Nebraska
Nebraska's Matt Rhule is solidifying his vision entering year 2: 'It's been night and day'
LINCOLN, Neb. — Hints of spring are here. The ice and snow have disappeared. The NFL combine is on deck. One month from Saturday, players at Nebraska return to the practice field.
Until then, or at least until spring break arrives in two weeks, the Cornhuskers remain stuck in the most grueling period of their offseason. It’s also the most revealing and perhaps the most important time on the football calendar, according to coach Matt Rhule, before the season begins.
“Don’t tell me you want to beat Iowa after we lose to Iowa,” Rhule said. “Tell me you want to beat Iowa today with your actions.”
He’s talking about culture. It’s the buzzword that will not go away. Fans hear it. Players hear it. The media repeats it. But what is culture, really, and how can it help the Huskers when every head coach at every program preaches its significance?
An impactful culture, Rhule said, requires complete belief.
“I think we’re headed in that direction,” Rhule said. “It’s been night and day, significantly better than it was last year.”
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The culture around Rhule’s program last year was not poor, the second-year coach is quick to mention. It was just something new.
“Now everyone knows what to expect,” he said.
Anxiety levels drop when expectations are understood. Performance, in theory, improves.
With these steps forward comes added responsibility. The reshaped culture of Nebraska extends beyond the glow of Memorial Stadium.
The work doesn’t stop#GBR x #WhatsNExt! pic.twitter.com/zWaJPjvfiZ
— Nebraska Football (@HuskerFootball) February 22, 2024
Wednesday night, Rhule met with more than 100 high school coaches in a room with seating for 70 on the Sandhills Global campus in northwest Lincoln. He offered a few words and introduced quarterbacks coach Glenn Thomas and secondary coach Evan Cooper.
Rhule then drove to Omaha for a similar event with coaches from the Metro Conference.
Half of his staff went to the Lincoln engagement, the other half to the one in Omaha.
Among Rhule’s messages? Don’t make excuses.
Instead, make football enjoyable. Many coaches in attendance Wednesday have seen participation numbers decline in sports at their schools, said Jim Hansen, an organizer of the gathering and treasurer of the Lincoln Football Coaches Association.
“Let’s create football programs that kids want to be a part of,” Rhule told the high school coaches, according to Hansen.
Another Rhule message during this offseason: Culture isn’t measured solely by attendance or performance. It’s measured by what happens in the quiet moments.
“I know guys are watching the quarterbacks,” Rhule said recently. “We lost five games (last season) by three points or in overtime. So we’re fighting for every single point. We’re three points away from being a good team in our brains.
“So am I going to follow a quarterback that doesn’t win all the drills, that’s not out there throwing at 6 a.m., that’s not there on the weekends? I’m not following that guy.”
Likewise, the Nebraska coaches expect that they’re being watched. Wednesday in Lincoln, Thomas and Cooper impressed the high school coaches with their knowledge and attitudes. The program started at 7 p.m. The Nebraska assistant coaches stuck around until 9:45.
Coaches in attendance ranged from some of the largest schools in the state to Parkview Christian, which plays six-man football.
After some fluctuation over the past two decades at Nebraska, Hansen said “adults are back in the room.”
A former assistant coach at Lincoln Pius X, Hansen said he recalls years ago when a Nebraska coordinator scoffed at him for seeking insight on the Huskers’ scheme. Hansen told Rhule the story. If anything like that happens at Nebraska with this coaching staff, Rhule said, find him and let him know.
“This staff has just been different in the sense that they’ve really tried to connect with us,” Hansen said. “It’s great to see that the guys you watch on Saturday are going through the same things that we do on Friday night. They are one of us. They really are.”
As Thomas said last week in an introductory session with the media, Rhule’s process of building a culture has worked with multiple college programs. Rhule directed Temple to four-game improvements in his second and third seasons. Baylor went from one win in his first year to 11 in Rhule’s third.
“There’s a lot of value in that,” Thomas said. “But he’d be the first to tell you, every day we come in the building, we’re looking for the best way.”
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The best way might be a new way. Rhule and his coaching staff stay involved during winter with the Huskers’ mat drills. Two weeks remain of the culture-growing exercise.
“You do the offseason so you can get in better shape,” Rhule said. “But I want to see who shies away from competition and who attacks it. When things really get hard, that’s what I want to find out.”
In this time of year, Rhule said, “you show your teammates, ‘Hey, I’m a playmaker, I’m someone to watch. I’m going to compete in everything. I’m going to be tough.’”
Next season, with a strong culture in place, when Nebraska drives into scoring position tied late in the fourth quarter of a November Big Ten game — see Maryland in 2023 — Rhule said he doesn’t plan to hear complaints about how he made the wrong call to go for a touchdown.
