Nebraska
Matt Rhule addresses Nebraska’s spring game, special teams, revenue sharing
LINCOLN, Neb. — In his first meeting with the media since the aftermath of Nebraska’s victory in the Pinstripe Bowl, coach Matt Rhule answered questions for 30 minutes Saturday. He could have gone an hour before the topics might have grown stale.
An illustration of the abundance of business to address: The name of Nebraska’s returning starter at quarterback, Dylan Raiola, was not mentioned until the final two minutes.
Dana Holgorsen, the offensive coordinator who received a two-year contract after his trial run at the end of 2024? Not mentioned. John Butler, the defensive coordinator elevated in December from secondary coach, came up one time in passing.
Developments continued Sunday as interior offensive lineman Rocco Spindler, a 23-game starter at Notre Dame, gave Nebraska its 16th portal commitment.
Rhule No. 1: Run the Damn Ball pic.twitter.com/tjuRbhlmde
— Rocco Spindler (@RoccoSpindler92) February 2, 2025
Rhule came off the road late last week to celebrate his 50th birthday Friday and squeezed the Q&A session into his morning before he rushed away to welcome a group of approximately 20 prospects to campus for a recruiting event.
The third-year coach was operating on perhaps a half tank of fuel. His fatigued voice told the story of his five-week schedule since the football season ended.
“We’re not going to win here without working,” Rhule said.
The next two weeks afford a bit of downtime for Rhule and his staff. But there is a stack of pressing matters before Nebraska starts spring practice in late March.
Here’s a rundown of three key topics addressed by Rhule on Saturday — with a dose of perspective:
The cancellation of Nebraska’s spring game appears imminent
What Rhule said: “Fundamentally, I hate to say it like this, but it’s really because last year, we were one of the more televised spring games, and I dealt with a lot of people offering our players a lot of opportunities after that. So to go out and bring in a bunch of new players and then showcase them for all the other schools to watch, that doesn’t make a lot of sense to me. The word ‘tampering’ doesn’t exist anymore, it’s just absolute free, open, common market. And so I don’t necessarily want to open up to the outside world. I don’t want these guys all being able to watch our guys and say, ‘Wow, he looks like a pretty good player. Let’s go get him.’”
Perspective: This storyline blew up on social media and in the news cycle during a quiet weekend on the football calendar, but there’s more to know than simply that Nebraska looks set to cancel its traditional, open-to-the-public scrimmage at the end of spring practice.
Nebraska athletic director Troy Dannen made an announcement last week about the spring game. It didn’t cause an uproar, but Rhule fanned the flames with his comments on tampering. How much the Huskers fended off bids to poach their roster after the spring last year, we don’t know. But just six players entered the portal last spring at Nebraska — two who had left the program months earlier, two walk-ons who didn’t land at Division I schools and two reserves from 2023 who would have likely played similar roles in 2024.
Rhule has grown frustrated, like many coaches, with the rampant tampering that exists in the sport. A televised spring game does little to impact the toxic climate. But Rhule used his stage Saturday to lament the prevalence of roster interference.
Notably, Nebraska will still hold an event at the end of its April practice sessions. It will invite fans. They will show up. And a newly imagined spring showcase might provide more entertainment value than a spring game, which typically lacks substance.
Spring games are dying across college football. For some schools — not Nebraska — it’s because they lose money. For others, a spring game no longer makes sense in this era of NIL, revenue sharing and the portal. Put Nebraska into that category.
Interesting explanation from Matt Rhule on how Nebraska will structure the 105-man roster.
He said the Huskers will treat the first 57 like an active NFL roster. The next 38 will be pieced together like a second group, with an eye on keeping numbers balanced by position.
The…
— Mitch Sherman (@mitchsherman) February 1, 2025
Nebraska is in a better place than most ahead of revenue sharing
What Rhule said: “We don’t take money from the (university). This is all through our budget. So it’s sustainable. A lot of other schools, rev share’s not going to be sustainable. So they can float a big number now and disappoint a kid later. We feel like we can stand on business. This is what we said, and this is what we’re going to do.”
Perspective: Rhule said he talks to coaches at other Power 4 programs who’ve not yet raised half of the $14 million they’re expecting to pay football players in the first year of revenue sharing, which is expected to begin July 1. Nebraska has no such concerns. And it has fewer concerns in years ahead about meeting the increased cost than nearly all of its Big Ten rivals that also benefit from gaudy TV payouts.
The Huskers intend to use this strong financial position to their advantage. “I think we all saw in the College Football Playoff,” Rhule said, “the people who spent the most got the most. I’ve been saying that since I got here. It’s kinda real, right?”
