Nebraska
Everything Boston College Football Head Coach Bill O’Brien Said on Selection to Pinstripe Bowl
The Boston College Eagles (7-5, 4-4 ACC) football team received its bowl invitation on Sunday afternoon to take on the Nebraska Cornhuskers (6-6, 3-6 B1G) in the Pinstripe Bowl on Dec. 28 at Yankee Stadium.
On Monday, Eagles head coach Bill O’Brien spoke about being selected to the bowl game and shared his early thoughts on Nebraska.
Below is a transcript of everything O’Brien said.
Q: Can you just speak to the benefits of having this game in the northeast. It’s not quite as local as Fenway, but still in New York, it’s not too far away. Just how much [does] that help from a fan and recruiting standpoint as well.
O’BRIEN: Yeah, I think it’s fantastic for us to be able to play in New York City at an iconic venue, Yankee Stadium. We have a lot of our fan base that lives in that area, lives in the Tri-State area and New York City, have some great alums in that area. So it’s a great opportunity for us. We’re playing an iconic program in Nebraska, led by Matt Rhule, who I’ve known for a long time, got great respect for Matt. So it’s a really, it’s an excellent opportunity for us at BC.
Q: Are you anticipating any opt-outs for the bowl game?
O’BRIEN: As of right now, we’ll see. Not ready to really talk about that right now, some guys are still making decisions. We’ll see. They’re always going to do what’s in the best interest along with the advice that I give them and things like that. So they’ll do what’s in the best interest of their own careers and Boston College. We’ll see how it all shakes out.
Q: With the 15 extra practices, how much are you going to allocate to team building and how much to game planning?
O’BRIEN: Yeah, well every day is team building. Every day here is team building, but yeah, I know what you mean. We’ll start introducing Nebraska at some point in time. We’ve got to watch the film on them first. There’s a lot of film and so we’ve got to get through all that, but we’ll do a good job with our team. We’ll start practice tomorrow. We’ll practice Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, and our team will show up to practice and we’ll be ready to play.
Q: Just how does this kind of cap your season? Where have you been able to accomplish and what you wanted to accomplish this year, and does this bowl appearance kind of make that statement about the direction of program setting in?
O’BRIEN: I think it’s, for where we’re at, to win three out of our last four, and to get to seven wins, and now to have a chance to go to this bowl game and play Nebraska. That was the big thing for me was to be able to go to a bowl where we could play an opponent like Nebraska, a Big Ten opponent. Obviously, I’m familiar with the Big Ten, the history of Nebraska and college football in this country is fantastic. So, to be able to go down there, it’s a great opportunity for our guys. It means a lot. We get all these extra practices, got a chance to improve as a football team and really excited about it. Our guys are excited about it. Coaching staff. It’s just awesome for Boston College.
Q: Coach, without dating you too much, I just wanted to ask if you had a favorite Nebraska football memory from growing up because I know they were one of those like handful of teams you got to watch on TV back in the day.
O’BRIEN: Yeah, I mean you remember the famous game. I think it was probably, man I probably be dating myself, but the Nebraska-Miami national championship game, Tom Osborne, Howard Schnellenberger. I think Tom Osborne elected to go for two to try to win the game, didn’t get it. I think Miami won the game. That was incredible. What an incredible, very, very, one of those college football games that you just never forget. And then I coached against Nebraska twice at Penn State. So we coached against them in 2012 in Lincoln which is an incredible environment and had a great game against them. We lost. And then we coached against them at Penn State at another great game. Lost that one too. So just tough, tough games, tough environments, but great memories of just Nebraska football growing up. No doubt about it.
Q: It was great to see the ACC getting two teams in the College Football Playoff. When you look ahead to ‘25 schedule, you’ll be hosting three playoff teams next year at home which Notre Dame, Clemson, SMU. How positive is that, not only for the conference, but really raising the profile of Boston College?
O’BRIEN: Yeah, I mean it’s huge. And to think about the ACC getting two teams in, that SMU-Clemson game was a great football game to watch. Came down to the last play. It was incredible to see how that game unfolded. Two great teams. Yeah, I know there’s a lot of back and forth between the conferences and all that, I get it. I’ve kind of said my peace on that. I just, I think the ACC is a very difficult league. I’ve coached in all three conferences, and all these games are tough. There’s great coaches, there’s great quarterbacks, there’s defensive linemen and running backs and wide receivers and DB’s and guys you got to deal with that are tight ends. I mean, it’s a difficult league to coach in in the ACC. And I think if you really study it and you really study the teams within each conference, not sure where we get all this that the ACC is third. Really not sure about that. I get it, but I just think the ACC is a very, very difficult conference and I’m glad to see that we got two teams in.
