Nebraska
Sherman: Echoes of a bygone era stir postseason hope for Nebraska baseball
LINCOLN, Neb. — Seven years of postseason magic began a quarter-century ago for Nebraska baseball. It matters more today than at any time since the run came to an end.
I’ll explain.
But first, a story from one of the peak moments of that era: On June 2, 2001, Nebraska hosted Rice in Game 2 of the only super regional ever played at Buck Beltzer Field.
It was, in fact, the final game at the rickety venue, which was quickly razed to make room for football practice space as Dave Van Horn’s baseball program upgraded into its new Haymarket digs. But as the early innings unfolded with a first trip to the College World Series in reach for Nebraska, another day at “The Buck” appeared inevitable.
Rice sent Kenny Baugh to the mound. The hard-throwing right-hander was drafted with the 11th pick of the MLB Draft by the Detroit Tigers three days after his final collegiate appearance that Saturday.
Baugh never played in the big leagues amid the need for shoulder surgery. Part of the reason for his trouble, undeniably, remains buried in Lincoln.
He threw 171 pitches in 8 ⅓ innings against Nebraska. Let that sink in.
None of the first 11 plate appearances for the Huskers ended with a ball in play. Jeff Leise led off the top of the first for Nebraska. It was the visiting team after dispatching the Owls, 7-0, one day prior in the series opener.
Leise struck out. The outstanding player at the Lincoln Regional from the previous week, he walked back toward the third-base dugout. Teammates looked to him for a report on Baugh.
“Good luck,” Leise said he told them, recounting the memory this week. “I didn’t really have much to add other than that. He was mid-90s with his fastball, but it looked harder than that, and he had a power curve.”
Baugh fought his control. Still, several of those 2001 Huskers, in rewatching the game a few years ago, traded texts in wonderment during the replay of the late innings over how Nebraska managed to beat the Owls. The Huskers scored three runs against Baugh in the ninth to take a 6-5 lead and won it in the 10th.
Junior shortstop Will Bolt caught the final out to ignite a dogpile.
The Huskers slayed a dragon. Rice beat Nebraska 16-2 four months earlier in the first game of that season. After another dogpile last Sunday in Omaha when Nebraska won the Big Ten tournament with Bolt at the helm, the Huskers’ resilience and competitive fire echoed a bygone era.
“A lot of memories come flooding back,” Bolt said.
GO DEEPER
Nebraska baseball enters regular-season finale with postseason hopes still on the line
Now, the question is, can they travel a similar path in June?
Van Horn, Bolt’s old coach who has run the show at Arkansas since 2003, masterfully designed his Nebraska program to play with a collective chip on its shoulder.
“People didn’t think much of us when they saw us,” said Leise, a first-team All-American outfielder in 2002 who now provides baseball commentary for the Big Ten Network.
From 1999 to 2005, Nebraska won four Big 12 tournaments. Three times out of the four, the Huskers lost their first games in Oklahoma City, then stormed back to raise a trophy.
These Huskers did the same last week. Instead of Chad Wiles, R.D. Spiehs and Scott Fries who ate innings unexpectedly, it was Will Walsh, Drew Christo and Jackson Brockett. In place of Dan Johnson and Jed Morris who smashed home runs, it was Josh Caron and Gabe Swansen.
“There are certain attributes, certain traits that all (championship teams) have,” Bolt said Sunday. “Toughness is at the top of the list. Talent, you’ve gotta have it. You’ve gotta have the dudes. You’ve gotta have the players.
“The separator is the toughness piece of it, just the unwillingness to waver from a process of showing up and having a job to do.”
In Bolt’s time as a player, Nebraska capitalized on the momentum gained from its second and third Big 12 tourney championships to win regionals. Trips to the CWS followed league tourney titles in 2001 and 2005. Texas beat the Huskers in 2002 to win the Big 12 tournament in Arlington, Texas, before both squads advanced to the CWS.
I had a front-row seat for the rise of Nebraska baseball, reporting on those teams daily during the postseason for the Omaha World-Herald. What struck me was not the heroics on the diamond that put the Huskers over the top in do-or-die games.
It was their composure and togetherness. They were more of a force off the field than on it. I’ve seen more teams like them in decades of watching the CWS up close. Many hoisted trophies in Omaha.
