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Four Observations From Nebraska Football’s Loss to Iowa

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Four Observations From Nebraska Football’s Loss to Iowa


LINCOLN—Nebraska and Iowa met for a Black Friday battle with both teams at 7-4.

By the end of the day, Iowa was 8-4, and Nebraska’s 7-5 record felt like a gut punch from another rivalry loss to the Hawkeyes. Below are four observations from the game.

“That’s unacceptable.”

– Nebraska coach Matt Rhule after the loss

Let’s begin with a couple of notes that went Nebraska’s way.

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The Blackshirts opened the game with a pair of three straight three-and-outs, even with the latter ending in a field goal. In the first quarter, Iowa managed just 2.6 yards per carry.

On special teams, Nebraska recovered a kickoff that Iowa mistakenly let fall. Kyle Cunanan made all three of his field goals.

Nebraska kicker Kyle Cunanan makes a 31-yard field goal against Iowa.

Nebraska kicker Kyle Cunanan makes a 31-yard field goal against Iowa. / Kenny Larabee, KLIN

With those out of the way, oof. Bad misses galore.

On Nebraska’s first kickoff, head coach Matt Rhule and special teams coordinator Mike Ekeler elected to challenge Iowa returner Kaden Wetjen. Through 11 games, he averaged nearly 30 yards a return on kickoffs with one touchdown, adding three more scores on punt returns.

Wetjen took that kickoff 51 yards. A penalty moved it up another 15 yards, which meant the three-and-out by the Blackshirts still resulted in Iowa points.

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“Certainly, the kickoff return and the field position tilted in the first half against us,” Nebraska coach Matt Rhule said after the game. “At one point, they had 10 points, and they had nine plays or something like that. I said, ‘Calm down; just keep playing.’”

In the second quarter, Iowa was picking up more than seven yards on every run. From the second quarter on, the Hawkeyes picked up 7-of-10 third downs, staying on the field longer against an increasingly tired Blackshirt unit.

Iowa Hawkeyes quarterback Mark Gronowski hands the ball off to running back Kamari Moulton.

Iowa Hawkeyes quarterback Mark Gronowski hands the ball off to running back Kamari Moulton. The pair combined for 157 yards and four touchdowns on the ground. / Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

That defensive unit had to spend extra time on the field in the third quarter. With Nebraska having just a pair of three-and-outs for drives in the quarter, Iowa had the ball for 12:38. The Huskers could have had another drive, but Jacory Barney Jr. got blown up while attempting to return a punt, and the ball sputtered into the end zone, which Nebraska did recover, but resulted in a safety.

The Blackshirts were eaten up by another quarterback who can make you pay with his legs. Mark Gronowski rushed for 64 yards and two touchdowns. He also threw just his eighth touchdown pass of the season. Gronowski’s 166 yards through the air are his most since throwing for 186 yards at Rutgers back in September.

In the punt game, Archie Wilson was forced to do most of his work into a strong south wind. The Australian averaged just 32 yards a punt, with a long of 35.

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Despite a good start by the defense and moments where the special teams offered sparks, the field constantly tilted in Iowa’s favor. That’s what the Hawkeyes do under Kirk Ferentz, and they did it well again on Friday.

“To me, today was about big plays,” Rhule said. “They had control, and they ended up running. The play action off the run game and just having to do too much to sell out.”

In the same week Emmett Johnson was left off the finalist list for the Doak Walker Award, given to the nation’s top running back, Johnson showed that he was snubbed and should have been included.

Johnson finished with a career-high 217 yards and one touchdown on the ground. That’s the first 200-yard game by a Husker since Ameer Abdullah (225 yards) in 2014.

“I was just trying to leave it all out there on the field,” Johnson said after the game.

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Nebraska running back Emmett Johnson takes the carry 70 yards against Iowa.

Nebraska running back Emmett Johnson takes the carry 70 yards against Iowa. / Kenny Larabee, KLIN

On the year, Johnson is up to 1,451 yards rushing. That’s good for eighth place on the NU single-season rushing chart. He also passed Abdullah (1,103 yards in 2013) for the most rushing yards in Big Ten Conference games, picking up 1,125 yards in the nine league games.

