Nebraska
Echoes of a Dynasty: Rhule, Devaney, and Nebraska Football’s Repeating History
He was the anointed savior – a former star player with fire and vision. The one who would end two decades of mediocrity and restore Nebraska to the success they’d grown accustomed to in decades past. A coach who had mentored a Heisman winner as an assistant — and seemed destined to crown another in Lincoln.
Instead, he left with five straight losing seasons and a confounding record of just 15 wins against 34 losses.
I’m talking of course about Bill Jennings, Nebraska head coach from 1957 to 1961.
What, you were expecting someone else?
As Mark Twain once said, ‘History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does often rhyme.’ And from a 50-foot view, the arc of Nebraska football history does follow a rhythm: five decades of early dominance (1890–1940), followed by two decades of struggle, four decades of clockwork winning (1962–2001), and the two-plus decades of mediocrity we’re still living through.
If history does rhyme, Nebraska may be due for another long, sustained resurgence.
That resurgence would have to start the same way the last one did: with a head coach who can wake the Big Red giant from its long slumber. The parallels between Matt Rhule and Bob Devaney are striking. Both rose through the ranks turning around lower-tier schools. Both ended long bowl droughts with wins in New York City – Devaney with the Gotham Bowl in 1962, Rhule with the Pinstripe Bowl in 2024, though Rhule did it in his second season.
But the similarities start with their immediate predecessors.
Bill Jennings, a former Oklahoma Sooner, was a widely praised hire when he was promoted to the head role in 1957. He had coached Billy Vessels to a Heisman Trophy at Oklahoma, just as Scott Frost had coached Marcus Mariota to the big prize at Oregon. But despite recruiting ample talent, Jennings couldn’t get the Huskers out of their own way. They were mistake-prone and undisciplined, capable of toppling Oklahoma and their 74-game conference win streak one week and then losing to perennial doormat Iowa State the next.
And though he was given five full seasons to turn the ship around, Jennings rarely accepted responsibility for the team’s shortcomings. In 1960, he famously said he didn’t believe the state of Nebraska could be good at anything, much less fielding a major college football program.
Frost similarly dodged accountability as Nebraska’s head man, rankling fans most recently by referring to Nebraska as a “meat grinder” of a job in yet another subtle defense of the mess he presided over in Lincoln.
But while their predecessors mirror each other in failure, Devaney and Rhule share their own reflections in success, or at least in promise.
I know, I know. Comparing anyone to the legendary Bob Devaney is sacrilege, a foolhardy exercise that will surely result in lots of eye rolls and maybe even a foul word or two.
After all, Devaney never had a losing season as head coach. Matt Rhule did in his very first year.
More immediately, if history was repeating, Rhule would have also defeated Michigan in 2023 like Devaney did in his first season, a monumental victory that sparked the Husker dynasty. However, that 1962 Michigan team, ranked highly to start the season, finished 2–7. The 2023 Wolverines won the College Football Playoff.
And Rhule wasn’t gifted the same talent Devaney was from Bill Jennings. He certainly didn’t have a generational talent like Bob Brown – a future Hall of Famer whose number 64 is still retired – on his roster like Devaney did.
But more important than perfect symmetry are the real parallels that do exist.
Both men are considered players’ coaches — motivators more than disciplinarians, known for their ability to connect. Their pregame speeches are the stuff of legend (and now internet fodder).
In a similar vein, they’re both renowned for their near-limitless social energy and public presence, though Devaney was famous for holding court at local watering holes while Rhule is more often seen supporting other Husker programs from the bleachers or sidelines.
This makes them stand out in Nebraska’s coaching lineage as their gregarious, approachable styles contrast with Tom Osborne’s quiet stoicism, Frank Solich’s introversion, Bill Callahan’s cool detachment, and Bo Pelini’s combustibility. Similarly, both Devaney and Rhule operate as true CEO-type coaches, not serving as de facto coordinators over the offense as Callahan and Frost did, or the defense as Pelini did.
As Henry Cordes put it in Devaney: Birth of a Dynasty, the Bobfather’s early success stemmed from “the considerable force of his personality. Players simply loved to play for Devaney and relished his physical, hard-nosed style of football.”
That’s another shared trait: philosophically, both men preach toughness and culture.
Rhule’s notorious “mat drills” are kept largely under wraps, but players describe them as among the most grueling in the country, designed to crush ego and foster team unity.
