Nebraska
Tad Stryker: Stress-Free Start for Husker Nation
A good friend of mine — let’s call him Formerly Enthusiastic Husker Fan — was a very young man when Nebraska football was at its peak, but has become quite guarded in his attitude after he experienced The Slide, NU’s depressing downturn of the past two decades. It had reached the point where he refused to get too excited about much of anything related to Cornhusker football, including the signing of five-star recruit Dylan Raiola. He responded with skepticism when the Huskers were declared 28-point favorites over UTEP and was bracing himself for a disappointing home opener.
Maybe you know someone, or maybe a half dozen, like him. It’s hard to find fault, but you could almost hear them collectively exhale a few minutes after 4 p.m., when Jahmal Banks made a spectacular leaping catch in the south end zone to give Nebraska a 30-7 lead at halftime.
Going into Saturday, Nebraska had lost four consecutive openers, although none were at home. You have to go back to 2019, when Scott Frost and the Huskers launched their season with a blah 35-21 win over a South Alabama team that eventually finished 2-10, to find the last time NU was 1-0.
Will a 40-7 season-opening thrashing of the UTEP Miners, a team that likely will prove to be at least a step above the 2019 South Alabama Jaguars, do the trick? Will Raiola’s 19-for-27 passing performance with two touchdowns and no interceptions in a little over half a game, cure someone like Formerly Enthusiastic Husker Fan? Probably not, and we shouldn’t expect it so quickly. There’s a lot of proving to do for Matt Rhule and the Big Red, but what used to be known as a typical Husker home opener just might create a foundation of optimism that simply hasn’t been available to a lot of recovering fans like my friend.
It apparently was therapeutic for the graybeards on the Husker roster, at least.
“Some of the older guys were really happy,” Rhule said after the game. “They said they had never really experienced a game that was over at halftime.”
Imagine that. A stress-free second half on a sunsplashed football afternoon in Lincoln.
Not to mention the benefits of getting your second-string offensive line on the field in the third quarter and piling up the reps in the fourth. That’s the sort of thing which pays dividends in 2025 and beyond.
Speaking of reps, Nebraska ran 83 offensive plays, after averaging only 60 per game last season. That’s a lot of film to dissect and learn from. Piling up 30 first downs and 507 total yards and going plus-one in turnovers will do wonders for a team with a young quarterback.
It would’ve been hard to expect a better debut for Raiola, who except for one lucky bounce on a deflected pass early in the second quarter was never close to throwing an interception. And that play certainly didn’t rattle the true freshman, who turned around and promptly tossed his first career touchdown pass on the next snap — a beautiful 59-yard bomb to Isaiah Neyor, who displayed tremendous balance as he stayed upright after contact and trotted triumphantly into the south end zone.
Neyor, who seems to have regained the form he had several years ago at Wyoming after an injury-plagued term in Austin, Texas, served notice that he will be a reliable third-down option for the young quarterback. Of Neyor’s team-high six catches, four went for a first down, including a pair of third down conversions, which helped NU to a an overall 11-for-17 performance on third down.
Raiola appeared to move smoothly through his progressions. On his first drive, he looked at two receivers before throwing to his third option, Janiran Bonner, for a seven-yard reception, setting up a 5-yard touchdown run by Dante Dowdell. He may have been fighting Texas-sized butterflies for all I know, but the youngster looked self-assured from the moment he led the team onto the field during his first regular-season Tunnel Walk.
It wasn’t a walk in the park, but it was the first time Nebraska has scored 40 points since the 56-7 thrashing of Northwestern in 2021. That has to count for something.
Raiola played only briefly in the second half. leading an 11-play, 73-yard scoring drive before Heinrich Haarberg and Jalyn Gramstad took over at quarterback.
He is Nebraska’s national story, for better or worse, taking attention away from the Blackshirts, who allowed just 205 total yards and recorded their eighth straight performance allowing 24 or fewer points and less than 400 yards. Those figures will be tested next by Shedeur Sanders, Travis Hunter and the Colorado Buffaloes, a game that Formerly Enthusiastic Husker Fan doubtless will use as a benchmark to judge the progress of Rhule’s rebuild. CU will need to score a lot of points to win if Raiola displays the same type of calm competence that he did in the opener, especially if the Husker offensive line can spring another 200-yard running game.
Rhule and assistant coach E.J. Barthel used all four of their leading running backs, although nobody got even a dozen carries. They started with Rahmir Johnson, and followed up Dowdell. The Oregon transfer looked superb, gaining 55 yards on eight carries with a combination of power and speed, and all was well until he fumbled while straining for extra yardage inside the UTEP 10-yard line with 10:48 left in the second quarter.
“It was a shame that Dante had that fumble, but he was really running well,” Rhule said. “Dante has done such a good job. At the end of the spring, I probably would have put him fourth. He was the second back in the game today. I thought he was really playing well, running the ball well, and then had that fumble.”
Despite the praise from Rhule after the fact, Dowdell never saw the field again after he fumbled. Maybe a silent message from the coach?
Emmett Johnson and Gabe Irvin both had their good moments, especially when the former blazed 47 yards on a draw play to set up a 3-yard touchdown run by Ervin to put Nebraska ahead 23-7 with nine minutes left in the second quarter.
“They all made plays,” Rhule said.