Johnson also passed Abdullah for career receiving yards, now up to fourth with 702 yards.

With 22 yards receiving, Johnson had 229 all-purpose yards on the day. He now has 1,821 all-purpose yards in 2025. That moves him onto the NU top-10 list for a single season, passing Marlon Lucky (1,743 yards in 2007), and Mike Rozier (1,790 yards in 1982) for eighth.

Johnson almost single-handedly had Nebraska in the game at halftime. He had already rushed 19 times for 177 yards and his touchdown. Within those rushing yards was his 70-yarder to set up the only touchdown Nebraska would get in the contest.

Nebraska running back Emmett Johnson carries the ball against Iowa.

Nebraska running back Emmett Johnson carries the ball against Iowa. / Kenny Larabee, KLIN

The Husker junior now has a couple of decisions to make: whether or not to play in the bowl game and whether or not to go early for the NFL draft.

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“I’m just going to go back home and talk to my family and let God take over that,” Johnson said. “I’m going to take this time to just pray about everything. I love this place a lot, so I just got to go pray about it and let God decide what I’m going to do.”

November has been a tough month for Husker football fans for some time.

Nebraska is just 2-10 in the month under Matt Rhule. The Huskers have not won more than one game in November since 2016.

Iowa Hawkeyes running back Kamari Moulton

Iowa Hawkeyes running back Kamari Moulton is hoisted by teammates after scoring a touchdown against the Nebraska Cornhuskers during the fourth quarter at Memorial Stadium. / Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

Since joining the Big Ten Conference, Nebraska is just 21-37. That includes going 4-0 in 2012.

“When you end the season the way we have the last two games, it has to rest solely on me,” Rhule said in his postgame opening statement.

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Against Iowa, Nebraska is now 30-23-3 all-time. That includes going 3-1 in the first four years of being conference foes in the Big Ten.

But over the last decade-plus, it has been all Hawkeyes. Iowa has won 10-of-11 Black Friday contests. The lone win for the Huskers came under interim coach Mickey Joseph in 2022. The last full-time head coach for Nebraska to beat Iowa was Bo Pelini.

The Iowa Hawkeyes hoist the Heroes Trophy after defeating the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Memorial Stadium.

The Iowa Hawkeyes hoist the Heroes Trophy after defeating the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Memorial Stadium. / Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

Nebraska’s only win over Iowa since joining the Big Ten was in the first year of the game, becoming a rivalry: 2011.

The talk from many (most? all?) of us surrounded the almost mythical boost Matt Rhule’s teams have taken in year three under him. Temple went 2-10 and 6-6 before posting back-to-back 10-win seasons. Baylor jumped from 1-11 to 7-6 to 11-3.

Matt Rhule is now 2-10 in November, including 0-3 against Iowa, as Nebraska's head coach.

Matt Rhule is now 2-10 in November, including 0-3 against Iowa, as Nebraska’s head coach. / Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

Nebraska has made improvements each season under Rhule. The 6-7 2023 was followed by a 7-6 last year. The Huskers are 7-5 and heading to a second straight bowl game, but these seven wins feel much further back compared to the seven wins in 2024, where Nebraska was getting over the hump by finally getting back to a bowl game and even winning it.

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Hindering the potential for more wins down the stretch were injuries at the quarterback position. Dylan Raiola was lost midway through the USC game. TJ Lateef filled in admirably, leading the Huskers to a win at UCLA before struggling at Penn State and having a tough day against Iowa, which included tweaking his hamstring and limiting the type of playcalls that could involve him moving around.

“TJ got hurt early on in the game, and that limited a lot of the things that we wanted to do,” Rhule said. “(Offensive coordinator Dana Holgorsen) was like, ‘Hey, I’m not going to be able to move him around.’

“One of our big thoughts this game was, in the drop back game, he’d scramble around because sort of the way that they play, and we had to kind of abandon that early.”