“Those days are over,” he said. “Every team in the country throws touchdowns on those plays. And on our team, we need guys who will go get the ball. We need guys to throw the ball.”
The guys they need are made inside the football complex in February — and outside of it as the culture expands through the outreach on display this week in Lincoln and Omaha.
(Photo: Dylan Widger / USA Today)
Nebraska
Discounted tickets for Nebraska State Fair over 4th of July Weekend
The Nebraska State Fair is celebrating America’s 250th anniversary with a special 72-hour flash sale on Season Passes.
From July 3 through July 5, fans can purchase a 2026 Season Pass for just $50—a significant discount from its regular value of $132.
The pass includes one admission per day for all 11 days of the 2026 Nebraska State Fair, making it ideal for visitors who plan to attend multiple days.
Fair officials say the promotion is one of the biggest Season Pass discounts offered in years and will not be extended.
After July 5, Season Passes will remain available at a higher discounted price.
Nebraska
Online sports betting petition heads to Nebraska ballot review as opposition mounts
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – Legalizing online sports betting has met with resistance in the Nebraska Legislature for years.
Tax Relief Nebraska, a group backed by Nebraska casinos and online sports betting groups, took the issue to the people of the state through a petition drive.
Those petitions are now in, and casino officials say they expect to have enough signatures to make the November ballot — but also expect pushback through Election Day.
The case for online betting
Currently, legal sports bets cannot be placed on a phone in Nebraska. Casino operators say people who choose to wager are finding other ways to do it.
“They’re just doing it illegally through a virtual private network, or they’re driving over to the first exit between Iowa and Nebraska, placing a bet and then driving back to their home,” said Lynne McNally of Warhorse Casino.
Nebraska casino operators say the state has already collected millions of dollars in state taxes and property tax relief from casino gambling, and that online sports betting would add to that total.
A majority of Nebraskans voted for casino gambling to enter the state in 2020, and casino operators expect similar support if the online betting petition makes the November ballot.
“As you know, we got 65% on the constitutional amendment and actually got nearly 70% on the tax portion of the statute when the casinos were legalized in 2020. I think that we’ll be in that area, if not maybe a little higher than that,” McNally said.
“There’s always going to be a sector of the public that doesn’t want to gamble. They don’t want to go to our facilities and that’s just fine. I guess I have an objection with trying to tell other people what to do,” McNally said.
The opposition
The Nebraska Family Alliance stands against online gambling and plans to campaign against the initiative across the state. The nonprofit group issued a statement that reads in part: “Online sports betting has been a massive public policy failure that benefits national sportsbooks at the expense of kids, student-athletes, families and businesses. While they have more money, they don’t have the truth.”
Pat Loontjer, director of Gambling with the Good Life, has opposed expanded gambling in Nebraska for 30 years.
“They’re telling the same lie — property tax relief. Well in Nebraska you say property tax relief and everybody says where do I sign,” Loontjer said.
Loontjer also raised concerns about the impact on young people.
“Sports betting on the phone is the most addictive thing for young people, young men especially. You’ve got kids that are going to lose their scholarships, lose their future,” Loontjer said.
What comes next
If enough signatures are verified and the issue is placed on the November ballot, Warhorse Casino officials say Nebraskans could be able to make sports bets on their phones by spring of next year.
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Nebraska
Two high schools will represent Nebraska in the National Independence Day Parade
Along with marching in the parade, the high schools will tour the U.S. Capitol, visit Mount Vernon and other monuments and museums.
Around 80 Grand Island students are making the trip. Lee said the students cover their own costs, with fundraising largely run though the school’s booster program helping offset the expense.
Bishop Neumann’s 53 students benefited from community donations, along with a holiday greenery sale and fundraisers, which Kellett said helped cover airfare and other costs.
For both directors, the trip carries extra weight tied to the nation’s 250th anniversary.
“That’s a pretty big milestone,” Lee said. “And to be able to be a part of that is pretty neat.”
Kellett said the moment will stay with students long after the parade ends.
“These kids, they’ll be around for the 300th anniversary of the country, and they’ll be able to look back and tell their grandkids, ‘you know, I was there at 250 and was able to march in the National Independence Day Parade,’” Kellett said.
Both bands have spent the summer preparing. Grand Island started working on its music after its final spring concert in May, rehearsing its marching and music together on Tuesday evenings.
Bishop Neumann has rehearsed continuously over the summer and marched in two parades to prepare, a 150th anniversary celebration in Weston and the Papillion Days parade.
Kellett said the band’s last rehearsal in Wahoo drew residents who lined the streets holding signs and cheering the students on.
“The students have come in, and they’ve worked really hard,” Kellett said. “They have their music memorized and they’ve worked on their marching skills, and so all that effort into this they’re ready to go for the parade.”
The parade starts at 9:30 a.m. CT Saturday at Third Street and Constitution Avenue.
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