Nebraska
Dave Feit: It Wasn’t Perfect, but Let’s Not Nitpick the Huskers’ 31-Point Win
After the Colorado game, Nebraska football head coach Matt Rhule said his team is not at a place where it can look past opponents.
In a similar vein, Nebraska is not at a place where fans can – or, at least, should – nitpick the team’s performance. Yes, Northern Iowa used its ground-and-pound offense to control the pace of the game and the time of possession. Sure, I was hoping the defense would be more dominant against an FCS team. And for the third straight game, the second half offense was very pedestrian.
But I don’t care.
The Huskers are 3-0, have yet to trail in a game, and really have not been tested. There’s speed and potential all across the offense. The defense has all-conference caliber playmakers at all three levels. For every negative we can find on special teams, I can point out a positive.
So, I’m not going to sound a doom-and-gloom siren when NU is playing some of its best ball in almost a decade. I’m just not. If somebody on a call-in show, Twitter, or message board tries to spin a yarn about how the Huskers “underachieved” on Saturday, ignore them.
That Northern Iowa team was a solid squad. I believe the Panthers would be capable of beating some recent Husker teams – especially the ones that lacked defensive (and/or mental) toughness or lived to give away “close” games in the final minutes.
Instead, the 2024 Huskers took the opening kickoff down for a touchdown. Even though the Blackshirts allowed a field goal on the following possession, the offense answered with another 75-yard touchdown drive. After that, the game was essentially over.
But now things get serious.
The schedule – viewed all summer as “easy” – is suddenly challenging. A ranked Illinois squad is coming to town Friday. Upstart Indiana will be ready to ambush the Huskers in a month. Nebraska is not at a place where it can just show up and expect to win.
Someday, I promise you can stomp and snort because Nebraska won by “only” 31 points. But we’re not there yet.
For now, we gladly accept wins and know that the coaching staff will spend the week working to correct all the things we saw – and dozens of others we did not.
Things I believe
Matt Rhule is not concerned about “style points”. The Huskers could have won this game by much more if they wanted to. It was clear they took their foot off the gas when they could have run up the score. They could have brought Dylan Raiola out for another drive instead of going to the bench.
I said a version of this after UTEP, and repeated myself after Colorado. And I’ll say it again after Northern Iowa.
I don’t think Rhule sees an upside in winning a game by 14, 21, or 42 points. The win is more important than the margin of victory. He’s going to be okay with coasting to the finish line – relying on an experienced offense line, a stable of good backs, and a beast of a defense to close out games.
In a “developmental program”, Rhule understands that it is much better to get the reserves some live snaps instead of trying to pad stats or cover the spread. By my count, 76 Huskers played Saturday. On a young team, that matters more than any style point.
Raiola’s deep ball to Jaylen Lloyd told me a lot about this team. Halfway through the second quarter, Nebraska had first down on their own 31-yard line. Dylan Raiola fakes a handoff to Rahmir Johnson and rolls to his right. A Panther cornerback on a blitz is coming untouched directly at Raiola. Dylan does a little stutter step, and the corner is rolling on the turf empty handed.
Jaylen Lloyd, who had started in the slot near the blitzing cornerback, went sprinting down the middle of the field at the snap. At the same time as Raiola was evading the sack, Lloyd cut his route toward the corner in front of the safety, whose eyes are locked on the scrambling QB. When Raiola sees his receiver and starts to throw, nobody is within 10 yards of Lloyd. Rahmir Johnson is about 25 yards behind Lloyd.
Raiola rears back and throws. The ball is not perfect – Lloyd has to stop, slipping a little as he makes the catch. Meanwhile, Rahmir has pressed the turbo button and is sprinting as fast as I’ve ever seen him move, looking for somebody to block. Lloyd is tackled on the 10 after a 59-yard gain.
I absolutely love everything about this play – and have been watching it on a loop. Dylan subtly evading a sack while keeping his eyes up to find an open receiver. Lloyd’s track speed and greatly improved receiver skills to bring in the pass. And my favorite part: Rahmir absolutely selling out to try to get his teammate into the end zone.
When you can combine raw athleticism, speed, and selfless desire, good things will happen.
That’s about as good an outcome as you can get against an FCS opponent. Ever since Ameer Abdullah delayed Bo Pelini and Nebraska from being a national laughingstock, I’ve firmly believed that FCS games are all risk and no reward. FBS vs FCS games tend to be one of three outcomes:
- A blowout romp that is less productive than the spring scrimmage, such as Nebraska vs. Idaho State, 2012.
- An uncomfortably close win that serves as a harbinger for future struggles. The aforementioned McNeese State game fits this category.