Lateef finished 9-for-24 for 69 yards and no touchdowns through the air. This comes after another week of speculation and increased reports about Raiola’s future in Lincoln.

True freshman quarterback went 1-2 as a starter since taking over for Dylan Raiola.

True freshman quarterback went 1-2 as a starter since taking over for Dylan Raiola. / Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

Ask Husker fans and media about Lateef being able to take the reins after the UCLA game? You’d have definitely received favorable answers. After the Iowa game? It might be better to roll into 2025 with some experience at that position, barring a major offseason of improvement for Lateef.

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Nebraska was also playing a bunch of underclassmen all over the roster. The depth chart seemingly got younger by the week. That’s another place where another year of development could pay off handsomely for the program.

The year three bump didn’t happen, but some could also argue this was really year two (Scott Frost got a year zero!). That’s not the camp that I’m in, but whether that’s the case or not does not change how expectations lead into 2026.

Even if the record didn’t take a jump, the trajectory of the program looks improved. Questions remain ahead of signing day next week and the transfer portal in January. If the Huskers can get to next fall with this young talent making offseason jumps, the real Rhule bump could be just around the corner.

“I think people have a right to be upset with how (the season) ended,” Rhule said. “I’m going to work as hard as I can, as long as I can. I’m going to surround myself with really positive people, not toxic people, and try to continue to move the program forward.”

Have a question or comment for Kaleb? Send an email to kalebhenry.huskermax@gmail.com.

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Nebraska Football 2025 Schedule

Home games are bolded. All times central.

Have a question or comment for Kaleb? Send an email to kalebhenry.huskermax@gmail.com.

Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.



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How to Watch Nebraska vs. Iowa: Time, TV Channel, Live Stream – November 28, 2025

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How to Watch Nebraska vs. Iowa: Time, TV Channel, Live Stream – November 28, 2025


Data Skrive

Mark Gronowski and the Iowa Hawkeyes (7-4) are in action on Friday at 12 p.m. ET versus the Nebraska Cornhuskers (7-4) at Memorial Stadium (Lincoln, NE). The matchup is on CBS, if you’re searching for how to watch.

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Keep up with college football all season on FOX Sports. Learn more about the Iowa Hawkeyes and the Nebraska Cornhuskers.

How to Watch Iowa vs. Nebraska

  • When: Friday, November 28, 2025 at 12 p.m. ET
  • Location: Memorial Stadium (Lincoln, NE) in Lincoln, Nebraska
  • TV Channel: CBS
  • Live Box Score: FOX Sports

Iowa vs. Nebraska: Head to Head

  • Against Nebraska, Iowa has tallied two wins over the past three matchups.
  • The two teams are tied ATS (1-1-1) in those meetings while the scoring has gone over the point total on one occasion.
  • Iowa has scored 1 fewer point than Nebraska in their past three games.

Iowa’s 2025 Schedule

Date Opponent Score
8/30/2025 vs. Albany W 34-7
9/6/2025 at Iowa State L 16-13
9/13/2025 vs. UMass W 47-7
9/19/2025 at Rutgers W 38-28
9/27/2025 vs. Indiana L 20-15
10/11/2025 at Wisconsin W 37-0
10/18/2025 vs. Penn State W 25-24
10/25/2025 vs. Minnesota W 41-3
11/8/2025 vs. Oregon L 18-16
11/15/2025 at USC L 26-21
11/22/2025 vs. Michigan State W 20-17
11/28/2025 at Nebraska

