Nebraska
Dave Feit’s Nebraska-Iowa Recap: Historic Collapse Overshadows Emmett Johnson’s Amazing Season
In the past, I have compared the University of Iowa football team to cockroaches.
As utterly derogatory as that might seem, I mean it as a sincere compliment.
There are no surprises with how a roach approaches their business. They are who they are. Individually, they’re rather unremarkable. But they are a species that is collectively greater than the sum of their parts. They work as a team to ensure their survival.
Speaking of which, roaches are notoriously hardy. Once you allow them into your house, they are particularly difficult to eradicate. If a nuclear war broke out tomorrow, the only survivors would be cockroaches, a box of Twinkies, and Kirk Ferentz’s Iowa Hawkeyes completing one of their nine passes to a wide open tight end for a 43-yard gain.
Iowa embraces their inner cockroach. Ferentz has made “annoyingly hard to defeat” the identity of himself and his entire program. They’re never flashy (and they likely have a ceiling), but Iowa is as consistently reliable as turkey leftovers on Black Friday.
Meanwhile, there’s Nebraska. I don’t remember enough from my college entomology course to come up with a suitable insect comparison for the team once known as the Bugeaters. That’s probably because any insect species that struggles to score, cannot defend themselves, and generally acts disinterested in self-preservation is not likely to survive for very long.
On Friday, the Huskers almost made it to halftime before their mistakes and miscues started to snowball into an ugly 24-point loss. It was a bitterly disappointing result on a bitterly cold day at the end of a regular season that slid off the tracks.
Nebraska now has the better part of a month before their next game. Those four weeks – and the two after the bowl – will be absolutely crucial in determining the short and long-term future of the program. Which coach(es) – if any – leave? Which players depart via the portal – or for the NFL draft? Who comes in to fill those spots?
Nebraska’s laundry list of flaws will not get solved before the bowl, so the staff would be wise to study the Iowa tape and – at least for one game – apply the cockroach mentality to their preparation.
Husker fans may cringe at the notion of trying to replicate Iowa’s approach – even for one game – but the opportunity to a) leave fans with a good taste in their mouth, and b) be able to show a slight improvement in the overall record should not be understated.
This is a historic end-of-season collapse.
Nebraska lost this game by 24 points. They lost their previous game (at Penn State) by 27. In the history of the program, there have been nine other instances of back-to-back games with losses by 24 or more points. Only two happened since Bob Devaney was hired in 1962.
The most recent was in the middle of the 2007 season. NU lost at Missouri by 35, then to Oklahoma State by 31 on homecoming. Steve Pederson was fired the next day. Bill Callahan would win only one of his remaining five games before he was fired.
Before that*, we go back to the end of the 1990 season. The Huskers lost to Oklahoma by 35, and then by 24 to co-national champion Georgia Tech in the Citrus Bowl. Tom Osborne would go 78-6-1 in his next seven seasons, winning the conference seven times along with three national championships.
*The end of the 2001 season (26-point loss at Colorado, 23-point loss to Miami in the Rose Bowl) is a single point away from making the list. Frank Solich would coach for two more seasons, going 16-12.
It feels as if the program is closer to a 2007 repeat than a 1990s-esque run of dominance. But ask anybody who remembers the 1990 season, and they’ll tell you that were legitimate questions about if Osborne was slipping from the “can’t win the big one” towards “can he even get back to the big one?”
I’m not suggesting Rhule is on the Callahan or Osborne path. The parity in today’s game makes a 1990s style run impossible for everyone outside of the Ohio State/Georgia tier. Personally, I think Nebraska will be rewarded for having patience. Fred Hoiberg is currently putting together a strong case for the virtues of not firing a coach after three or four seasons.
But the Penn State and Iowa losses should not be swept under the rug. Legitimate cracks have been exposed in the foundation Rhule has built. They demand attention and a plan of action.
Don’t be surprised if there are staff changes before the bowl game.
Matt Rhule – fresh off a contract extension – is not going anywhere. But the status of the rest of the staff could (should?) be up in the air.
Let’s be blunt: the conference season was disappointing. In Nebraska’s five league losses, the Huskers were outscored by an average of 30 to 15. Giving up way too many points and not scoring enough is a great way to get fired. The last two losses – by a combined score of 77-26 – show a program heading in the wrong direction.
I’m not going to call for anybody to be fired, but there are assistants whose production has been underwhelming. I don’t think any of Nebraska’s three coordinators are going to leave, but stranger things have happened. Based on what I saw in 2025, Mike Ekeler is the one I’d focus the most effort (and resources) on retaining.
