Nebraska
Nebraska starts November fade with UCLA loss to lead Misery Index for Week 10
How coaches salaries and the NIL bill affects college football
Dan Wolken breaks down the annual college football coaches compensation package to discuss salaries and how the NIL bill affects them.
Sports Pulse
The problem with Nebraska starts with the name, the mascot, the essence of the place.
They’re called the Cornhuskers.
As the legend goes, the term actually came from a sportswriter in 1900 named Cy Sherman, who started calling using “Cornhuskers” to refer to the football team that was referred to at the time as the Nebraska Bugeaters. A few years later, it stuck.
These days, we have lots of mascots in sports that represent relics of the old world: Knights, Pirates, Raptors, Trojans, Cavaliers. We could go on and on.
For people in Nebraska, the name Cornhuskers represents a similar tradition, but with a more personal and meaningful touch. It signifies the hard, noble work of farmers who settled on the Great Plains and fed America, a lifestyle that went hand-in-hand with the sport of football as they saw it at the turn of the 20th century.
But in the modern world, corn crops are processed by machines that can handled multiple tons per hour. The industry has evolved. There are no more actual corn huskers.
The state’s other big cash crop, however, has not evolved. Nebraska football still does the same thing every year.
After starting 5-1 and looking like a lock to reach the postseason for the first time since 2016 – yes, you read that right – Nebraska’s season is once again on the ropes after a 27-20 loss to UCLA.
The level of catastrophe in this result is hard to fully and accurately convey. It’s not just that UCLA was 2-5 or that Nebraska was playing at home or that the Bruins pretty much dominated the game and took a 27-7 lead midway through the third quarter.
It’s the pattern.
Last year, Nebraska was 5-3 with winnable games remaining. It finished 5-7. In 2022, Nebraska was 3-3 and lost its next five games. In 2021, Nebraska was 3-3 and couldn’t find even one more stinkin’ win. In 2019, the Huskers were 4-2 and missed out on bowl eligibility because they lost five of their last six and couldn’t beat 4-8 Purdue.
So the November collapse is not only real, it’s as predictable as the fall harvest. And much to the horror of Nebraska fans, it’s happening again.
At 5-4, Nebraska needs to either win at Southern California, beat Wisconsin or go to Iowa the day after Thanksgiving and win in Kinnick Stadium to become bowl eligible and prevent another horrific late-season slide.
It won’t be easy, especially given how difficult things have been offensively for freshman quarterback Dylan Raiola the last few weeks. Nebraska has scored a total of 58 points in its last four games.
At this point, nobody expects coach Matt Rhule to launch the Huskers from nowhere to national title contention. He won at Temple, he won at Baylor and it would be one of the more stunning developments in recent college football history if he doesn’t eventually win at Nebraska.
But still, there’s no good excuse or explanation for losing at home to a very bad UCLA team. After paying Rhule a bunch of money (he’s owed $56 million after this season) to break this intolerable bowl streak, a mascot in blue jeans and a red cowboy hat representing a 1900s-era farmer who no longer husks his own corn is enough false advertising.
UPS AND DOWNS: Ohio State leads winners and losers from Week 10
That’s why Nebraska is No. 1 in the Misery Index, a weekly measurement of which programs are feeling the most angst.
Four more in misery
Penn State: A lot of people can watch the same movie time and again but still find it enthralling, even though they know every line down to the letter. Boston Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla, for example, has claimed to watch “The Town” multiple times per week. Here at the Misery Index, “Casino” is that movie you just have to click on if you see it come up on the TV guide. Doesn’t matter how many times you’ve seen it, it’s still awesome.
Penn State football is the opposite of that. It’s the movie nobody in their fan base wants to watch on repeat.
Anyone who has invested their time and emotion into this program for the last decade under James Franklin felt it deep in their loins when the Nittany Lions were on the 3-yard line with a chance to tie or take the lead against Ohio State less than seven minutes to go: There’s no way Penn State was scoring. They didn’t, getting stuffed three times before Drew Allar threw an incompletion in the end zone. Penn State never touched the ball again in a 20-13 loss, dropping Franklin to 1-14 against top-five teams and 3-18 against the top 10.