Iowa 2025 Stats & Insights

  • Iowa has struggled offensively, ranking 15th-worst in the FBS (309.4 yards per game) this season. However, the defense ranks eighth-best in the nation, allowing just 267.9 yards per game.
  • While Iowa ranks sixth-worst in the FBS in passing offense with 134.8 passing yards per game, it’s been a different situation with the defense, which ranks 11th-best (166.3 passing yards per game allowed).
  • The Hawkeyes sport the 69th-ranked offense this season (27.9 points per game), and they’ve been more effective on the other side of the ball, ranking ninth-best with just 15.1 points allowed per game.
  • The Hawkeyes rank 50th in rushing yards this year (174.5 rushing yards per game), but they’ve been thriving on the other side of the ball, ranking 14th-best in the FBS with 101.6 rushing yards allowed per game.
  • Iowa is averaging a 41.6% third-down conversion rate on offense this season (53rd in the FBS), and is surrendering a 34.8% third-down conversion rate (36th) on the defensive side of the ball.
  • The Hawkeyes have forced 13 total turnovers (74th in the FBS) this season and have turned it over 11 times (26th in the FBS) for a turnover margin of +2, 52nd-ranked in college football.

Iowa 2025 Key Players

Name Position Stats
Mark Gronowski QB 1,363 YDS (62.9%) / 7 TD / 6 INT
427 RUSH YDS / 13 RUSH TD / 38.8 RUSH YPG
Kamari Moulton RB 690 YDS / 2 TD / 76.7 YPG / 5.0 YPC
15 REC / 95 REC YDS / 0 REC TD / 13.6 REC YPG
Kaden Wetjen WR 20 REC / 151 YDS / 1 TD / 15.1 YPG
Xavier Williams RB 260 YDS / 3 TD / 28.9 YPG / 5.9 YPC
Karson Sharar LB 72 TKL / 7.0 TFL / 2.0 SACK
Zach Lutmer DB 61 TKL / 4.0 TFL / 1.0 SACK / 3 INT
Xavier Nwankpa DB 64 TKL / 1.0 TFL / 1 INT / 1 PD
Koen Entringer DB 66 TKL / 3.0 TFL

Nebraska’s 2025 Schedule

Date Opponent Score
8/28/2025 vs. Cincinnati W 20-17
9/6/2025 vs. Akron W 68-0
9/13/2025 vs. Houston Christian W 59-7
9/20/2025 vs. Michigan L 30-27
10/4/2025 vs. Michigan State W 38-27
10/11/2025 at Maryland W 34-31
10/17/2025 at Minnesota L 24-6
10/25/2025 vs. Northwestern W 28-21
11/1/2025 vs. USC L 21-17
11/8/2025 at UCLA W 28-21
11/22/2025 at Penn State L 37-10
11/28/2025 vs. Iowa

Nebraska 2025 Stats & Insights

  • Nebraska ranks 75th in the FBS with 379.6 total yards per contest, but it has been led by its defense, which ranks 20th-best by allowing only 307.5 total yards per contest.
  • Nebraska ranks 54th in the FBS with 242.8 passing yards per game, but it has been lifted up by its defense, which ranks second-best by surrendering only 138.8 passing yards per contest.
  • From an offensive perspective, the Cornhuskers are putting up 30.5 points per game (47th-ranked). They rank 38th in the FBS defensively (21.5 points surrendered per game).
  • With 136.8 rushing yards per game on offense, the Cornhuskers rank 87th in the FBS. Defensively they rank 97th, surrendering 168.7 rushing yards per game.
  • Nebraska ranks 26th in the FBS with a 46.6% third-down conversion rate on offense, and 50th with a 36.6% third-down percentage allowed on the defensive side of the ball.
  • With 12 forced turnovers (87th in the FBS) and nine turnovers committed (ninth in the FBS) this season, the Cornhuskers rank 44th in the FBS with a turnover margin of +3.

Nebraska 2025 Key Players

Name Position Stats
Emmett Johnson RB 1,234 YDS / 11 TD / 112.2 YPG / 5.6 YPC
44 REC / 348 REC YDS / 3 REC TD / 31.6 REC YPG
Dylan Raiola QB 2,002 YDS (72.4%) / 18 TD / 6 INT
Nyziah Hunter WR 42 REC / 611 YDS / 5 TD / 55.5 YPG
Jacory Barney Jr. WR 42 REC / 458 YDS / 4 TD / 41.6 YPG
Javin Wright LB 71 TKL / 6.0 TFL / 1.5 SACK / 1 INT
DeShon Singleton DB 61 TKL / 3.0 TFL / 1.0 SACK / 2 INT
Vincent Shavers Jr. LB 46 TKL / 6.0 TFL / 1.0 SACK
Rex Guthrie DB 48 TKL / 0.0 TFL

FOX Sports created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

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Jett Thomalla, Millard South Cruise To Nebraska High School Football Title

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Jett Thomalla, Millard South Cruise To Nebraska High School Football Title


It was the perfect culmination to an incredible career for one Nebraska high school football standout.