- An embarrassing loss. Appalachian State over #5 Michigan. North Dakota State over #13 Iowa. Montana over #20 Washington. Thankfully, NU has avoided this trap.
Northern Iowa has 12 wins over FBS / Division I opponents since 1985. They were less intimidated by Nebraska’s environment than Colorado or UTEP. The Panthers had a strong game plan and stuck to it.
It wasn’t a behind-the-woodshed beating, but Nebraska did what they needed to do to win comfortably. They were able to get the starters out early – very important with a short week ahead – and appeared to come out of the game fairly healthy.
I’m not sure what else you can ask for against an FCS team.
Things I don’t know
What happens when NU gets punched in the mouth? In all three games, NU has come out swinging, landing early knockouts against UTEP and Colorado. Northern Iowa stood in the longest, but the game was still over before halftime.
At some point – possibly as soon as Friday night – an opponent is going to be the aggressor. They’re going to (metaphorically) punch the Huskers in the face. Or they’ll refuse to be crushed like a grape if Nebraska goes up by 10 points.
It’s Big Ten time, boys and girls. The majority of teams in this league are not going to lay down – especially for a Nebraska team that still is viewed as an outsider.
What will happen when other teams stand their ground? Will NU keep swinging? Will they get tight and press, making silly mistakes? Or, heaven forbid, will they fall down?
The answer to this question will determine what the ceiling is for this team.
What’s going on with the red zone play calling? In the second half, Nebraska had two straight possessions that got into the UNI red zone. Both stalled out, resulting in short field goal attempts.
Without getting into the individual play calls, I think Nebraska got a little too cute on Saturday, especially considering the opponent is from a lower division. An inside handoff to Janiran Bonner that we haven’t seen before. Dylan Raiola trying a keeper. And a lot of Heinrich Haarberg – either as the primary option or as a decoy.
I can understand showing some of the Haarberg package to make future opponents have to account for it. But I also understand lining up and running power at an FCS team. I’m glad Thomas Fidone got a touch in the red zone (a six-yard gain down to the 1), but I’d like to see him utilized more as well.
Where is the cutoff for where Nebraska trusts its FG kickers? We talked about this last week, as Nebraska chose went for a few fourth down opportunities against Colorado instead of trying kicks well beyond 50 yards.
On Saturday, we got a better indication when the Huskers went for it on 4th & 3 from the 25. That suggests that the trust zone is inside of 42 yards.
Later in the game, Rhule opted to have Tristan Alvano kick short field goals (from 31 and 21 yards). Maybe that’s the football equivalent of having a cold 3-point shooter make some layups in hopes of getting hot from distance.
Huskerigami Update
A “Huskerigami” is a final score combination (win or lose) that has never happened in the 130+ year history of Nebraska football.
Final score: 34-3
Is that a Huskerigami? No… but it was darn close. There have two previous 34-3 games. The first time was a win over Iowa State in 1979. The most recent was a loss at Michigan in 2022.
Had Northern Iowa scored a touchdown on its final possession we would have had a Huskerigami (34-9, 34-10, and 34-11 are all open). But the backups stopped the Panthers two yards shy of the end zone on 4th and goal.
For the record, the Huskerigami committee will always root for NU’s defense to get a stop and was doing so Saturday night.
5 Things I loved
- John Bullock. The senior linebacker is playing at a very high level. He flies around the field making tackles, disrupting plays, and being an impact player.
- Dylan Raiola. It’s only Week 3, but I’ve already several moments where I see him do something – an effortless pass, a little slide step to avoid a blitz (and make his uncle look good), or his ridiculous poise – and I just laugh and think about how I still can’t believe that he’s here and appears to be as good as advertised.
- Rahmir Johnson. Aside from the impressive hustle play we discussed earlier; I’ve been loving Rahmir’s start to his senior season. He’s becoming one of the best receivers out of the backfield since Marlon Lucky almost 20 years ago. I’m excited for him to take one to the house.
- Carter Nelson. The true freshman from Ainsworth, playing in just his third 11-man football game, led NU with four catches for 48 yards and a 24-yard touchdown. You can see why the staff has been so high on him. His future is bright.
- Heinrich Haarberg. I’m guessing it has been a few years since a Husker carried the ball, threw it, and caught it in the same game. While I like seeing Haarberg out there as part decoy, part red zone threat, he’s on this list for his passing. A perfect 3 for 3 on Saturday, bringing his season total to 8 for 8. Yes, that’s all in garbage time but he’s clearly improved as a passer.
Honorable mention: Isaac Gifford, Jacory Barney, Jr., Ty Robinson, Emmett Johnson, Malcom Hartzog, Jr., Tristan Alvano, Derek Branch, Mason Goldman, Jaylen Lloyd, Stefon Thompson, Aidan Flege, Jacob Bower, Will Compton, night games in Memorial Stadium.