Devaney’s spring practices featured similar culture-setters. None was more infamous than the ax-handle drill, in which players wrestled over a wooden bar in a no-holds-barred clash.
“We had some pretty bad collisions and injuries doing that,” Tom Osborne once recalled.
Both coaches combine their emphasis on toughness with a strict adherence to structure.
Devaney once neatly summarized his coaching formula as: “Recruit like hell, then organize.” An Omaha-World Herald writer noticed the difference between Devaney and Jennings’s approaches in his very first game versus South Dakota. “In contrast to the confusion which has appeared to keep the Cornhusker bench in turmoil during recent seasons, all was in order and businesslike.”
Rhule is cut from the same cloth. His practices are precise, his evaluations structured. Everything is process oriented. Some insiders believe he’s the most organized head coach Nebraska has had since the famously meticulous Bill Callahan.
His administration is a clear departure from the chaos that preceded him. Under Frost, backup quarterback Luke McCaffrey haphazardly burned a game of redshirt eligibility on a single snap. By Frost’s final year, his recruiting operation was so disorganized that even assistants weren’t sure who could extend offers.
Devaney knew Nebraska’s recruiting operation had to start at home. He retained Clete Fischer, a well-liked assistant from Jennings’ staff, and together they toured the state rebuilding trust, ensuring the next Gale Sayers would become a Husker and not a conference foe.
Rhule followed suit. In his first year, he and his staff visited over 100 high schools across Nebraska, rebuilding the bridge between the program and its in-state talent base.
Devaney didn’t conquer everything. He had a losing record against Oklahoma, the one Big Eight opponent who got the better of him.
Rhule has similarly struggled against his team’s chief rival, having yet to solve the Iowa problem. His Huskers have lost two straight to the Hawkeyes’ black and gold magic, both on improbable last-second field goals.
Finally, both are fiercely loyal to their staff. Rhule has not fired anyone, technically, though coaches have resigned and departed due to outside circumstances. Most recently, he declined to terminate underperforming coordinators in Marcus Satterfield and Ed Foley, electing instead to place them in other roles. Likewise, calls for Devaney to make coaching changes after the 1968 season were loud and contentious. He refused to give in. “I won’t make anyone a sacrificial lamb,” he reportedly told his assistants.
Still, both coaches knew when to break free from their usual way of doing business. In 1969, Rhule put Wide Receivers coach Tom Osborne in command of the offense. Osborne, a former wide receiver himself, opened the offense up and passed more than the conservative Devaney had previously. Likewise, Rhule hired Dana Holgorsen as his offensive coordinator late in the 2024 season, a move that opened up the passing game more than Rhule had before.
The move likely saved Nebraska’s season and may have longer implications on the program’s trajectory. In Devaney’s case, the change in offense, among other things, led to national titles.
It’s not just Devaney and Rhule – Nebraska football is riddled with rhyme schemes over its long, illustrious history.
Devaney once recalled how in his first game, the Huskers opened with a pass that fell incomplete and the crowd gave a standing ovation, such was their exhaustion with the heavy run scheme they ran under Jennings. Devaney was likely joking or at least exaggerating. But if you remember, the same thing actually happened during Bill Callahan’s first Spring Game in 2004, a sign that the fans were ready to move on from predecessor Frank Solich’s ground-bound scheme.
The triumphant victory over Missouri the Huskers claimed in 2009 was eerily reminiscent of Nebraska’s loss to Colorado in 1990. In both cases, the eventual victor trailed 12-0 heading into the fourth quarter before a 27-point deluge secured the win.
They weren’t always as fortunate as that rain-soaked night in Colombia. The Huskers boasted breakthrough victories over Oklahoma in 1978 as well as Washington in 2010, only to begrudgingly face both again in the post-season, repeat efforts the team was less-than-enthused about. They lost both.
Going back even further, the Huskers’ long unbeaten streak under Devaney began and ended with Coach Pepper Rodgers in a fun bit of symmetry. Nebraska beat his Kansas team in 1969 thanks to a suspect pass interference penalty, leaving Rodgers furious after. Then in ‘72, the two-time reigning national champion Huskers faced 18-point underdog UCLA Bruins coached by Rodgers and lost a stunner. Some might call it karma for the dubious call in ’69.
Rhule himself has banked much of his career on how his teams historically follow the same rising scale, notching more wins each season on the way to a crescendo of double-digit victories by Year Three. Much will be made of how much this season resembles the arc he completed at Temple and Baylor.