Jett Thomalla led Millard South High School to the Class A Nebraska high school football state championship with a one-sided 49-0 victory over Papillion-LaVista South in the finals. 

The Patriots, who were the No. 4 seed due to receiving a forfeit loss during the regular season, earned wins in the playoffs by 42, 45 and 41 points to get them into the championship.

Thomalla, an Alabama commit, was flawless in leading seven first half touchdown drives to put Millard South up at the half by what the final score would eventually be.

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In the first quarter, the Patriots scored four touchdowns, adding three more in the second quarter behind Thomalla.

Thomalla was 15 of 21 passing for 288 yards and seven touchdowns, though he did throw an interception. Amarion Jackson, an Iowa State commit who missed time this season, had six receptions for 118 yards and two touchdowns.

Owen Zech, another senior like Thomalla and Jackson, caught four passes for 129 yards and three touchdowns. Both Gabe Prucha and Isaac Jensen, also seniors, caught a touchdown pass.

Prucha added a team-high 83 yards rushing.

Thomalla finished his final season of high school football by completing 193 of 266 passes fro 3,484 yards with 58 touchdowns and five interceptions. He had seven passing touchdowns in each of the last two games, throwing for at least two in every contest this season.

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Five times Thomalla went over 300 yards, including a season-high 463 in a 62-21 playoff win over No. 1 seed Omaha Westside.

During his career, Thomalla played in 40 games, completing 648 of 974 for 10,253 yards. He threw 134 touchdowns against just 19 interceptions, adding 252 yards rushing and six more scores. 

Over the past three seasons, Millard South went 33-4 with one of those defeats being a forfeit loss. They won the last two state championships, besting Omaha Westside in the finals last year, 27-10.

In other championship action on Tuesday, Wahoo bested Sidney, 20-6, and Bishop Neumann topped Grand Island Catholic, 37-15.

On Monday, Sandy Creek downed Crofton, 66-26, Waverly got by Gretna East, 42-27, and Wynot bested St. Mary’s in a scorefest, 71-60.

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Where, Who the Latest Bowl Projections Have Nebraska Playing

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Where, Who the Latest Bowl Projections Have Nebraska Playing


Nebraska football is one game away from finding out its bowl destination.

After getting to and winning the Pinstripe Bowl last year, Matt Rhule has the Huskers headed for a bowl game in back-to-back years for the first time since 2016. NU has also guaranteed a winning season in back-to-back years for the first time since the Bo Pelini era.

But November remains a difficult portion of the schedule for the Big Red. In the Rhule era, Nebraska went 0-4 in the month in 2023, 1-3 last year, and is 1-2 this year.

Nebraska Cornhuskers head coach Matt Rhule.

Nebraska Cornhuskers head coach Matt Rhule. / Matthew O’Haren-Imagn Images

Ahead of a matchup with similarly ranked 7-4 Iowa on Black Friday, here are the latest bowl projections for Nebraska.

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Las Vegas Bowl vs. Utah

Nebraska has never played in the Las Vegas Bowl, but it would be fitting to open the season there for Big Ten Media Days and then end the season in the same place for a bowl game.

This is far and away the most popular pick for the Big Red, with five predictors saying Nebraska will be heading back to Sin City.

Nebraska head coach Matt Rhule

Nebraska head coach Matt Rhule speaks to the media during the Big Ten NCAA college football media days at Mandalay Bay Resort. / Lucas Peltier-Imagn Images

Nebraska and Utah have played four times in history, but not once since the George H. W. Bush administration. The Huskers are 4-0 in the series that goes back to 1968.