Q: Two parter. First, can you elaborate on your relationship with Matt Rhule? Just how you guys know each other over the years, how far do you go back? And then just some thoughts on Nebraska, I know you’re just getting a feel for them, but your early thoughts on them.
O’BRIEN: Yeah, when I got the job at Penn State was when I really met Matt. Matt went to Penn State. Played at Penn State. Matt is from State College, just a very well known guy in Pennsylvania and at Penn State. Matt’s a great guy. He was coaching, I think at, I want to say Temple when I was at Penn State. And wherever he’s gone, he’s done a really good job. He’s coached in the NFL. He worked for Tom Coughlin in New York Giants, head coach of the Carolina Panthers as everybody knows and he’s done a great job at Baylor, Nebraska, Temple, guy’s a really good football coach. And yeah, so I got to know him or first met him about 12 years ago at Penn State.
Q: And then just early scouting report on Nebraska? I know you’re just getting a feel for them but what makes them unique?
O’BRIEN: I mean you start offensively, they’ve got an excellent young quarterback in Dylan Raiola. We recruited him when I was at Alabama, one of the top players in the country at that position and so it’s a very difficult challenge for us. A lot of good skill players and then as always Nebraska has linemen, right. They’ve got offensive linemen and they’ve got defensive linemen. On defense, their edge guys are really good, their defensive tackles are excellent, and they’re a good football team. I know at the end of the day, we both lost some tough games, but Nebraska is a really good football team and it’s a big time opportunity for us to go against a Big Ten team and it’s pretty cool opportunity for us.
Q: Do you anticipate fine tuning a few things and maybe adding a few wrinkles that Nebraska won’t see on film?
O’BRIEN: I mean, I don’t know. We’re gonna have to look at it. We’re studying the tape right now. Look, we do what we do, we run the ball, we try to mix it up on defense, and we try to do as good a job as we can on special teams, covering kicks and coming after kicks and returning kicks and things like that. So, we’ll do what we do and we’ll see if there’s, as we watch the tape, if there’s anything we can try to take advantage of, but we are what we are right now, there’s no doubt about that.
Q: Without getting into which guys might play, might not play, but for your younger guys, I know that bowl games don’t necessarily impact eligibility or one game towards a redshirt or anything like that. So, how great is it to have this opportunity to not only after the practices, to maybe see them in a real game?
O’BRIEN: No doubt, that’s a great question, and there’s no doubt about that. You’ve got a chance to play guys that have not played and this doesn’t affect their redshirt so they can get ready for the game. We’ve got a lot of good young players in this program, so really looking forward to the opportunities that those guys may get. Now, they got to earn it on the practice field. We start practice tomorrow and they’ve got to do a good job of practice to earn the right to play in Yankee Stadium against Nebraska. But it is an opportunity for some of those younger guys to play that have not played. So it’ll be cool to watch that all play out over the next three weeks.
Q: As a general follow up for you, I know I asked earlier about Nebraska memories… You’ve been around for a while. Are there like Bucket List stadiums that you look at and be like, ‘Hey, we can still cross this one off the list?’
O’BRIEN: Yeah. I mean, I’ve never been to Yankee Stadium. So this is very, very cool to have a chance to go coach a football game in Yankee Stadium. I mean, as a football coach who’s been around a long time, who has a baseball background, you guys know my son as a baseball player, it’s an unbelievable opportunity. And I’ve been to a lot of stadiums. Just thinking about when I coached at Penn State and we went to Nebraska and played in Lincoln. That place, there’s a lot of history there and a lot of great games have been played in that stadium. So yeah, I’ve been fortunate. I’ve coached in a lot of unbelievable venues.
Q: Gonna wear a Red Sox shirt while you’re down there?
O’BRIEN: No, no, not at all.
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Nebraska
Pillen: Nebraska senator tears down historical exhibits by PragerU from Capitol walls
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – Parts of a temporary historical exhibit inside the Nebraska State Capitol were torn down by a state senator, Gov. Pillen alleges.
Gov. Pillen said Wednesday on social media that several displays of historical figures, key events in the American Revolution and portraits of those who signed the Declaration of Independence were “ripped off the walls” by state Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh of Omaha.
A 40-second video shared by Pillen appears to show Sen. Cavanaugh taking down several displays and a photo showed the items on the floor of her office.