TIRESOME ACT: James Franklin, Penn State fall short again
Clemson: What makes a 33-21 home loss to Louisville so infuriating is that Clemson fans were convinced a lot of the issues of the last few years had been fixed. And why shouldn’t they have been? After an embarrassing 34-3 loss to open the season against Georgia, the Tigers played really well over the next six games, particularly on offense. At minimum, Clemson looked like a team ready to challenge for the ACC title and a College Football Playoff spot. But it turned out to be an orange mirage, and Clemson won’t make the CFP unless it can win the ACC title. They simply don’t have any good wins. Beating Appalachian State, North Carolina State, Stanford, Florida State, Wake Forest and Virginia is not impressive when you’ve gotten smacked around by the two best teams on the schedule.
That’s the reality for Dabo Swinney right now. Clemson is not the best program in the ACC. That would be Miami. It’s not even the second-best because that would be SMU. The national championships are now long in the rear-view mirror, and the Tigers pretty mediocre.
Arizona: It’s almost impossible to believe now, but the Wildcats were indeed ranked 21st in the preseason US LBM Coaches Poll. Even though the architect of Arizona’s turnaround, Jedd Fisch, left for Washington, the return of quarterback Noah Fifita and receiver Tetairoa McMillan gave the Wildcats a 1-2 punch on offense that should have been the foundation for lots of point scoring. Instead, Arizona’s offense has dropped off a cliff under head coach Brent Brennan and offensive coordinator Dino Babers.
Coming into this week, the Wildcats ranked 71st nationally in total offense and 98th in scoring. It was more of the same Saturday in a 56-12 loss to UCF, dropping the Wildcats to 3-6 as Fifita struggled again in this new system. Arizona is without question one of the nation’s most disappointing teams.
Auburn: There will be an Iron Bowl played the Saturday after Thanksgiving, just as it always is. But this year, the state championship of Alabama has already been won – by Vanderbilt of all teams. The Commodores completed an Auburn-Alabama sweep, and became bowl eligible, with a 17-7 win in Jordan-Hare Stadium. It shouldn’t have been a huge surprise. Vanderbilt is a pretty decent team that has been competitive against everyone in the SEC. Auburn is a 3-6 team that needs a miracle to avoid its fourth consecutive losing season.
At this point, Auburn fans have to be wondering, “How did it come to this?” Well, Diego Pavia has played a crazy huge role. The Vanderbilt quarterback beat Auburn last year when he was at New Mexico State. And even before that, in 2022, he beat then-Liberty coach Hugh Freeze 49-14. If you’re one of those people who paid Freeze $6.5 million a year to come to Auburn, it’s fair to wonder whether Pavia would have been a better investment.
Miserable but not miserable enough
Georgia: At this point in the season, you’d find broad agreement across college football that Georgia is the most likely team to win the national championship. The depth of talent is unmatched. The coaching track record is pristine. In wins over Texas and Clemson, they’ve already proven they can beat some of the best teams in the country. But is Carson Beck good enough to lead the Bulldogs to the promised land? It’s a legitimate question for Georgia fans to ask. Because even in a 34-20 win over Florida, a game that was tied deep into the fourth quarter, Beck threw three interceptions. That gives him 11 for the season and eight in the last three weeks. He just makes too many mistakes, and Georgia fans are going to have heartburn every time he drops back to throw.
Virginia Tech: A year ago, Syracuse decided that the 6-6 trajectory of the program wasn’t good enough and hired Fran Brown, who was the defensive backs coach at Georgia, to replace Dino Babers. It’s a decision that has paid off handsomely. Syracuse is now 6-2 and full of excitement after beating Virginia Tech 38-31 in overtime.
Meanwhile, Virginia Tech fans watched their team blow a 21-3 lead and give up a 14-play touchdown drive at the end of regulation to tie things up with 29 seconds to go with a team that hasn’t progressed from last year’s 7-6 record under Brent Pry. If you’re jealous of the excitement from Syracuse football fans, there might be a problem with your program.
