Nebraska
Dave Feit: A Narrative-Busting Victory for Nebraska Football
Well… how about that?
Just when you think you know the 2024 Huskers, they go and do something to completely flip the script.
There have been so many different narratives about this team and their deficiencies. They’re “snakebit” and cursed. The offense stinks. Quarterback Dylan Raiola has regressed. Bad attitudes and the “here we go again” mindset are a cancer. The upperclassmen are holding this team back. Matt Rhule will start 2025 on the hot seat.
And on and on.
This was a narrative-busting game. On a feel-good Saturday afternoon, the Huskers dispatched Big Ten nemesis Wisconsin with surprising ease. Rhule, who has clearly been carrying the weight of our collective expectations (as well as our shared PTSD for the 118 losses that occurred between 62-36 and his hiring), can finally exhale. The eight-year* bowl drought monkey is finally off this program’s back.
*A quick pause to point out that had the Huskers sought and accepted a likely bowl bid after the 2020 season, the bowl-less streak would “only” have been at three seasons. Thankfully, this is now a moot point.
That’s the beauty of a three-score win on Senior Day – it has the ability to wash a lot of the season’s sins away. We can take a deep breath, smile, and start to realize that maybe things weren’t as bad as we thought they were. Celebrate the past and focus on the future. That’s needed because one 19-point victory – or even a much-needed set of bowl practices – won’t fix all of Nebraska’s issues.
There are still assistants who would be best utilized in different roles (or at other programs). The special teams have only improved from “liability” to “sub-par”. The defense is clearly in “bend, but don’t break” mode.
Senior Days stir up nostalgia, but also fears about who will replace the contributors who are not coming back. The coming roster purge down to 105 adds a new layer of complexity. Nebraska can no longer attempt to solve a lack of depth by hoping one of the 11 other guys in the room can step up.
Which players without extensive game tape should be prioritized, and who should be thanked for their time and sacrifice? Fortunately, an extra month of practice can help answer some of these questions. Arguably, that extra development and evaluation will matter more in the long run than a trip to Detroit, New York City, or elsewhere to play another 6-6 or 7-5 team.
Speaking of 7-5, it’s kind of hard to believe that Nebraska has a chance to reach the record that so many fans (including myself) predicted back in August, especially after all of the angst we’ve gone through.
That was a fun environment. The last time we gathered at Memorial Stadium, Nebraska lost a frustrating game to UCLA.
Former Husker Collin Miller ruffled a lot of feathers after the UCLA game when he called out the crowd for being “asleep in their seats” in an environment that – by many accounts, and for many reasons – was flat.
Miller’s critiques were largely met with more passion and noise than was displayed during the UCLA game. The former Blackshirt was roundly shouted down, including by yours truly.
While I have no interest in going after my fellow season ticket holders and neighbors in the stadium, I did feel some of the backlash swung too far in the opposite direction.
Nobody should ever take the passion, dedication, and financial support of Nebraska fans (especially season ticket holders) for granted. Period. Thankfully, no fan has ever been asked to make a tackle, block the weakside linebacker on 3rd down, or draw up a play for 4th & 8. Those things are best left to the coaches and players.
But home field advantage is still a thing that exists. Especially in college football.
Fans have the opportunity* to impact a game with their passion, pride, and vocal chords.
*You’ll note that I said “opportunity”, not “obligation”. I have no desire to tell people how to fan. If you want to sit in quiet solitude in row 58, that’s your right.
With Nebraska needing one more game for bowl eligibility, their options were win at home or in Iowa City at night. I know which one I would pick: being in front 87,000 loyal fans at home.
And the fans delivered. The pregame energy was noticeably better than UCLA. The crowd was into the game from the start and stayed locked in until the end.
For our efforts, my fellow fans and I were rewarded with a great atmosphere, a great win, and some tremendous video content from the HuskerVision crew. It was one of the most enjoyable games I’ve experienced in a long time.
I’m not suggesting that fans need to bring this level of energy every time Nebraska takes the field for the Huskers to win. I do not want to be the fan police, plus I expect Rhule to get the team to a point where they can win in any environment.