The displays featuring material made by the controversial conservative group PragerU were put up in the state Capitol as part of the United States’ 250th anniversary.
“Celebrating America during our 250th year should be a moment of unity and patriotism, not divisiveness and destructive partisanship. I am disappointed in this shameful and selfish bad example,” Pillen wrote.
Cavanaugh told 10/11 that senators are prohibited from putting items on the walls in the hallway outside their offices. She said the posters line the entire hallway around the first floor, but she only took down the ones outside her office.
“When I walked in this morning and saw these poster boards lining the hallway of my office, I thought well I’m not allowed to have things lining the hall of my office… I tried to take them down as gently as I could and not damage any of them, and I stacked them inside of my office and I let the state patrol know that they were there,” Cavanaugh said.
PragerU has previously faced criticism for making content that historians, researchers and scholars have considered inaccurate or misleading. Some parents and educators have also spoken out against the nonprofit, saying its content spreads misinformation and is being used for “indoctrinating children.”
The Founders Museum exhibit in particular has been criticized by The American Historical Association for blurring the line between reality and fiction, according to NPR.
The exhibit is supposed to remain on display during public building hours through the summer.
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Copyright 2026 KOLN. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Oregon State LB transfer Dexter Foster commits to Nebraska
Nebraska has picked up a third linebacker commitment from Oregon State transfer Dexter Foster, a sophomore with three seasons of eligibility remaining, including a redshirt year.
The 6-foot-3, 236lb linebacker started in seven games this fall for the Beavers, totaling 52 tackles with 3.0 tackles for loss, four quarterback hurries and a pass breakup. As a true freshman in 2024, he appeared in 12 games, totaling 43 tackles with two tackles for loss, a sack and two quarterback hurries.
Foster held just two offers coming out of high school prior to committing to Oregon State, but was at one point a target for new Nebraska defensive coordinator Rob Aurich, when Aurich was the defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at Idaho in 2022-2023.
The sophomore joins a linebacker room that has seen a bit of a facelift through transfer portal additions. San Diego State linebacker Owen Chambliss led the Aztecs in tackles this season and has now signed with the Huskers, following Rob Aurich to Lincoln. Iowa State freshman linebacker Will Hawthorne committed to the Huskers on Tuesday. Nebraska fell just short of Iowa State when Hawthorne was coming out of Gilbert (Ia.) in the 2025 cycle.
Foster is the seventh transfer portal addition for the Huskers this cycle and the fourth defensive addition. The Huskers are expected to be done with linebacker portal recruiting at this point and will turn attention to needs up front, both at defensive tackle and edge rusher.
Quick look at what Nebraska is getting in Foster
Standing 6-foot-3, and north of 235lbs, Foster is rangy and athletic in space. Has the versatility to play true strong-side or weak-side linebacker and could even spin down to edge rusher if needed. Possesses the athletic and physical range to track down ball-carriers in space, arm length to keep would-be-blockers at bay. Shows good eye discipline working through traffic, quick to react and trigger downhill, with the fluidity to change directions quickly. Still more read-and-react than anticipatory at this point in his development, but gets to his spots quickly. Has the athleticism to stick in coverage against running backs, tight ends and even slot receivers.
Has the experience, size and play-style to factor into Nebraska’s linebacker rotation immediately, and could even push to start alongside San Diego State linebacker transfer Owen Chambliss. Has the versatility to be a chess piece of sorts for Aurich and stick on the field regardless of personnel.
Nebraska
Nebraska-based pizza chain Godfather’s Pizza is set to open a new location in Queen Creek
QUEEN CREEK, AZ — A slice of the Midwest is coming to the East Valley! Godfather’s Pizza from Omaha, Nebraska, is set to open a new location this month in Queen Creek.
Bruce Cannon, who owns and operates two Godfather’s Pizza locations in Lincoln and Norfolk, Nebraska, will also own and operate the new Queen Creek restaurant.
“This marks the brand’s first traditional Godfather’s Pizza restaurant in Arizona since 2009, signaling an exciting return to the Phoenix metro area,” read the news release sent to ABC15.
The restaurant will open near Queen Creek Rd and Signal Butte Rd.
The restaurant will provide dine-in, carryout, and third-party delivery options, featuring its classic pizza lineup alongside favorites like breadsticks, streusels, and specialty pies.
IF YOU GO
- Opening date: January 19, 2026.
- Address: 22485 Queen Creek Road, Suite 101
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