Not only can Nebraska tout that it’s prepared to pay well without concerns about sustainability, Rhule said, but its players also benefit from a support system that helps them manage resources.
“I think it’s important for people to see what we do,” Rhule said. “You guys walk through the parking lot. You don’t see Lamborghinis and Ferraris. Our guys are investing in their futures and taking care of people back home.
Special teams remain unsettled
What Rhule said: “I’m always very protective of our players, but I’ll be quite honest … I don’t think anything we did was wrong schematically last year. I think a lot of our problems stemmed from the snapper position. And once that happens, you’re trying to compensate for things. And I love those guys, but it just was not a good year from that perspective.
“You think about scheme. You think about all these things. But really at the end of the day, it comes down to technique and fundamentals. When something at the very core is not right, then the elements all around it aren’t right.”
Perspective: If Rhule sings the same tune after spring practice alongside a yet-to-be-hired new special teams coordinator, I’ll see more cause for concern. In the first week of February, the coach deserves to receive the benefit of the doubt, having just finished a whirlwind two months of recruiting in the portal and at the high school level while reshaping his coaching staff.
Rhule has handed control of vetting candidates to run special teams to Phil Snow, his longtime confidante and new associate head coach. With the support of Snow and Rhule, time exists for the next coordinator to lead the “overhaul” of special teams that Rhule said he sought after last season.
Undeniably, Nebraska’s problems at long snapper led to some — but not all — of the breakdowns that allowed opponents to block eight kicks in 2024. The long snapper wasn’t on the field when a botched punt return swung momentum in the second half against Iowa. The long snapper didn’t design or call Nebraska’s ill-fated fake field goal near the goal line against Boston College. The Huskers ranked no higher than 92nd nationally in returning and covering punts and kickoffs.
“I don’t think we can put any more time into it in terms of practice,” Rhule said. “I don’t think we can put any more time into it in terms of meetings.”
But the Huskers can make better use of the time they spend on special teams. They can get more of the top players on the team invested in it.
Rhule said he views special teams as an aspect that can be “net neutral” or that can sway the outcome of games toward winning or losing. Nebraska lost games last year and in 2023 because of poor special teams play. In this Big Ten environment, with so many contests for Nebraska decided by one score — 13 of 25 in two seasons under Rhule — it needs a net positive from special teams.
Rhule is leaning on Snow to help in this first phase of improvement.
“I think you guys will find that I trust Phil immensely,” Rhule said, “because it always goes back to the same core values of technique, fundamentals, effort, preparation, just looking at things from that perspective.”
(Photo: Dylan Widger / Imagn Images)
Nebraska
Penn State’s vets shined in the team’s romp vs. Nebraska, and so did these young Lions
Kaytron Allen is now Penn State’s all-time leading rusher after yet another stellar performance on the ground.
Nick Singleton, Allen’s 2022 classmate and good friend, added two more touchdowns to his impressive career total, along with 95 combined rushing-receiving yards.
Singleton has amassed 53 touchdowns for PSU, tying him with Saquon Barkley for the most in program history.
Penn State’s offensive line, led by vets Vega Ioane, Nick Dawkins, Drew Shelton, Anthony Donkoh and Nolan Rucci, paved the way for the Lions’ 231 rushing yards and four rushing scores in PSU’s 37-10 steamrolling of Nebraska on Senior Night in State College.
Senior defensive linemen Dani Dennis-Sutton and Zane Durant combined for two sacks and two pass breakups in the contest.
The Penn State veterans came to play as the Lions improved to 5-6 in their final 2025 game at Beaver Stadium.
It was a good night for a few of the program’s gifted young players, too.
Ethan Grunkemeyer. The Lions’ redshirt freshman quarterback, in his fifth career start, completed 11 of 12 passes for 181 yards and a touchdown.
Grunkemeyer became the first Penn State quarterback to complete 90 percent of his passes on 10 or more attempts – “Grunk” was at 92 percent – since Todd Blackledge completed 10 of 11 (91 percent) passes at Syracuse in 1981.
Penn State running back Kaytron Allen
Daryus Dixson. Penn State’s rapidly developing true freshman cornerback was a difference-maker against Nebraska, finishing with a career-high eight tackles, five of them solos.
Yvan Kemajou. The Lions’ true freshman edge rusher collected four tackles, 1.5 tackles for loss and a sack against the Cornhuskers. The sack was Kemajou’s first.
Kemajou has 4.5 tackles for loss.