But wasn’t it fun to cheer loud, will the team to victory, and celebrate with 86,922 of your friends? I can’t wait to do it again.
Dana Holgorsen was in his bag. In his second game as Nebraska’s offensive coordinator, Holgorsen opened his cookbook and found a recipe for success.
I’m not sure what I liked the best about Nebraska’s offense against Wisconsin. The nearly 50-50 run pass ratio (36 runs, 38 passes). That beautifully simplistic run fake followed by a quick slant pass. Using formations (Emmett Johnson and Dante Dowdell lined up next to Raiola like a motorcycle with two sidecars), personnel groupings (two tight ends), and motion to create favorable matchups.
Maybe it was the mix of power running, misdirection, and short, simple throws. I know I loved how Nebraska scored all seven times they entered the red zone.
But I think my favorite thing happened late in the third quarter. Nebraska is up 27-10 and has a big 3rd & 4 from the Badger 29. Before the snap, Raiola motions a receiver over to his left. At the snap, the receiver on the right runs a route to the left, leaving the west side of the field empty. Suddenly, Johnson comes streaking out of the backfield. Raiola hits him in stride and EJ gains 26 yards to the three-yard line. Simple, yet elegant.
And I’m excited to see what he’ll do against Iowa.
Players making plays (or they don’t play). An important thing to note from the pass play I described above: when presented with an opportunity to make a play, the guys took advantage of it. That was a common theme on Saturday.
Nobody personified the “players making plays” mantra better than Emmett Johnson, who looked like a video game animation spinning, juking, and dancing the Badger secondary looking for extra yardage. His red and white uniform was moving so quickly, he sometimes looked like a pink blur.
Luke Lindenmeyer and Nate Boerkircher both took advantage of some extended playing time by making some excellent blocks and being active options in the passing game.
On the flip side, it appeared Lindenmeyer and Boerkircher’s opportunities came at Thomas Fidone’s expense. Fidone was called for a false start with eight minutes to go in the first quarter. He went out after the penalty, and I do not recall seeing him on the field again. I do not believe his absence to be injury related. Hopefully, he (and others) will maximize their opportunities against Iowa.
Is this what happens when you don’t spend the afternoon shooting yourself in the foot? Once again, Nebraska fans got to watch a team in red and white making stupid mental errors all day long. But for one glorious day, it wasn’t Nebraska
Here is an incomplete list of boneheaded things the Badgers did on Saturday:
That list is a botched onside kick away from being a greatest hits of how Nebraska has lost games in the last five years. It was so refreshing to finally be on the receiving end of another team’s sloppiness.
Best of all? Nebraska made the Badgers pay for their mistakes.
On the drives following the two missed field goals, the fumble, and a turnover on downs, the Huskers scored a total of 24 points. They won the game by 19.
When was the last time Nebraska had a weekend this good? Let’s recap the weekend in the three biggest Husker sports for posterity:
Friday night: Nebrasketball goes to Omaha and absolutely suffocates the #14 Creighton Bluejays, winning by 11, in a game that wasn’t as close as the final score suggests. The Huskers held All-Everything center Ryan Kalkbrenner to four points, on 0-1 shooting. The three-time reigning Big East Defensive Player of the Year looked mortal as numerous Huskers scored layups at the rim.
The upset launched an avalanche of delicious trolling by Husker fans (and NU’s social media folks), most of it directed at the Nebraskans with ala carte cheering preferences.
Saturday afternoon: The football team earns a bowl bid with a convincing win over a team they haven’t beaten in 4,438 days. In addition to the bowl bid, NU also received a rather ugly trophy.
Saturday night: The remarkable juggernaut that is Nebraska Volleyball easily swept #6 Wisconsin (again), ending the Badgers’ hopes of a conference title, and putting NU squarely in the driver’s seat for a championship.
It’s just an absolute joy to watch Nebraska play volleyball. They play at such a high level and look like they’re having the time of their lives. If you weren’t alive for the mid-90s run of NU football, this is what it looked and felt like.
So, as my favorite band (The Nadas) sang, was this the “best weekend ever”?