To steer the Huskers to a breakthrough season, though, he’ll need to first vanquish a familiar blueblood, as Devaney did in his first season.
“We felt that to get the program going again — to sell people on what we were doing — we had to beat Michigan.” Devaney said years after his pivotal win in the Big House September of 1962.
Rhule will again have the same opportunity to inspire belief come September 20th of 2025.
If the Huskers win – and history is any guide – they could be bound for an epic run.
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Nebraska
Daniel Kaelin Talks Return to Nebraska, Ego-less QB Room, and Wideouts Making Plays
They say all roads lead home, and for Daniel Kaelin, that remains true as he returns to Lincoln after a year away from the program in 2025.
The former four-star Belleview West (NE) star heads into his sophomore season in his second stint as a Husker, ready to compete for an impactful role. Though he’ll likely be on the outside looking in, in terms of earning the starting job, after gaining starting experience at his previous school, he won’t go down without a fight.
Now, after roughly a week and a half of spring football practices in the books, Kaelin met with the media Wednesday. During his time at the mic, the Nebraska native touched on a variety of topics, including his decision to come home, an ego-less quarterback room in Lincoln, and much more.
It didn’t take long for the will-be sophomore to get asked about his decision to return to Nebraska. After explaining the values he got out of his time away, Kaelin described it as something he’s as excited about as he is thankful for.
“It’s been really good,” said Kaelin. “Nebraska’s my home, and there are so many people on this team that I have a good relationship with. So, the transition has been really smooth. I’ve been enjoying being back, for sure”.
Leaving after the end of the 2024 season, Kaelin’s path towards competing for a starting job appeared to be full of obstacles. But a little over a year after he transferred to Virginia, the situation has changed dramatically. Back in the scarlet and cream, a year older and with more experience, the soon-to-be third-year player is enjoying his return, to say the least.
In his time as a Cavalier, the then-redshirt freshman saw action in seven games. Despite a sparing role, he still managed to throw for the first 339 yards of his career, while also scoring his first collegiate touchdown. Kaelin also proved to be a threat on the ground, with 12 carries for 72 yards.
In total, he amassed 400 all-purpose yards at Virginia and comes to Nebraska more battle-tested than before. Here, the 6-foot-3, 218-pounder will look to grow even more, but was asked to reflect on what he gained during his stay on the East Coast.
“It was my first time being away from home,” he said. “I think that year- doing things on my own- was probably big for me becoming an adult. I think I learned a lot about myself that way”.
Between personal development and his time on the field, Kaelin’s lone season at Virginia was not for nothing. Instead, a more mature version of the young quarterback is what the Huskers are getting back amongst their ranks. He also provides them with the third quarterback to have started a Power Four game in their career.
After discussing what he gained in his time away, Kaelin was then asked to explain how he landed back in Lincoln ahead of the 2026 season. To somewhat of a surprise, the Nebraska native suggested it wasn’t initially planned. Rather, the opportunity presented itself, and both sides agreed.
“I didn’t really even expect to be leaving the last school I was at,” Kaelin said. “Things kind of happened pretty quickly. When I got in the portal, I was able to get in touch with Coach Rhule, and when I knew that this was a possibility, it just made a lot of sense for me. It is really comfortable for me coming back home and being around people that I know”.
Using his past relationships with coaches and players such as Carter Nelson and Bode Soukup, the former in-state signal-caller is what you’d call back home. Confident, comfortable, and with a lot more to prove, he’ll look to make an impact on the field for the first time as a Husker this fall.
Kaelin was then asked to shed light on the dynamic within the quarterbacks’ room, and his response sounded similar to that of quarterback coach Glenn Thomas earlier in the day. Instead of pushing each other away due to competition, the position group is looking to help each other grow. In fact, Kaelin suggested it may be the most unified position group he’s ever been a part of, and something he views as a positive change.
“There’s egos,” he said. There’s money involved. I think that can create some tension or problems sometimes. There haven’t been any type of issues like that with the room that we have right now; it’s been great.”
While some suggest that his comment may be a back-handed dig at former signal-callers within the room, it’s clear that the Huskers no longer have an issue with competition in 2026. Instead, the group is pushing eachother to improve. And when spring ball and fall camp come to a close, the best man for the job will emerge with the others’ full support.
A big change since Kaelin was on campus in 2024 is NU’s retooled wide receiver room. After welcoming in a new position coach, the Huskers have been able to recruit, retain, and add several high-level players to the unit. When asked to offer his thoughts on the room, the will-be sophomore didn’t hold back his early praise.