An extra wrinkle is the current chaotic coaching carousel. With so many staffs turning over, there were will be plenty of opportunities for coaches who may not be happy to take a lateral move (like Tony White and Terrance Knighton did last winter).
My advice for Matt Rhule: if there are staff openings this offseason, avoid the urge to seek out the next up-and-coming coach. While Rhule does have a good track record of identifying talent (Texas Tech’s Joey McGuire and Penn State’s Terry Smith got their breaks on a Matt Rhule staff), he has his share of misses as well (Garret McGuire and Bob Wager). Go with lower-risk options.
Emmett Johnson absolutely deserved to be a finalist for the Doak Walker Award.
Last week, the three finalists were named for the award given to the best running back in college football. Notre Dame’s Jeremiyah Love, Missouri’s Ahmad Hardy, and Kewan Lacy of Ole Miss were the finalists who beat out Nebraska’s Emmett Johnson.
It was a bad decision that is already aging poorly. Johnson had a career-high 217 yards rushing and a touchdown against Iowa. That is the 23rd most rushing yards by a Husker in a single game, and first 200-yard game in over a decade. Johnson currently has 1,451 rushing yards (eighth best single season, fifth best by a junior). EJ has 1,821 all-purpose yards in 2025, the ninth best season in school history, ahead of Mike Rozier’s 1982 campaign.
If – and this is a gigantic (and unlikely) if – Johnson plays in the bowl game, he could climb even higher. Johnson would need 47 rushing yards to pass Ken Clark for the seventh best rushing season, and 161 yards to surpass Ameer Abdullah’s 2014 season for sixth place. On the all-purpose charts, 74 yards would pass both Abdullah (2012) and Lawrence Phillips for seventh place. 163 yards of total offense would get Emmett Johnson into the top 5, ahead of Ahman Green and Johnny Rodgers (1971). 191 all-purpose yards would give Johnson the third most in school history, trailing only Mike Rozier’s Heisman Trophy season and Ameer Abdullah’s fantastic 2014 campaign.
Alas, this is likely wishful thinking as I’d be shocked if Johnson plays in the bowl game.
In theory, Johnson should be named a first-team All-Big Ten pick – the first Husker running back to earn that honor since Ameer Abdullah in 2013. If Johnson can be named a first-team All-American, he would be the first Husker back since Mike Rozier in 1983.
Regardless of his records or accolades, Emmett Johnson has put together one of the greatest seasons by a Nebraska running back. Ever.
Why did Nebraska throw for the end zone late in the first half?
On first-and-ten from the Iowa 24, Emmett Johnson gained six yards on the ground as the clock ticked under four minutes in the second quarter.
Nebraska was already within field goal range, and was likely to come away with points. At that moment, the priority needed to shift from “we gotta score as soon as possible” to “we must score AND make sure Iowa does not have enough time to answer.” Remember: at this point, Iowa had scored on three of its four possessions. Nebraska absolutely wanted and needed a touchdown, but it was more important to secure another first down to burn clock.
The smart play in that situation would have been to run it on second down. Maybe Johnson picks up the first down, maybe it’s a short gain setting up a third-and-two. Either way, another 30 seconds ticks off the clock.
Instead, offensive coordinator Dana Holgorsen called a pass to the end zone on second-and-four. In the best-case scenario, NU scores a touchdown and gives Iowa the ball with 3:45 and all three timeouts. TJ Lateef’s throw for Dane Key fell incomplete. On third-and-four, Johnson picked up a single yard. NU ran the play clock down to 1 before calling a timeout. Kyle Cunanan drilled a 35-yard field goal, but Iowa got the ball back with 2:53 and all three timeouts.
The Hawkeyes tried to play conservative – running on first and second down. But Kamari Moulton gained 34 on second down, carrying the ball to the NU 40. Kirk Ferentz decided to put his foot on the gas. Iowa did what Nebraska should have done: five of their next seven plays were runs. When Iowa finally scored their inevitable touchdown, Nebraska had less than 40 seconds to respond.*
*That drive was a separate fiasco that had NU facing a fourth-and-five at their own 31-yard line.
For a coach who talks about winning the “middle eight,” it was a dreadful sequence, especially considering that Iowa was set to receive the second-half kickoff. Instead of potentially leading 20-17, NU trailed 24-16.
Assuming Dylan Raiola leaves, does Nebraska go after a starting quarterback or a backup to Lateef?
For the sake of this question, let’s assume Dylan Raiola enters the transfer portal when it opens. If that happens, Nebraska’s quarterback depth in 2026 would be:
The quarterback in the 2026 recruiting class (Dayton Raiola) has decommitted, and it seems unlikely that Nebraska will sign a high school senior.