The Husker running game will be the key to the Colorado contest. Nebraska’s offensive line has more than 130 combined career starts, and it’s high time for it to shine in a contest that already is drawing a lot of national attention. Sanders will likely use a fast tempo to attack the Blackshirts after watching film of UTEP’s first-quarter scoring drive. Nebraska needs to counter with a gut-punch running game to steal the Buffs’ momentum.
If 1-0 seems foreign to some recovering fans, imagine what a 2-0 start could do for Husker Nation.
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Nebraska
Nebraska State Patrol troopers find 242 pounds of cocaine during commercial truck inspection
LEXINGTON, Neb. (KOLN) – Troopers with the Nebraska State Patrol arrested one person after finding more than 240 pounds of cocaine during a commercial vehicle inspection.
On Tuesday afternoon, an NSP Carrier Enforcement trooper conducted a commercial vehicle inspection on a semi tractor/trailer driven by Arwinderjit Singh, 30, of California, near mile marker 254 on Interstate 80.
During the inspection, the trooper became suspicious of criminal activity. An NSP K-9 detected the odor of a controlled substance inside the cab of the semi, troopers said.
After searching the cab, troopers located 242 pounds of cocaine concealed underneath the sleeper bed, NSP said.

Singh was arrested on suspicion of possession of cocaine, possession with intent to deliver, possession of an open alcohol container, no drug tax stamp and displaying a fictitious license plate.
Singh was lodged in Dawson County Jail, and his bond was set at 10% of $2 million. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for March 12.
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Copyright 2026 KOLN. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Athlete of the Week: Creighton Prep boys wrestling’s Zaiyahn Ornelas
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – Creighton Prep senior Zaiyahn Ornelas won his fourth consecutive Nebraska state wrestling title on Saturday.
According to NSAA records, he joins 39 other wrestlers in state history to accomplish the feat.
“It’s a great feeling,” Ornelas said. “It’s a feeling everybody wants.”
Ornelas won three Class C state titles at Wilber-Clatonia at 106, 113 and 120 pounds before transferring to Creighton Prep for his senior season, where he competed in Class A at 126 pounds.
“Three state titles there and then just thought I could bump up my competition,” Ornelas said.
“Zaiyahn is one of the cleanest technicians I’ve ever seen. That’s a huge testament to his coaching staff at Wilber,” Fisher added.
Ornelas was one of four Creighton Prep wrestlers to win state titles this season, helping lead the Jr. Jays to the Class A team title. Teammates said his presence in the practice room raised their level of competition.
“I could never slack off just because my competition in the state was easy. I always had to come in this room and get better or else I was going to get beat,” said sophomore Cruzer Dominguez, a two-time Class A state champion at 106 and 120 pounds.
Sophomore Kameron Green, the Class A 144-pound state champion this year, also credited Ornelas for aiding in his development.
“Zaiyahn being a training partner has helped me in tremendous ways,” he said. “When he wrestles, he’s not the nicest or shyest kid, but he’s tenacious and tough.”
Junior JT Smith, a two-time state champion at 175 and 190 pounds, said the achievement carries weight for the entire team.
“It’s something really special to have a teammate that’s a four-time state champion,” he said. “That’s something everyone wants to be.”
Fisher said Ornelas’s attitude set the tone from the start.
“He has so many skills and then coming into our room, he’s extremely coachable. Every time he came in here he was humble, ready to work, wanting to get better and that’s why he is as good as he is,” Fisher said.
Ornelas signed to wrestle at the University of Nebraska in November. He said the move to Creighton Prep delivered what he was looking for.
“This is the reason why I came here. I went out to explore, to find the best, and this is the territory that I found. If it wasn’t for these guys — the push — I would have not been there,” Ornelas said.
“It’s hard to believe. That’s kind of what I wanted since the beginning, freshman year,” he said.
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Copyright 2026 WOWT. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Nebraska Chamber taps former state senator to lead during leadership transition
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – The Nebraska Chamber of Commerce & Industry has selected a former state senator and longtime board member to lead the chamber while it searches for a new president and CEO.
Board of Directors Chair Pat Keenan said Thursday that Matt Williams of Gothenburg agreed to serve as interim president.
ALSO READ: Nebraska Chamber president and CEO resigns after less than a year
“The Board is grateful to Matt for stepping into this role during a very active and productive time for the Nebraska Chamber,” Keenan said. “He has steady leadership, strong relationships and trust from his many years of advocacy for economic development, and decades of experience working with the legislature and state government on tax policy and economic development incentives.”
Williams represented District 36 in the Nebraska Legislature from 2015 to 2023.
The chamber said Williams has had a lifelong career in banking and serves as chairman of Flatwater Bank. He previously served as chair of the Nebraska Bankers Association and the American Bankers Association.
His long involvement with the chamber includes membership on the Board of Directors; he currently serves as director for District 6. In 2025, he was named to the Nebraska Business Hall of Fame.
“The Nebraska Chamber is on rock-solid footing, with the clear vision of the Board, and talented and hard-working staff hitting its stride in legislative policy and advocacy, technology, manufacturing, leadership-development, fund-raising and membership. The success of cutting-edge initiatives like 6 Regions, One Nebraska, the launch of the Go Big Future series, and the strong member engagement across the state demonstrate the success and strength of this organization. I’m excited to lend my support in whatever way I can for the Chamber. I know how strong businesses and communities make for a stronger Nebraska, and I’m glad to be part of that.”
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Copyright 2026 KOLN. All rights reserved.
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