“A big thing that we’ve noticed so far is we have guys that make plays,” Kaelin said. “We’ve been challenging them to- when the ball is in the air, it has got to be theirs. We don’t want 50/50 balls. They’ve got to go make plays. And so far, they’ve definitely been doing that. It’s been really impressive to watch”.
Not only are the Big Red’s pass catchers bigger, deeper, and faster than before, but it’s beginning to pay off for the offense this spring. There’s still plenty of time for the quarterbacks and wideouts to develop chemistry, but early reports suggest the relationship has started well.
For Kaelin, it was positive to see the metaphorical boy return as a man. Not only has he gained experience and found success on the field, but he’s also come back with a deeper understanding of what it takes to lead a team. By all accounts, it appears his teammates have taken a liking to him, so don’t be surprised if he sees the field in some role this upcoming fall.
Again, he’s far from guaranteed the starting job here in Lincoln and will have to beat out two players with more experience than he has. Still, it is more than likely that he will take his first snaps as a Husker at some point in 2026. Were he to take meaningful reps, the third-year sophomore has already been tested before, and that gives Nebraska reason for optimism about the room.
Overall, he sounded as if he was preparing to be more than ready when his opportunity comes. Returning home did not come without a price, but don’t expect Kaelin to remain silent his second time around. The Huskers are looking for a player who can reliably make plays, and it’s hard to argue that there would be another player in his position group who cares more about the program than he does.
Still, he’ll have to prove his skill is worthy of deserving that chance. Spring should tell a lot about where he stands.
Nebraska
In a first for Nebraska, federal judge awards attorney’s fees to immigrant who was detained without bond hearing
For the first time, a federal judge in Nebraska has awarded court costs and attorney’s fees to an immigrant who prevailed in a lawsuit challenging his detention without bond.
Senior U.S. District Court Judge John Gerrard, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, issued the ruling on Tuesday and awarded $1,535.23 to Edgar Eduardo Cadillo Salazar. Gerrard had previously ruled that Salazar’s detention at the Cass County Jail without bond was unconstitutional and ordered the government to provide him with a bond hearing or release him from custody.
Under the federal Equal Access to Justice Act, individuals and businesses that prevail in civil lawsuits against the federal government can file a motion to hold the government liable for attorney’s fees and court costs. Judges can order the government to cover those costs unless they find that the government’s position was “substantially justified,” or if “special circumstances make an award unjust.”
Before last summer, when the Department of Homeland Security revised its longstanding interpretation of statute, only immigrants who were encountered at the border or other ports of entry were subject to mandatory detention. Immigrants encountered after residing in the U.S. were typically subject to discretionary detention and eligible for a bond hearing.
The new interpretation has led to detention without bond for tens of thousands of immigrants who would have previously been eligible to bond out – and it’s led to an endless stream of wrongful detention lawsuits in Nebraska and around the country. A Reuters investigation found that federal courts have ruled against the mandatory detention policy more than 4,400 times.
In Gerrard’s order granting Salazar’s request for attorney’s fees, he said the government’s position that all undocumented immigrants are ineligible for bond hearings was not substantially justified.
“This ‘new understanding’ of a decades-old statute has resulted in the government detaining hundreds of thousands of nonviolent individuals, often without due process or other constitutional protections,” Gerrard wrote. “It has also sparked thousands of lawsuits where courts have ordered release of those wrongfully detained, for which neither immigration courts nor the Department of Justice have seemed prepared.”
He continued: “The government has not provided any justification, let alone a substantial one, for its radical departure from the historical treatment of noncitizens who entered the United States without inspection. Its arguments rely purely on statutory interpretation; the government apparently expects it can transform an entire area of administrative law because it unilaterally decided that, for thirty years, everyone was wrong about what a statute meant.”
Salazar was later denied bond by an immigration judge and remains in custody, according to his attorney, Alexander Smith.
Two similar motions were denied last month by U.S. District Court Judge Susan Bazis, an appointee of former President Joe Biden. In both cases, Bazis had ruled in favor of the detained immigrants, and they were later released on bond per her orders. But in her opinions denying attorney’s fees under the EAJA, she found that the government’s position on mandatory detention was “substantially justified.”
“The Court cannot say that the Federal Respondents’ pre-litigation decision to treat [the respondent] as being subject to mandatory detention, while not ultimately correct in this Court’s view, lacked a reasonable basis in law or fact,” Bazis wrote in a footnote of her opinions.