I didn’t do the research, but my guess is probably not, considering football and volleyball have combined for ten national championships and over 80 conference championships. The historic bar for success is pretty high.
But for a fan base that has grown all too accustomed to painful groin kick losses against rivals, three straight big wins were memorable moments to celebrate and savor.
Was this Nebraska’s most complete win of the season? Admittedly, there are not a lot of contenders for the title, especially against P4 competition. But I think it’s possible that Nebraska played their best 60 minutes of football against the Badgers.
I think it’s indisputable that Colorado remains Nebraska’s best win of the season. The first half of that game is probably the best the Huskers have looked this season. But the second half was a little anticlimactic. At the time, I wrote that NU “got a little bored in the second half.”
But on Saturday, the Huskers did some of their best work after halftime. Nebraska scored 20 points, answering both Badger scores with points of their own. There was no letting off the gas, no attempt to coast across the finish line. With a bowl berth on the line, the Huskers went for the throat.
All three phases weren’t in peak form, but the defense and special teams did what they had to do. Overall, it was a complete team victory. Arguably the best of the year.
A “Huskerigami” is a final score combination (win or lose) that has never happened in the 130+ year history of Nebraska football.
Final score: 44-25
Is that a Huskerigami? YES! This is the 579th unique score combination in Nebraska history, and the first since the 35-11 win over Northern Illinois in 2023 (the week before Huskerigami started).
This was the eighth Nebraska-Wisconsin game to end in a Huskerigami score (out of 18 total games).
- Emmett Johnson. 198 total yards, with a large chunk of those coming after contact. EJ ran with a purpose, vision, and burst that has been largely absent from NU’s running backs for several years. Be sure to give credit to the offensive line for another strong performance, but Johnson made the most of the opportunities he was given.
- Dylan Raiola. Feel free to fact-check me on this, but I think NU is 4-0 when Raiola throws a sidearm pass. I don’t know if those throws are him feeling comfortable in the offense, a reflection on his health, or completely unrelated. Regardless, Raiola looked as confident and in control as he has since September, coming just seven yards shy of his first 300-yard game.
- Ty Robinson. He made his college debut against Wisconsin in 2019, a raw kid in a redshirt season holding his own against the (then) #15 Badgers. Five years later in his home finale, Robinson showed the finished product he has become. A mountain of a man who uses his instincts and brute force to disrupt offenses. Robinson made himself some good money by coming back for his senior season. And he absolutely trucked some poor Badger as a goal line fullback.
- Jacory Barney Jr. The freshman phenom sparked the game from the opening kick, recording NU’s longest return of the season, and 45 of his 150 all-purpose yards. He’s quietly become Raiola’s favorite receiver – a combination I hope to see for years to come (a not-so-subtle hint to the fine folks at 1890).
- John Hohl. Remember the days when we didn’t think NU would even attempt another field goal this year? Three more makes on Saturday, and (knocks on wood) no misses in almost two months. Johnny Hohl is one of the feel-good stories on this team.
Honorable mention: The seniors (and others who played their last game for NU), Nebraska fans, Jahmal Banks, Dante Dowdell, field storms, Brian Buschini, Greg Sharpe, the return of “Chasing 3”, and 55 degree Saturdays in late November.
- Tackling. Nebraska’s tackling – both on defense and kick coverage – could have been better. The Huskers gave up a lot of free yards by not wrapping them up initially. Iowa is a team that makes you pay for missed tackles.
- Sacks. The Blackshirts generated decent pressure against Braedyn Locke (three hurries and a couple of knockdowns), but they never got there in time to sack him. A little more pressure up front will help a defensive secondary that has not been very sharp.
- Timeout management. I’m okay with Rhule challenging Wisconsin’s first touchdown. The replays shown in the stadium gave the impression that it was worth the risk. But otherwise, Rhule spends his timeouts like my kids spend their birthday money: as quickly as possible, and often on worthless things that get thrown away.
- Celebration penalties. I’m torn on the unsportsmanlike penalty that Micah Mazzccua received for spiking the ball after Dowdell’s first touchdown. On one hand, it was a dumb penalty that accelerated a Wisconsin scoring drive. But as a former offensive lineman, I’m not sure I would have been able to pass up the opportunity. As long as the celebrations don’t cross into taunting, let the kids have fun.