5 Areas for improvement
- Tackling. Let’s give credit to Amauri Pesek-Hickson and Tye Edwards, two good backs (and former three-star recruits). They were patient runners who ran hard and were absolute loads to bring down. But I doubt Tony White was thrilled with the number of missed tackles and yards after contact.
- Special Teams. The third phase remains a mixed bag. Not much happening on NU’s punt returns, and a roughing the kicker penalty extended a UNI drive.
- Forced fumbles. I’d like to see the defense knock the ball out more than what we’ve seen through three games.
- “Dylan Raiola needs to stop copying Patrick Mahomes”. We need to stop with the tired “somebody needs to tell Dylan to stop copying Mahomes” takes. For as great as he is, Patrick Mahomes did not invent jumping up and down before a sporting event. And if Dylan is doing it to copy him, why should anybody care? It is a stupid argument made by stupid people looking for attention. Don’t give it to them.
- Game pace. Thanks largely to Northern Iowa pounding the rock and burning clock (a great podcast name by the way), the first quarter went by in about 35 minutes. Unfortunately, that meant full media timeouts during every dead ball for the rest of the night. A game against an FCS team isn’t going to be a ratings bonanza. It’s okay if we get things wrapped up in two and a half hours.
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
Quotebook: Rhule, Raiola, Rahmir + Robinson post-Pinstripe Bowl
NEW YORK – Nebraska football coach Matt Rhule and a few players were chosen for Saturday’s postgame interviews with the media following the Huskers’ 20-15 win over Boston College in the Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium.
Below, we dig into the Quotebook from the postgame podiums as the Huskers – who finished their season at 7-6 overall – didn’t just finally get over the hump by reaching a bowl game but also finished the job by winning the bowl game. They took care of the Eagles, who also end the year with a 7-6 mark.
Following a perfect non-conference slate – highlighted by a dominant win over ranked Colorado – and an overtime loss to ranked Illinois, the Huskers bounced back with wins over Purdue and Rutgers. Then, they fell on the road at Indiana and Ohio State in losses that felt drastically different in both vibes and the actual final score. Then, the UCLA game happened. Then, a hard-fought loss came – yet again – on the road at USC.
The Huskers finally broke through against Wisconsin, ending a four-game losing streak on the season, a 10-game losing streak to the Badgers – also a nine-game losing streak when bowl eligibility was on the line (including eight straight such losses under Rhule) – and finally returning to the postseason to end a seven-year bowl drought.
The Huskers followed that breakthrough win with an equally debilitating loss by the exact same final score (13-10) as the Nebraska-Iowa game the previous November. (And the exact same final score as two other losses during that same 2023 season.)
But…
All’s well that ends well, right?
The Huskers are now officially in offseason mode, moving into the winter with a slight shift in momentum sparked by the bowl game victory.
And with that, we present Saturday’s postgame Quotebook with thoughts from Rhule, quarterback Dylan Raiola, running back Rahmir Johnson and defensive lineman Ty Robinson – plus thoughts from Boston College head coach Bill O’Brien and the Eagles.
Nebraska
Rhule wants “complete and total overhaul” of special teams
NEW YORK — The good?
Nebraska won enough football games to qualify for a bowl game for the first time since 2016. Even more good? The Huskers beat Boston College 20-15 on Saturday in the Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium in New York to mark the program’s first bowl win since 2015.
Clearly, there is positive momentum at Nebraska.
Now, the bad.
The bad was Nebraska’s poor special teams rearing its ugly head once again. Mistakes in the third phase of the game caused Nebraska to nearly lose its 20-2 lead late in the third quarter in stunning fashion.
First, BC blocked a John Hohl extra-point attempt after Nebraska’s second touchdown of the first half. The snap from Camden Witucki was fine, but holder Brian Buschini dropped the ball as Hohl was making his approach.
With the chaos in front of him, Hohl’s kick went low and was easily blocked by BC’s Max Tucker. Ashton McShane scooped it and scored 2 points from 87 yards.
Then in the fourth quarter, Buschini had a punt blocked after BC’s Victor Nelson split both Jason Maciejczak and Dylan Parrott, who were part of a three-man shield (Mason Goldman was the third member of the shield, but had his own Eagle to block).
And just like that, BC scored a touchdown one play later to make it a 20-15 Husker lead. The Eagles scored 13 points in under 2 minutes of game action.
The collective gulp from Husker fans was heard everywhere.
“It’s no secret. To be where we want to be next year, we have to be the same defensively, probably a little better in some areas,” Matt Rhule said after the game. “We have to really improve on offense, and I think we’re all seeing at times signs of what it’s going to look like. And then special teams, we need a complete and total overhaul of that. We have to be better at that. I always put those things on my shoulders, we’ll get it done. But it has not been good enough this year.”