Oklahoma State: For the second week in a row, we are asking where the fire is with Mike Gundy as a team that was projected to be a College Football Playoff contender sinks to 3-6 (0-6 in the Big 12) after a 42-21 loss at home to Arizona State. Obviously, this season is gone and it’s not coming back. So we can move on to the bigger picture here, which begins with the following statement Gundy made in his postgame press conference.
“I’m not sure sure I agreed with our schemes,” said Gundy, who mostly appears bored as he comes into the home stretch of his 20th season. “There are some things I don’t really agree with.”
Though he declined to elaborate, that’s a pretty strange thing to say. And it begs more than a few questions – questions like, Aren’t you the…head coach? Do you talk to your coordinators? Are you attending meetings? Are you going to practice? And if there are things in the scheme and gameplan that you don’t agree with, aren’t you the person with the power to change them?
Wisconsin: The great thing about the Badgers’ rivalry with Iowa is how similar the two programs are. They are quintessential Big Ten overachievers, playing a particular brand of Midwestern football that evokes images of frostbite, beer and heavy bruising. Among their 98 meetings, only two wins separate them. In many ways, they are each others’ greatest measuring stick – and right now the reading is clear. Wisconsin has lost touch with its rival after a 42-10 Iowa victory. Two years into the Luke Fickell era, why aren’t the Badgers better than this? Why are they on a three-game losing streak against the Hawkeyes without any of them being particularly close? Why do the Badgers feel like they’ve been bumped down into the third or fourth tier of Big Ten programs? Between 1998 and 2019, Wisconsin was basically a Top 25 staple. Now, the Badgers are just jumping around the middle of the Big Ten standings.
Nebraska
Detective speaks out about Nebraska teen’s 1969 murder case
(WOWT) – Stabbed at least a dozen times, the body of 17-year-old Mary Kay Heese was discovered along a country road in 1969.
In an update to an exclusive First Alert 6 investigation, the detective who helped solve the decades-long cold case is speaking out.
“It’s been a dark cloud over Wahoo for a long time. There’s a lot of people who remember that,” Saunders County Attorney Investigator Ted Green said.
For nine years, Detective Green has learned much about the victim’s life and how it came to an end.
“She fought some, there was a struggle,” Green said.
The suspect, Joseph Ambroz, was 22 years old in 1969 and paroled from prison for about six months when he came to live with his mom in Wahoo.
“I still don’t understand how she got in the car because that wasn’t Mary Kay’s personality,” Kathy Tull, the victim’s cousin, said in an interview.
Detective Green believes a party grove was the destination.
“And she’s just thinking its ok a couple of guys I know from the restaurant and we’re going out for a ride,” Green said.
Green reveals that Mary Kay likely got in the car with the suspect and another young man who was with them.
“He committed suicide in 77 so if he wasn’t an active participant or just didn’t realize what was going to happened all of a sudden it just happened,” Green said.
A tip line set up by the victim’s cousin led to a lake west of Wahoo where the suspect’s car may have been dumped in 1969 where dive teams found a large metal object.
“It’s everybody’s hope the golden nugget you hope had been there. But there’s evidence I can’t discuss that there’s something there,” Green said.
Evidence that remains in the lake because Green got estimates of up to $400 to pull it from the muddy, murky water.
But Green said he has plenty more evidence, including an autopsy after exhuming the body of the victim with a forensic pathologist from the Offutt Military Identification Lab adding expertise.
“There’s DNA available, its just I’ve got to go off of we have available to us,” Green said.
Though forensics will play a part in this case, it appears solved the old-fashioned way.
“This is a case that didn’t have anything glaring but had small pieces along the way. This is all gum shoe, all gum shoe work,” Green said.
Green would not respond when asked if he has found a murder weapon.
The 1969 murder of a small town high school Junior led to hundreds of interviews and tips over 55 years, and the investigation narrowed from ten suspects to one.
“Well been able to exclude everybody mentioned as a suspect way back when except for this guy,” Green said.
Even though the suspect is in custody, the case is not closed.
If you have information on the murder of Mary Kay Hesse, call the Saunders County Attorney’s Office at 402-443-5613.