- Freedom Trophy. Be honest: did you know the Freedom Trophy existed prior to Nebraska carrying it off the field? Look, I’m thrilled that Nebraska finally beat Wisconsin. But that trophy – generically ugly with a moralistic trope theme with no direct tie to either program – is a loser. I’d much rather the two teams play for something fun and unique.
MORE: How Did Dana Holgorsen Turn Around Nebraska’s Offense So Quickly?
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MORE: Nebraska Football Exorcises a Decade’s Worth of Demons in Win Over Wisconsin
MORE: Iowa Football Opens as Home Favorite Over Nebraska in Black Friday Matchup
MORE: Five Big Ten Teams Remain in Associated Press, Coaches Top 25 Polls
MORE: Luke Fickell: ‘Don’t Have Any Excuses’ for Wisconsin Football’s Loss to Nebraska
Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.
Nebraska
Cornfield Baptism Near Omaha, Nebraska
What the hell happened to my life?
My inner monologue was deafening in the stillness of the Nebraska morning. I hadn’t heard myself this clearly since high school five years ago, before I pushed off into life as an actress in New York City. I couldn’t be sure what made my thoughts so loud—maybe it was whiplash, my abrupt move from filming HBO’s High Maintenance to my childhood stomping grounds.
Nebraska
Concordia Nebraska to host Early Childhood Conference June 7-8, 2026, with preconference
SEWARD, Neb. — Early childhood educators from Nebraska and surrounding states will gather at Concordia University, Nebraska, for the school’s annual Early Childhood Conference on June 7-8, 2026, with an optional pre-conference also planned on campus.
“The theme for this year’s event is Unshakable!” said Concordia Nebraska Assistant Professor of Education Dr. Drew Gerdes. “We know that teachers are hard workers; teaching is challenging in many ways but also rewarding. At Concordia, we have a strong history in developing and supporting teachers, and this conference is one way that we can connect with those in the field, support and encourage them, and offer opportunities to ‘fill their toolbox’ with new ideas and strategies.”
Conference keynote speaker Raelene Ostberg, founder of Thriving Together, will address attendees about finding and keeping joy in their work with students, families and colleagues. Thriving Together is an organization dedicated to supporting early childhood educators.
The Sunday evening dinner keynote speaker will be Rev. Dustin Lappe ’97, who serves at Messiah Lutheran Church and School in Lincoln, Nebraska. Organizers said Lappe has years of experience as both an early childhood teacher and a pastor.
“This conference will feature many break-out sessions on a variety of topics,” Gerdes said. “From the value of music in learning to differentiated learning to early literacy skills, participants will be able to hear from veterans in the field and leaders in education who have a great passion for sharing and helping others grow.”
Concordia Nebraska first hosted an early childhood conference decades ago under the leadership of then-program director Dr. Leah Serck ’58.
“Educators from Nebraska and many surrounding states look forward to this event each year, which has a rich history of bringing in high-quality keynote speakers and valuable topics,” Gerdes said.
More information, including pre-conference and conference details and pricing, is available at cune.edu/ecc. Early bird discounted registration is available until May 22.
Nebraska
Starting fires helped contain a Nebraska wildfire — and ignited another – Flatwater Free Press
This story is made possible through a partnership between Flatwater Free Press and Grist, a nonprofit environmental media organization.
As the fast-moving blaze rolled toward Fire Chief Jason Schneider’s district in Cozad, he and his crew faced a literal uphill battle.
The Cottonwood Fire was tearing through the Loess Canyons, an area defined by steep slopes, narrow valleys, few roads and pockets of invasive eastern red cedar trees, which can throw embers and ash — and even explode — when they burn.
“You think you would have it put out, and you keep on moving north, and you’d look back south and it’s just going again behind you,” Schneider said.
But the situation started to improve when they connected with a prescribed burn group. They had equipment and showed Schneider and his volunteer crew how to use fire to contain the wildfire.
“It would have burned a lot more if they hadn’t showed up and helped us get it stopped where we did,” Schneider said.