“You can tell this team is close,” Leise said. “They go to bat for each other. When things get tough, they fight through adversity. We played that way. We practiced that way. There was a level of excellence that everybody strived for.”
Ohio State flattened Nebraska 15-2 in the opening game for both teams at this year’s Big Ten tournament. Just as the Huskers responded after several difficult defeats in April and May, they won last week behind ace pitcher Brett Sears. He beat Purdue, and then Nebraska went to work in ending the stays of Ohio State, Indiana and Penn State.
“That confidence and that experience,” Bolt said, “that postseason feel, the butterflies, all of that they’re taking with them this week.”
Championship numbers. 📊🏆 pic.twitter.com/nIS5CWp0cM
— Nebraska Baseball (@HuskerBaseball) May 29, 2024
The Huskers head to the Stillwater Regional as the No. 2 seed of four teams, set to face Florida on Friday at 2 p.m.
Sears will be on the mound, ready to slay a dragon.
LSU beat the Gators last year in the decisive third game of the CWS championship series. This year, Florida still hits home runs like a national title contender. But it’s 28-27 and snuck into the 64-team field.
“We’ll play anybody in the country and it’s not going to change our approach,” Christo said. “We’re going to show up and be the same team every day.”
That these Huskers last week showed a resemblance to the best teams in school history — with a coach who connects one era to the other — offers hope of a memorable June on the horizon.
(Photo of Caleb Clark: Courtesy of Nebraska Athletics)
Nebraska
Former Nebraska U.S. Sen. Ben Sasse says he has stage-four pancreatic cancer
Former Nebraska U.S. Sen. Ben Sasse on Tuesday said he was diagnosed with advanced pancreatic cancer.
Sasse, 53, made the announcement on social media, saying he learned of the disease last week and is “now marching to the beat of a faster drummer.”
“This is a tough note to write, but since a bunch of you have started to suspect something, I’ll cut to the chase,” Sasse wrote. “Last week I was diagnosed with metastasized, stage-four pancreatic cancer, and am gonna die.”
Sasse was first elected to the Senate in 2014 and won reelection in 2020. He resigned in 2023 to serve as the 13th president of the University of Florida after a contentious approval process. He left that post the following year after his wife was diagnosed with epilepsy.
Sasse was an outspoken critic of President Donald Trump, and he was one of seven Republican senators to vote to convict the former president of “incitement of insurrection” after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Sasse, who has degrees from Harvard, St. John’s College and Yale, worked as an assistant secretary of Health and Human Services under President George W. Bush. He then served as president of Midland University before he ran for the Senate. Midland is a small Christian university in eastern Nebraska.
Sasse and his wife have three children.
“I’m not going down without a fight. One sub-part of God’s grace is found in the jawdropping advances science has made the past few years in immunotherapy and more,” Sasse wrote. “Death and dying aren’t the same — the process of dying is still something to be lived.”
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Nebraska
Nebraska Cornhuskers could lure 4,000-yard QB away from Big Ten football rival | Sporting News
The Nebraska Cornhuskers are in search of a new quarterback. While there appear to be a few on the market, one of them appears to reportedly be interested in replacing Dylan Raiola.
Enter Michigan State Spartans transfer quarterback Aidan Chiles.
Nebraska coach Matt Rhule is focused on what’s best for his team, and although he didn’t mention Chiles by name, he is intrigued by the possibilities of a new signal-caller.
“We’re really grateful for all he did, and if he needs a fresh start,” Rhule told reporters. I’ll pray that he finds the right place and has a lot of success. With that being said, there are a lot of great quarterbacks out there, and a lot of them want to play at Nebraska.”
According to On3’s Pete Nakos, Raiola’s Nebraska exit opens the door for Chiles.
“Two schools have been mentioned early on for the Michigan State quarterback,” Nakos wrote. “Sources have linked Aidan Chiles to Cincinnati and Nebraska. The Cornhuskers are not only looking at one quarterback.”
Nakos followed up by reiterating how strategic this process will be in Lincoln.
“Sources have said Matt Rhule is evaluating the entire quarterback field in the portal, and that could include Boston College’s Dylan Lonergan and Notre Dame’s Kenny Minchey, among others.”