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Nebraska
Seven behavioral health care providers tapped for new program that helps Nebraskans in crisis • Nebraska Examiner
LINCOLN — Seven behavioral health care providers have been selected to launch a new certification program designed to improve mental health and substance use care across the state — and provide around-the-clock crisis help for Nebraskans.
Called the Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics initiative, the effort has been described as “transformational.” To start, it will involve: CenterPointe, Community Alliance, Heartland Counseling Services, Heartland Family Services, Lutheran Family Services, South Central Behavioral Health Services and The Well.
“This is a significant step for Nebraska,” said Matt Ahern, interim director of the Department of Health and Human Services’ Medicaid and Long-Term Care division. “We’re really excited about this model because it incentivizes a more integrated care — a whole person approach rather than segmenting behavioral health from physical health and everything else happening in a person’s life.”
Serves all
Selection of providers, announced Wednesday, follows passage last year of Legislative Bill 276, the Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic Act, sponsored by State Sen. Anna Wishart of Lincoln and signed into law by Gov. Jim Pillen.
This is a monumental step toward building healthier and stronger communities.
– State Sen. Anna Wishart of Lincoln
CCBHCs emerged from the Excellence in Mental Health Act, a federal law signed in 2014 to improve the nation’s mental health system. The model ensures that clinics provide a wide array of services, such as crisis response, medication management, psychotherapy and community and peer support.
In return, providers are allowed to participate in a restructured payment model that better accounts for costs associated with services, according to a DHHS news release. Certified clinics are required to serve anyone who requests care for mental health or substance use, regardless of their ability to pay, place of residence or age.
Over the next year, the Nebraska DHHS divisions of Behavioral Health and Medicaid and Long-Term Care will work with the seven provider organizations to develop services needed to meet the state requirements and federal criteria determined by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
Programs are to be up and running by January 2026.
“The CCBHC model allows a clinic to truly focus on delivering the quality of care and breadth of services a person needs,” said Thomas Janousek, director of DHHS Behavioral Health. “It focuses on reducing administrative barriers for providers which ultimately results in better care for the individuals it serves.”
‘No-brainer’
By launching the initiative, Wishart said, the state is “transforming” the way Nebraskans access mental health and substance abuse care, in a coordinated and comprehensive way that fills service gaps.
“This is a monumental step toward building healthier and stronger communities,” she said Wednesday.
Wishart has said she expects the CCBHCs to reduce emergency room visits and incarcerations. Data from other states that have implemented such clinics have shown reductions in law enforcement involvement and hospital usage, state officials have said.
Pillen has called the legislation a “no-brainer” for Nebraska. His testimony at a legislative hearing in early 2023 surprised some, as the Republican governor stepped across the political aisle to speak on behalf of a bill introduced by a Democrat, Wishart.
At the time, Pillen said that Nebraskans “must come together to solve tough problems.”
After completing the certification program, a provider is to be recognized as a CCBHC, offering integrated physical and behavioral health services to Nebraska families. Services are to include: around-the-clock crisis support; easy access to mental health and substance use care; tailored treatment plans; specialized care for veterans and military personnel; peer support; comprehensive psychiatric rehabilitation.
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Nebraska
Nebraska votes against second ballot measure that would have introduced new abortion protections
Scripps News and Decision Desk HQ project voters in Nebraska will not pass a measure that would have enshrined stronger abortion protections in the state constitution.
Nebraska’s Initiative 439 would have amended the state’s constitution to provide access to abortion until fetal viability, which is at the end of the second trimester around 24 weeks. It would have also included life of the mother exceptions and very clearly stated that it’s up to the practitioner to determine viability.
The measure narrowly failed. Counting of ballots continued for weeks after election night.
The measure, along with Nebraska Initiative 434, were both on Nebraska’s ballot in the November election.
RELATED STORY | Nebraska votes to ban abortion after first trimester
Voters passed Initiative 434, which bans abortion after the first trimester. It includes exceptions for medical emergencies, rape and incest.
Nebraska law will continue to ban abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy. That law went into effect in June of 2023. It includes exceptions for saving the life or health of the mother and for rape or incest.
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