Already, 2026 has marked Nebraska’s worst year on record for wildfires. As of May 6, wildfires have burned about 981,502 acres and dealt a blow to ranchers. They also have brought to the forefront the best arguments for and against a controversial and centuries-old land-management practice: Using fire to fight fire.
In March, the Cottonwood Fire, contained by prescribed burn techniques and past prescribed fires, made the case for the practice. In the Nebraska National Forest that same month, heavy winds turned the smoldering remnants of a prescribed burn into the Road 203 wildfire, bringing to life some landowners’ and managers’ worst fears.
The debate over prescribed burns had been simmering long before those wildfires and has grown louder in recent years as more Nebraskans turn to the practice. The Nebraska Prescribed Fire Council estimates that during modern times, 2025 saw the most acres burned in a single year by prescribed fire.
But in areas of the state like the western Sandhills, the practice has sparked backlash.
“There was a (prescribed burn) group that tried to establish a couple of years ago up around the Tryon, Mullen area up in there. And they almost lynched that group,” Keystone-Lemoyne Fire and Rescue Chief Ralph Moul said. “They said, ‘No, we do not want fire in the Sandhills,’ because there’s nothing to stop it up here.”
Despite the fear, there is overwhelming evidence that prescribed burns, when done correctly, can help prevent massive wildfires by burning up volatile fuels like cedar trees. They can make the land ecologically healthier and save ranchers money.
“The wildfires you’ve seen here in Nebraska the last few years are also a consequence of removing fire from the landscape,” said Kent Pfeiffer, program manager for the Northern Prairies Land Trust. “You don’t get rid of fire, you just change the nature of it … instead of having frequent, low-intensity fires, you end up with infrequent, high-intensity fires.”
The issue may be growing more urgent as the state faces dual threats. Large swaths of Nebraska’s native grasslands are in danger of becoming cedar woodlands — an already costly headache for ranchers. Meanwhile, climate change is bringing more extreme conditions, including intense stretches of drier and hotter weather that can lead to more destructive wildfires.
“It’s time to innovate a bit more on the wildfire and prescribed fire side,” said Dirac Twidwell, a rangeland and fire ecologist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. “What we know is that overall, our fire management is not working.”
‘I burned them’
Tucker Thompson was in his 30s when he first helped out on a prescribed burn on another person’s property near Gothenburg back in the early 2000s. The rancher, who summers cattle in the Loess Canyons, knew some neighbors would be upset, but cedar trees were starting to sprout across his land. He wanted to get ahead of the problem, and he was curious.
By today’s standards, the group’s equipment was basic and their knowledge limited. Even though everything went fine, Thompson left thinking the entire practice was insane. He went home and took a chainsaw to the cedar trees across about 400 acres of his property.
“And then five years later, they all start coming back. Ten years later, it’s like, I have no choice. There’s no way of killing these dang things, so I burned them,” Thompson said.
Now, Thompson continues the practice and is a member of two burn groups. He helped firefighters contain the Cottonwood Fire, even as it ravaged his grazing lands.
Prescribed burns “decrease the fuel load in these canyons, so we can control these fires to some degree,” Thompson said.
The Loess Canyons area has one of the most advanced prescribed fire cultures in the entire country, Twidwell said. It has reduced the risk of catastrophic fire and made the land more suitable for grazing, which has boosted landowners’ profits, he said.
Up until the last 150 years, fire was common in Nebraska. Wildfires would naturally control species like eastern red cedar. Indigenous peoples have also used fire for a variety of reasons in this region.
Prescribed burns are common in other Great Plains states like Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas. In Nebraska, it’s more prevalent in the eastern and central parts of the state. The benefits extend beyond fire protection — it also increases biodiversity and wildlife. Even the grass that comes back after a burn is preferred by the cattle.
More than 92,700 acres burned in prescribed fires between Jan. 1 and June 30 last year, according to a survey of 26 organizations by the Nebraska Prescribed Fire Council.
But conducting these burns requires a lot of planning, post-burn monitoring, money, machinery and manpower. And even when it comes together, a change in weather can cancel the whole operation at a moment’s notice.
