, who pitched all of 14 innings last year but had strong showings in two summer leagues, and Mike Nesseth, the affable, 6-5 sophomore who has the frame and the heat to be Nebraska's next great pitcher.

    We'll have more on these two tomorrow. Good kids, the both of them.

    Check out the rest of today's news so far...

    Tags: nebraska baseball, the two mikes

Great Husker Merchandise and Video. Best of Big Red. Osborne Family Enterprises
Click here for our Husker Locker Business Partners specials and discounts.

Advertisement

 

Home > Blogs > Search