The Utes are on the doorstep of the College Football Playoff, sitting at No. 13 with a 9-2 record.

Las Vegas Bowl vs. Arizona State

Another former Pac-12 team here, the Sun Devils are 8-3 and No. 20 in the latest rankings after making the College Football Playoff last season. Former Husker Jeff Sims is now their starting quarterback after Sam Leavitt’s season-ending injury.

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Former Husker Jeff Sims has been leading Arizona State at quarterback this season.

Former Husker Jeff Sims has been leading Arizona State at quarterback this season after stepping in for the injured Sam Leavitt. / Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Nebraska owns a 6-2 all-time record against Arizona State. ASU famously upset the Huskers in 1996 to stop a potential run to a third straight national title.

Music City Bowl vs. LSU

Nebraska’s only Music City Bowl appearance was a 2016 loss to Tennessee. This time, though, could feature a fourth opponent for the Big Red that does not have its original head coach at the helm.

LSU fired Brian Kelly earlier this season. The Tigers are currently 7-4 and headed to No. 8 Oklahoma to close out the year.

Music City Bowl vs. Missouri

A different but more familiar SEC opponent could be waiting for the Big Red in Nashville.

Nebraska holds an all-time lead over Missouri, 65-36-3, though the two teams have not played since 2010, when the Huskers went to the Big Ten and the Tigers were heading into their last year with the Big 12 before departing for the SEC. NU won the last two matchups in the series, but that falls far short of the 24 straight the Big Red took from 1979-2002.

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Nebraska Cornhuskers running back Roy Helu Jr

Nebraska Cornhuskers running back Roy Helu Jr runs between Missouri Tigers defender Jarrell Harrison (11) and Aldon Smith (85) during the second half at Memorial Stadium. Nebraska won 31-17. / Bruce Thorson-Imagn Images

Pinstripe Bowl vs. Miami (FL)

A return trip to New York might not be what the Huskers want, but a chance at a historical bowl rival could get the juices flowing all the same.

Nebraska and Miami are level all-time against each other, splitting the 12 meetings. The two have met in a New York bowl game before, with the Huskers winning 36-34 in the 1962 Gotham Bowl.

In the other five bowl matchups (four Orange and one Rose), the Hurricanes hold a 4-1 advantage. Thrice has the winner of a bowl game between these two teams been named the national champion.

Nebraska Cornhuskers running back Ameer Abdullah

Nebraska Cornhuskers running back Ameer Abdullah celebrates after scoring a touchdown against the Miami Hurricanes in the second half at Memorial Stadium. Nebraska won 41-31. / Bruce Thorson-Imagn Images

Miami is another team on the doorstep of the College Football Playoff. The Hurricanes are 9-2 and No. 12 in the latest rankings.

Nebraska is currently tied for eighth in the Big Ten standings at 4-4. The league’s bowl ties are listed below, but keep in mind that College Football Playoff teams are removed from these. Meaning, Indiana and Ohio State are not likely to fill any of these spots.

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  1. Citrus (formerly Capital One) vs. SEC
  2. ReliaQuest (formerly Outback) vs. SEC
  3. Las Vegas vs. Former Pac-12 Teams
  4. Music City vs. SEC
  5. Pinstripe vs. ACC
  6. Rate (formerly Cactus, Insight, Copper) vs. Big 12
  7. GameAbove Sports (formerly Quick Lane, Motor City) vs. MAC

There is a likelihood that a pre-2024 Big Ten team faces a newly added opponent from the Pac-12. Just like Indiana and Ohio State, Oregon is likely destined for the CFP. That means teams like Washington and USC (UCLA won’t make a bowl) could face a Big Ten opponent in Las Vegas.

Have a question or comment for Kaleb? Send an email to kalebhenry.huskermax@gmail.com.

Nebraska Football 2025 ScheduleEmpty heading

Home games are bolded. All times central.

Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.



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