In order to conduct a land management burn, a landowner or tenant has to apply for a permit and submit a plan to their local fire chief, who decides whether to waive Nebraska’s open burn ban. By law, the plan requires serious documentation, including a list of on-hand equipment and a description of weather conditions needed to burn safely.
Fairbury Fire Chief Judd Stewart’s jurisdiction is filled with landowners and managers who use prescribed burns. Stewart says he had to cancel almost 50 burn permits in March when Gov. Jim Pillen ordered fire chiefs statewide to temporarily stop issuing them during the wildfires. Stewart wishes the governor would have given more consideration to areas like southeast Nebraska, where fire danger was lower. Those areas still have heavy fuel loads, and the window to burn is closing.
“As we approach mid- to late summer, when we start getting high temperatures … that vegetation will carry fire again, and now we’ve got those heavy fuel loads that are going to be hard to contain,” Stewart said.
Austin Klemm, a board member of the burn group that helped Schneider and others contain the Cottonwood Fire, said he is working with about six landowners who have invested roughly $250,000 to $275,000 to plan a burn that might not happen this year due to the ban.
“Some of these guys have invested tens of thousands of dollars in prep work to be able to burn,” Klemm said. “These guys have deferred grazing, did not graze at all last year, had to go find a place to stick cows or feed cows all last year.”
‘It’s dangerous’
Becky Potmesil doesn’t have to look far to see the devastation wildfire can cause. Potmesil raises cattle in the Alliance area of the Panhandle, on the western edge of the Sandhills. To the south, the Morrill Fire burned an estimated 642,000 acres, making it the largest on record in the state’s history. To the southeast, the Ashby Fire burned another 36,000 acres.
The winds have blown away the black, burnt grass, leaving behind only sand dunes. It looks like a moonscape, she said.
“Anybody who’d do a prescribed burn out here in the (western) Sandhills in western Nebraska is crazy, and it’s dangerous,” she said. While she sees how there could be benefits in some Sandhills meadows, she doesn’t think it’s worth the risk in her area.
Moul, the Keystone-Lemoyne fire chief, is cautious about issuing burn permits in his Sandhills district. He likes for there to either be snow or green grass on the ground. The Sandhills have fewer fire breaks, less infrastructure and more extreme weather conditions like high-speed winds than other parts of the state, Moul and Potmesil noted.
Moul, an incident commander on the Morrill Fire, understands that prescribed fire has its place. But after seeing the damage caused by prescribed burn escapes over his career, he said fire chiefs shouldn’t allow them on or right before red flag days in their districts. Most of the burn groups know what they’re doing, Moul said, but a few have convinced local fire chiefs to issue permits on red flag days so they can “get the best kill of the trees.”
“But it was my experience when I worked with the state that we went to a lot of escaped fires because of prescribed burns that got away,” Moul said.
The Road 203 wildfire started as a prescribed burn in the Bessey Ranger District of the Nebraska National Forest. More than a day after the fire ignitions ended, heavy winds created a spot fire outside the original boundary as firefighters mopped up and patrolled the area, according to the Forest Service. The agency said 99.84% of its prescribed burns go according to plan. This one didn’t.
According to the Nebraska Prescribed Fire Council’s survey last year, 1.6% of burns escaped and required outside assistance, primarily from volunteer fire departments. Changing weather patterns and the spread of cedar trees are the primary reasons for escapes, the Fire Council said in an email.
“When the gap between prescribed fire acres and fuel load increases, it also increases fire behavior in both prescribed fire and wildfires causing us to adapt to riskier burns with increased planning and equipment.”
When Twidwell came to Nebraska in 2013, he was told prescribed fire would never be used in the Sandhills. Since then, he has seen multiple burns happen there as the culture continues to shift. Some of this is due to the spread of eastern red cedars in the area.
He knows some landowners will never be convinced, and he understands their concern. But beyond protecting the grasslands, Twidwell believes Nebraska needs to have more conversations on how to mitigate large wildfires by using fire.
“Everybody understands … the wildfire risk playing out,” he said. “Fewer understand the benefits and why certain groups are using prescribed fire.”
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