Obviously, NU will be shopping heavily in the quarterback aisle when the portal opens. But what kind of quarterback (and how many) do they pursue? Will they go after a proven starter? A talented backup? Multiple guys? And what skillset does Rhule and Holgorsen want in a quarterback? A drop-back guy like Raiola? A more mobile player like Lateef? A true dual-threat option?*
*If you think these are a ton of question marks, or the returning production is scary, I’d suggest you don’t consider the running back room.
I don’t want this to sound overly dramatic, but I think the fate of Nebraska’s 2026 season will be determined by what happens in the transfer portal.
Does Iowa want this game more than Nebraska does?
Since joining the Big Ten in 2011, the Huskers are 4-11 against the Hawkeyes, including 10 of the last 11. While I’ll be the first to note just how bad Nebraska has been for much of that stretch (eight losing seasons), one thought sticks out whenever Nebraska and Iowa meet:
Iowa wants to win this game more than Nebraska does.
There’s no single thing that makes me say that. It is more of a vibe that I – and others – get from watching the two teams. Iowa appears more focused, more physical, and has proved willing to manufacture a perceived slight into a major grievance. The Huskers tend to treat the Iowa game the same as games against Illinois or Maryland.
I’m not suggesting Nebraska needs to talk trash before or during games, nor should the Huskers engage in faux tough guy stunts like refusing to shake hands. But I’d like for Nebraska to treat Iowa the same way they treated Colorado in 2024: a team that we never, ever want to lose to again. I guarantee the team on the other side of the field feels the exact same way.
A “Huskerigami” is a final score combination (win or lose) that has never happened in the 130+ year history of Nebraska football.
Final score: 40-16
Is that a Huskerigami? No. It has happened once before. The first time was a 1962 win at Kansas. Sophomore Gale Sayers – who spurned the home state Huskers during his recruitment – rushed for 107 yards. Former Husker head coach Bill Jennings – fired by NU after the 1961 season – was an assistant coach for KU.
5 Things I loved
- Emmett Johnson. Off the top of my head, EJ’s first half – 19 carries for 177 yards and a touchdown, plus a 13-yard reception – was the finest first half by a Husker back since Roy Helu against Missouri in 2010. Johnson’s growth and development have been a delight to watch. If he played his final game in a Nebraska uniform (as I suspect), he has a place on the short list of best Husker backs in the 21st century.
- Javin Wright. He has been Nebraska’s best defensive player in 2025, likely to end the season leading in tackles and tackles for loss, and near the top in sacks and interceptions despite missing a game. His perseverance after multiple career-threatening injuries is inspiring.
- Donovan Jones. When looking at Nebraska’s defense, it is very easy to be disappointed by their performance in several areas. But I try to remind myself how young this group is. Jones is one of four redshirt freshmen who started on defense against Iowa. He’s going to be a good one as an upperclassman.
- Kyle Cunanan. With three field goals against Iowa, Cunanan is now 16-19 (84.2%) on the season. That’s the highest percentage in a full season since Drew Brown was 12-14 (85.7%) in 2017. Connor Culp was 13-15 (86.7%) in the shortened 2020 season.
- Jacory Barney Jr. He had more return yards (98) than Kaden Wetjen (71). Yes, there are some asterisks on both sides of that stat, but I respect how Barney has continued to be present in special teams as his touches on offense have dwindled.
Honorable mention: Marques Watson-Trent, Kade Pietrzak, Derek Wacker, Kevin Gallic, Kamdyn Koch, the 2025 seniors and everybody else who played their final game as a Husker.
5 Areas for improvement
- Defense. Since the 2001 Colorado game, Nebraska is 2-45 when they allow 40 points or more. Friday was the 29th straight loss when the opponent scores 40+. John Butler’s Blackshirts are getting whipped at the line of scrimmage.
- Offense. Dylan Raiola was on a scooter and TJ Lateef played the majority of the game with a hamstring injury. But Lateef was equally hamstrung by his receivers dropping catchable passes. Nebraska struggled to extend drives, settled for field goals, and largely failed to do anything that didn’t involve Emmett Johnson.
- Takeaways. Another game without a sack, interception, or forced fumble. The absence of defensive turnovers adds another layer of pressure on a team that feels like it has zero margin for error.
- Special teams. It’s hard to out special teams Iowa, but a long kickoff return, a safety on a punt return, 32 yards per punt, and a facemask penalty on the kicker is never going to get it done.
- Corporate logos on the field. Did you notice the Verizon logo on the Memorial Stadium turf? I know it’s a part of doing business in 2025, where “additional revenue streams” is a popular buzz phrase. I think it’s ugly and would have zero impact on my decision to switch carriers.