We’ll see how the Cornhuskers end up, but it seems some preliminary movement is just beginning.
Nebraska
Nebraska Emerging as Contender for 2027 Edge Rusher
Nebraska continues to make its presence felt on the recruiting trail, this time turning attention toward 2027 three-star edge prospect Griff Galloway.
The Cornhuskers have positioned themselves as a serious contender early in the process, signaling their intent to build future defensive depth with a versatile pass rusher who’s already drawing national interest. As Galloway’s recruitment heats up, Nebraska’s involvement underscores the program’s commitment to securing impact talent for the years ahead.
Galloway, a defensive line prospect from Providence Day School in Charlotte, North Carolina, stands at 6-foot-3 and weighs 240 pounds. A member of the Class of 2027, Galloway has already drawn attention on the recruiting trail, earning a player rating of 88 from 247Sports. He ranks as the No. 45 defensive lineman nationally and is among the top prospects in North Carolina, positioning himself as a name to watch as his timeline unfolds.
Galloway’s recruitment has quickly gained momentum, with the Providence Day standout already collecting ten scholarship offers. Among the programs showing strong interest, Nebraska, SMU, Notre Dame, and Tennessee have emerged as the schools in the final mix. As the Class of 2027 defensive lineman continues to evaluate his options, these four programs stand out as the leading contenders for his commitment, underscoring the national attention his talent has drawn at an early stage.
According to MaxPreps, Galloway has shown steady production across his high school career at Providence Day. As a junior, he recorded 27 solo tackles and 39 assists for a total of 66 stops, averaging 5.5 tackles per game with 13 tackles for loss. His sophomore campaign was even more impressive, as he tallied 31 solo tackles and 48 assists, finishing with 79 total tackles, 6.6 per game, and ten tackles for loss.
Several schools are starting to stand out for 2027 EDGE Griff Galloway, according to @ChadSimmons_ 👀
Read: https://t.co/x6Oa8PXNGy pic.twitter.com/mMAQszZZgb
— Rivals (@Rivals) December 19, 2025
Galloway first made his mark as a freshman, posting 39 solo tackles and 21 assists for 60 total, averaging 4.6 per game with 9 tackles for loss. The numbers highlight his consistency and growth as a disruptive force on the defensive line.
On film, Galloway flashes several standout traits that make him a compelling defensive prospect. His quick first step allows him to penetrate gaps and disrupt plays right at the snap, while his relentless motor ensures he pursues ball carriers across the field with consistent energy. Galloway’s versatility is another asset, as he has lined up both inside and outside, showing the flexibility to play on the edge or slide into a 3-tech role depending on scheme.
The production backs up the tape. His MaxPreps numbers reveal steady growth in tackles and tackles for loss each season, underscoring his ability to finish plays and impact games at multiple levels of the defense.
While Galloway’s film shows plenty of promise, there are clear areas for growth that could elevate his game. He needs refinement in hand usage and pad level to consistently win battles against stronger offensive linemen, ensuring he can maintain leverage and control at the point of attack. In addition, developing a wider array of pass-rush counters will be crucial to his progression, helping him move beyond being a solid disruptor to becoming a true difference-maker on the defensive front.
Grateful to be named RBC player of the week vs Rolesville @ChadGrier_ @PrepRedzoneNC @pepman704 @247recruiting @RBC pic.twitter.com/zlqa4DFMah
— Griff Galloway (@Griff_Galloway) September 6, 2025
Nebraska’s defensive vision under Matt Rhule emphasizes toughness and versatility up front, and Galloway’s skill set fits seamlessly into that approach. With the ability to line up both on the edge and inside, his size and motor make him a natural fit for the Huskers’ multiple 3 looks. Nebraska is actively recruiting pass rushers to strengthen its defensive line rotation, and Galloway’s recruitment shows the program’s commitment to targeting national prospects with high upside.
With continued development, Galloway projects as a player who could contribute early in a rotational role before growing into a starter capable of setting the edge and generating consistent pressure. If the Huskers can secure him, he’d be a valuable addition to their 2027 class, offering both immediate depth and long-term upside as a disruptive edge presence.
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