Koby Howard. Penn State’s true freshman wideout delivered another explosive play on the Lions’ first touchdown drive – a 31-yard catch that positioned PSU at its 47. The Lions capped their 98-yard scoring march three plays later.
Howard, who has three explosive plays in 2025, is averaging 19.8 yards on five receptions.
Alex Tatsch. PSU’s true freshman linebacker produced a career-high five tackles, three of them solos.
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Nebraska
Here are 2 ways you can watch Nebraska vs Penn State football streaming free today
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The Nebraska Cornhuskers visit the Penn State Nittany Lions as underdogs looking to knock off the resurgent home team during Week 13 of the college football season. Kickoff takes place today at 4 p.m. PT/7 p.m. ET (6 p.m. CT) on Saturday, November 22 with a live TV broadcast on NBC, and streaming on Peacock.
• You can watch Penn State vs. Nebraska football live for FREE with Fubo (free trial), by signing up with DIRECTV (free trial) or streaming live on Peacock for under $11/month.
What TV channel is the Nebraska vs. Penn State football game on today? Is it streaming free anywhere?
When: Kickoff takes place at 4 p.m. PT/7 p.m. ET (6 p.m. CT) on Saturday, November 22.
Where: Beaver Stadium in University Park, PA
TV Channel: NBC, and streaming on Peacock.
How to watch streaming live without cable: There are several options to watch this game and more football games this season.
- You can watch this game live for FREE with DIRECTV (free trial) or by signing up for Fubo (free trial).
- You can also sign up for Peacock ($10.99/month) to watch this game live on your TV, computer, phone or tablet with the Peacock app. Many Big Ten college football games will be streaming only on Peacock this season.
- The best deal: Another great option might be to get a Sling “Season Pass” ($199) and buy an HDTV antenna. This pairing would give you nearly every channel showing college football this season.
- If you already have a cable provider, use your login information to watch this game on NBC Live.
Nebraska vs. Penn State spread, latest betting odds
Point spread: PSU: -7.5 | NEB: +7.5
Over/Under: 45.5
- Get promo codes, signup deals and free bets from our Oregon Betting News home page.
Nebraska
Lincoln senator slams Pillen’s push to scrap TEEOSA as Nebraska’s school funding fight escalates
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) — Nebraska’s education funding has been the topic of much discussion this week, from a legislature-created commission studying the funding formula to an interim study that is in-part focusing on property tax contributions.
But a pointed statement from Gov. Jim Pillen is drawing ire from some legislators, and interest from others.
Pillen issued a statement Thursday night calling for the Unicameral to abolish TEEOSA — the Tax Equity and Educational Opportunities Support Act — after a $30 million overpayment to Omaha Public Schools.
TEEOSA is the funding formula used to determine state aid, by subtracting resources from needs, and it’s been in use since the 90s. But some legislators say getting rid of it is not as simple as it might sound.
Pillen, in his statement, blamed the “deaf ears” of some in the legislature for failing to pass tax reform.
Adams senator Myron Dorn told 10/11 because of valuation increases, TEEOSA has gone a different route than originally intended.
“I believe there could be definitely easier ways. There are solutions,” Dorn said. “We’ve tried to change it over the years. We haven’t had much success. Is it too complicated? Yes, it’s complicated.”
But abolishing the program outright isn’t something Lincoln Sen. Danielle Conrad will support, calling the governor’s comments “bizarre” and “unhinged.”
“It would be reckless and wrong to dismantle our school funding system without a clear, viable alternative that would ensure we can meet our students’ needs and ensure that we are good stewards of taxpayer dollars,” Conrad said.
She and Dorn clashed during an interim study hearing Thursday, where Conrad asked if protecting tax cuts for the wealthy and big corporations was more important than providing property tax relief.
Part of the funding issue is a massive budget deficit, something Conrad attributed in-part to tax cuts for the wealthy pushed by Gov. Pillen and his legislative allies in 2023.
“Gov. Pillen and his allies in the Legislature pushed forward blindly to engineer Kansas-style tax cuts that are inequitable and unsustainable and that benefit the wealthiest Nebraskans and the largest corporations,” Conrad said, “at the expense of ensuring a balanced budget and our ability to take care of critical things like roads and the university health care and child care and public education in our K-12 schools.”
Dorn added he has faith in the new School Finance Review Commission.
“I think if you give them a year or two, they’re going to come up with some very good concepts, some very good ideas in how we can make the TEEOSA formula better, or maybe have a different formula,” Dorn said.
Legislators will return Jan. 7 to begin their short, 60-day second session, with the budget expected to take up most of their time.
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