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Nebraska
Discounted tickets for Nebraska State Fair over 4th of July Weekend
The Nebraska State Fair is celebrating America’s 250th anniversary with a special 72-hour flash sale on Season Passes.
From July 3 through July 5, fans can purchase a 2026 Season Pass for just $50—a significant discount from its regular value of $132.
The pass includes one admission per day for all 11 days of the 2026 Nebraska State Fair, making it ideal for visitors who plan to attend multiple days.
Fair officials say the promotion is one of the biggest Season Pass discounts offered in years and will not be extended.
After July 5, Season Passes will remain available at a higher discounted price.
Nebraska
Online sports betting petition heads to Nebraska ballot review as opposition mounts
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – Legalizing online sports betting has met with resistance in the Nebraska Legislature for years.
Tax Relief Nebraska, a group backed by Nebraska casinos and online sports betting groups, took the issue to the people of the state through a petition drive.
Those petitions are now in, and casino officials say they expect to have enough signatures to make the November ballot — but also expect pushback through Election Day.
The case for online betting
Currently, legal sports bets cannot be placed on a phone in Nebraska. Casino operators say people who choose to wager are finding other ways to do it.
“They’re just doing it illegally through a virtual private network, or they’re driving over to the first exit between Iowa and Nebraska, placing a bet and then driving back to their home,” said Lynne McNally of Warhorse Casino.
Nebraska casino operators say the state has already collected millions of dollars in state taxes and property tax relief from casino gambling, and that online sports betting would add to that total.
A majority of Nebraskans voted for casino gambling to enter the state in 2020, and casino operators expect similar support if the online betting petition makes the November ballot.
“As you know, we got 65% on the constitutional amendment and actually got nearly 70% on the tax portion of the statute when the casinos were legalized in 2020. I think that we’ll be in that area, if not maybe a little higher than that,” McNally said.
“There’s always going to be a sector of the public that doesn’t want to gamble. They don’t want to go to our facilities and that’s just fine. I guess I have an objection with trying to tell other people what to do,” McNally said.
The opposition
The Nebraska Family Alliance stands against online gambling and plans to campaign against the initiative across the state. The nonprofit group issued a statement that reads in part: “Online sports betting has been a massive public policy failure that benefits national sportsbooks at the expense of kids, student-athletes, families and businesses. While they have more money, they don’t have the truth.”
Pat Loontjer, director of Gambling with the Good Life, has opposed expanded gambling in Nebraska for 30 years.
“They’re telling the same lie — property tax relief. Well in Nebraska you say property tax relief and everybody says where do I sign,” Loontjer said.
Loontjer also raised concerns about the impact on young people.
“Sports betting on the phone is the most addictive thing for young people, young men especially. You’ve got kids that are going to lose their scholarships, lose their future,” Loontjer said.
What comes next
If enough signatures are verified and the issue is placed on the November ballot, Warhorse Casino officials say Nebraskans could be able to make sports bets on their phones by spring of next year.
Copyright 2026 WOWT. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Two high schools will represent Nebraska in the National Independence Day Parade
Along with marching in the parade, the high schools will tour the U.S. Capitol, visit Mount Vernon and other monuments and museums.
Around 80 Grand Island students are making the trip. Lee said the students cover their own costs, with fundraising largely run though the school’s booster program helping offset the expense.
Bishop Neumann’s 53 students benefited from community donations, along with a holiday greenery sale and fundraisers, which Kellett said helped cover airfare and other costs.
For both directors, the trip carries extra weight tied to the nation’s 250th anniversary.
“That’s a pretty big milestone,” Lee said. “And to be able to be a part of that is pretty neat.”
Kellett said the moment will stay with students long after the parade ends.
“These kids, they’ll be around for the 300th anniversary of the country, and they’ll be able to look back and tell their grandkids, ‘you know, I was there at 250 and was able to march in the National Independence Day Parade,’” Kellett said.
Both bands have spent the summer preparing. Grand Island started working on its music after its final spring concert in May, rehearsing its marching and music together on Tuesday evenings.
Bishop Neumann has rehearsed continuously over the summer and marched in two parades to prepare, a 150th anniversary celebration in Weston and the Papillion Days parade.
Kellett said the band’s last rehearsal in Wahoo drew residents who lined the streets holding signs and cheering the students on.
“The students have come in, and they’ve worked really hard,” Kellett said. “They have their music memorized and they’ve worked on their marching skills, and so all that effort into this they’re ready to go for the parade.”
The parade starts at 9:30 a.m. CT Saturday at Third Street and Constitution Avenue.
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