There was also a moment where Nebraska tried a fake field goal, where Buschini, the holder, took the snap and tried running for a touchdown on BC’s 8-yard line. The play didn’t come close to working.
“The fake field goal, probably should have just dropped back and thrown it again,” Rhule said. “But we had the numbers there and the kid just made a good play.”
Ed Foley’s special teams haven’t performed up to the standard he and his boss, Rhule, constantly talk about. Both the field goal and punting units have struggled with snaps throughout the season.
Nebraska went to the transfer portal for help at long snapper and added New Hampshire’s Kevin Gallic.
“We’ve had snapping issues all year long. I think we’ve tried to already address that for next year,” Rhule said.
With Buschini playing his final season at Nebraska in 2024, the Huskers also added veteran transfer punter Jack McCallister, who started for Washington the past three seasons.
As Rhule always does, he tries to remember the positives, too.
In that regard, Rhule liked how the unit executed a fake punt pass vs. BC, where Buschini completed a pass to Isaac Gifford for a first down. That was Buschini’s second completion for a first down of the season.
“The fake punt was kind of a big call. A gutsy call that they’ve worked and executed,” Rhule said.
Nebraska
Key stats of the game in Nebraska's win over Boston College
Key stats of the game in Nebraska’s win over Boston College
NEW YORK — Nebraska held on and got the job done on Saturday.
The Huskers traveled to New York City to play in the Bad Boy Mowers Pinstripe Bowl against Boston College and will fly home with a 20-15 win.
It wasn’t pretty — is it ever with this program? — as NU led 20-2 with three minutes left in the third quarter but allowed BC to score two touchdowns in the final 6:11 of the game.
NU ends its 2024 season with a record of 7-6 (3-6 in Big Ten). That’s the most wins since the 2016 team went 9-4. It’s also the first bowl victory for the Huskers since the 2015 team beat UCLA 37-29 in the Foster Farms Bowl.
Here are three key statistics that stood out from NU’s win over the Eagles.
A good showing in the red zone from Nebraska’s offense
One of the top stats that usually equals winning football involves making the most of your trips to the red zone. On Saturday, the Husker offense was good enough once it entered BC’s 20-yard line.
NU finished the game by scoring points on three of its four red zone opportunities, and all of them were touchdowns. All three of NU’s scoring drives that entered the red area lasted at least seven plays, too, so the Huskers were going on some drives in Yankee Stadium.
The only red-zone appearance that didn’t end in a score was a fake field goal that had punter/holder Brian Buschini attempting to run the ball on a fourth-and-goal from the BC 8-yard line. That didn’t work as Buschini got 1 yard to seal a turnover on downs.
Nebraska turned the ball over twice, but John Butler’s defense put out the fires
NU’s offense turned the ball over twice in the game, both of which came in the first half thanks to a Dylan Raiola interception and an Emmett Johnson lost fumble.
Those could have been back-breaking mistakes, but they weren’t because defensive coordinator John Butler’s defense, which featured several young players getting opportunities, stood tall after each turnover.
The Huskers did not allow BC to score points off those turnovers. NU may have bent — the Huskers allowed BC to convert 5-of-10 third downs in the first half — but it never really broke until late in the game when the Eagles scored their first touchdown at the 6:11 mark of the fourth quarter.
On a wet and slippery field, yes, there were missed tackles and sloppy play at times. But the Huskers flew around like a team who had fun in the city for a week before flipping a switch and winning a football game, just like Matt Rhule wanted.
If BC was going to win this game, it needed to run the ball — that didn’t happen
Nothing against BC quarterback Grayson James. He played as well as he could and made some good throws while being pressured by NU’s defense all day.
But if BC was going to win this game, it needed to have an effective run game. That didn’t happen — BC would have liked to have its first-team All-ACC right tackle Ozzy Trapilo, who opted out — as the Husker defense limited the Eagles’ rushing attack to just 47 yards overall and 40 in the first half. That rushing total rises to 64 yards if you take away the 17 sack yards NU’s defense had.
BC entered the game with a top-50 rush offense nationally at 176 yards per game, good for 46th in the country.
The defensive front that played for NU today — guys like Ty Robinson, Nash Hutmacher, Cam Lenhardt, Elijah Jeudy, Keona Davis, MJ Sherman, Willis McGahee and Co. — held up well against BC’s offensive line and tight ends and allowed the linebackers behind them, like Javin Wright, Vincent Shavers Jr. and John Bullock, to clean up, which they did.
The Wright-Shavers-Bullock trio combined for 18 tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss and two sacks.
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