The issue of mandatory detention is currently under consideration by the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers Nebraska and other Midwest states. In oral arguments last month, the appellate court’s conservative judges appeared friendly to the mandatory detention policy.
Nebraska
‘Best we’ve played all year.’ Trent Perry scores 20 points as UCLA routs No. 9 Nebraska
The UCLA men’s basketball team made Senior Night one to savor Tuesday, dominating No. 9 Nebraska 72-52 at Pauley Pavilion for its 20th victory of the season and third over a top-10 ranked opponent.
The Bruins improved to 20-10 overall and 12-7 in the Big Ten with one regular season game remaining, Saturday at crosstown rival USC.
Trent Perry scored 20 points, Eric Dailey Jr. had 14 and three players — Tyler Bilodeau, Skyy Clark and Xavier Booker — each added eight points.
“Nebraska’s got a great team,” UCLA coach Mick Cronin said. “This is the best we’ve played all year — they brought out the best in us. We went from our worst defensive effort to our best. They outhustle everyone they play, but not us. Tonight we were great, but I love the way they play. If we had their attitude we’d have their record.”
Eric Freeny had four points, five rebounds and three steals in 18 minutes for UCLA, which got 26 points in the paint and 17 second-chance points.
“Effort is what it takes to win in March,” Freeny said. “It was our last home game. Coach keeps on pushing me to be better everyday.”
Sam Hoiberg had 12 points to lead Nebraska, but Pryce Sandfort, who began the game leading the conference in three-pointers made per game, was held to nine points.
“Sandford has been unbelievable so to hold him to nine points is amazing,” Cronin said. “Brandon Williams was the unsung hero.”
Williams had six points and three rebounds in 12 minutes off the bench.
The Bruins were in control from the opening tip-off and never trailed the Cornhuskers (25-5, 14-5). UCLA improved to 10-3 in all-time against Nebraska and the win greatly strengthened its resume for the NCAA tournament as the Bruins also beat then-No. 4 Purdue 69-67 on Jan. 20 and then-No. 10 Illinois 95-94 in overtime on Feb. 21 on Donovan Dent’s layup with one second left.
“We have to take attitude we came with tonight, bottle it up and take it on the road,” Dailey Jr. said. “We’ve got so much left. The season’s not over… we’re only as good as our last game. It’s all about how you respond. I love the fight that we played with tonight.”
This is the fifth time in Cronin’s seven seasons that the Bruins have won 20 or more games. They are 17-1 at home (their only loss in overtime to Indiana on Jan. 31).
“Since I’ve been here we don’t lose much at home.” Cronin said.
UCLA went ahead by 15 points, 37-22, on Perry’s three-pointer with 2:41 left and led 37-24 at intermission. The Bruins shot 50% from the field in the first half (15 for 30) while Nebraska was only 31% (nine for 29).
The Bruins increased their advantage to 18 points on Dailey’s dunk less than five minutes into the second half and the visitors got no closer than nine the rest of the way.
Prior to pregame introductions the Bruins honored seniors Bilodeau, Dent and Clark; fifth-year player Jamar Brown; redshirt seniors Steven Jamerson II, Jack Seidler and Anthony Peoples Jr; and redshirt junior Evan Manjikian. In a media timeout, midway through the first half, former coach Jim Harrick (who led UCLA to its 11th national championship in 1995) was honored and got a loud ovation.
“I’m happy for our seniors, I didn’t want them to lose their last game at Pauley,” said Perry, who reversed a subpar performance at Minnesota, where he was 0-for-7 from the field with one rebound and one assist in 26 minutes. “I had to come out here tonight and bounce back for my team. I play for something bigger than myself and I’m fortunate to have the type of guys I do around me.”
UCLA guard Skyy Clark looks to pass while under pressure from Nebraska guard Sam Hoiberg and forward Berke Buyuktuncel in the second half.
(William Liang / Associated Press)
Over the last four games, Dent has 46 assists and just two turnovers.
Bilodeau has scored in double figures in 26 of 28 games played, totaling 20 points or more nine times.
Dailey moved to within five points of reaching the 1,000-career point milestone.
UCLA has now made at least one three-pointer in 887 of 888 games dating to February 2000.
“We had one practice this week, that’s it,” Cronin said. “We watched film, had a heart-to-heart talk and a shoot around today but that’s it.”
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