Nebraska
What the New 15-Day Transfer Portal Window Means for Nebraska Football in 2026
The college football offseason has never looked more different, and for a Nebraska program that Matt Rhule says has “got everything [they] need to get the best players in the country,” the new transfer portal structure could make this one of the most consequential offseasons in recent memory.
Following an early-October decision by the NCAA’s Division I Administrative Committee, the sport is officially shifting to a single transfer window. Beginning with the 2026 cycle, players will have from Jan. 2 through Jan. 16 to formally enter the portal.
The change not only eliminates the former spring transfer period but also removes December movement entirely, consolidating all transfer activity into a 15-day stretch that ends just three days before the National Championship at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami on Jan. 19.
By condensing the portal to a single window in January, the NCAA has finally given Nebraska a clear picture of what its roster will look like, not just for the bowl game, but through summer training, fall camp, and into the 2026 season as a whole.
Instead of navigating a revolving door of mid-December departures and doing it again in the spring, the Huskers can head into the offseason with something they haven’t had in years: stability. For once, the roster they spent all season developing is the one they can actually keep.
While finishing the 2025 season the right way remains the priority, the new structure also gives the coaching staff and athletic department a cleaner runway. January becomes the month for portal decisions, NIL planning, and long-term roster construction, without the split focus of game-planning in between.
With that in mind, here’s how the new window will likely reshape Nebraska’s recruiting strategy heading into 2026.
With Early National Signing Day for high school recruits wrapping up on Dec. 5, Rhule and his staff will no longer have to balance prep and transfer recruiting in the same month. Nebraska’s 2026 class, which currently features 11 commits, will already have been signed for nearly a month before the transfer portal even opens.
With those developmental players locked in, the Huskers will have their clearest picture yet of what they need to add for 2026. Instead of projecting needs while juggling high school evaluations, Nebraska can identify gaps with precision and move aggressively to fill them.
If the current total of 11 high school commits holds steady, expect the Huskers to be even more assertive in the portal as they look to build on the momentum Rhule has created entering year four at the helm.
Rhule reinforced that mindset during the bye week ahead of the Penn State game, saying, “I want to put the best players in the country in this room, and [we’re] not having to worry about, ‘Hey, can we afford it?’”
After Nebraska’s 28–21 win over Northwestern on Oct. 25, the Huskers officially became bowl-eligible for the second straight season. With two games left in the regular season, the focus now shifts to which bowl Nebraska will play in, and just as importantly, who will be available when they get there.
That’s where the NCAA’s new transfer window becomes especially significant. Under the old system, Rhule and his staff had to prepare for a bowl game while simultaneously bracing for roster departures. Last season was the clearest example when Nebraska lost 33 players to the portal cycle between December and January, leaving the staff guessing about who would still be on the field.
That will no longer be the case.
With the portal now opening after bowl season, Nebraska will finally enter postseason play with its full roster intact. Every scholarship player, everyone on the two-deep, every starter, all of them will be available. No opt-outs due to portal entry, no disruption during bowl prep, only 15 additional practices and a chance to win another game.
The only teams that will still deal with transfer chaos during that stretch will be College Football Playoff teams, who must navigate portal entries during their postseason run. For programs like Nebraska, competing in the next tier of bowl matchups, this change creates a level of stability they haven’t experienced in years.
And for a team still building under Rhule, that continuity matters. Bowl prep becomes more valuable. Reps aren’t lost to attrition. Young players get meaningful development time with the full roster. And the staff can evaluate the team before the portal opens, giving them a clearer roadmap for January.
This is the first time in the portal era Nebraska can say it will truly take its team, and its whole team at that, into a bowl game.
With that in mind, Jan. 2 is still 48 days away, but that deadline will arrive faster than it feels. After guiding Nebraska to its most successful regular season since 2016, with a chance to improve that mark over the next two weeks, Rhule and his staff are expected to take big swings in the portal to keep the program trending upwards next fall.
Sophomore quarterback Dylan Raiola will enter his junior year in 2026, and Nebraska will almost certainly look to surround him with even more top-end talent. If the Huskers want to maximize the potential of their program-changing quarterback, the portal will be a major tool in doing so. For fans, it’s year four of the Rhule era, but for Rhule himself, it’s time to win now. After signing an extension through 2032, the expectations have only grown, and this next portal cycle is a chance to prove the university was right to double down on his leadership.
The first step, though, is finishing the 2025 season the right way. Despite the adversity of recent weeks, Nebraska has a chance to stack wins, secure a quality bowl game, and show recruits and future transfers that the progress they keep hearing about is real. Tangible improvement matters, and momentum heading into January could make all the difference when the window opens.
Until then, it’s business as usual — but when Jan. 2 rolls around, it’s all hands on deck.
Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.
Nebraska
Nebraska baseball falls to 16th-ranked Kansas
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – The Nebraska baseball team lost to Kansas 9-7 on Tuesday in front of a record crowd at Hoglund Park. The Huskers took an early lead on an RBI single by National Freshman of the Week Drew Grego. After giving up three unanswered runs, Nebraska rallied to go back in front on a 3rd-inning single by Will Jesske. Both Grego and Jesske finished with two hits in the game.
Kansas, however, took control in the middle innings. The Jayhawks got home runs from Tyson Owens and Josh Dykoff in the sixth frame. Both round-trippers came off NU relief pitcher Ty Horn. Kansas added insurance in the 7th inning before a late rally by the Huskers.
Nebraska trimmed a five-run deficit to two, but couldn’t complete the comeback on the road.
The Huskers’ loss is their second to the Jayhawks this season. Nebraska’s record drops to 31-10 overall.
Will Bolt’s team returns to action on Friday at Illinois. Game one is scheduled for 6:00 p.m. in Champaign.
Click here to subscribe to our 10/11 NOW daily digest and breaking news alerts delivered straight to your email inbox.
Copyright 2026 KOLN. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Nebraska jumps up to No. 2 in college softball Power 10 rankings
Softball
April 21, 2026
Nebraska jumps up to No. 2 in college softball Power 10 rankings
April 21, 2026
Check out Michella Chester’s updated college softball Power 10 rankings for the week of April 21, which sees Nebraska rise to No. 2 behind an 11-game win streak.
Nebraska
Mental health by the numbers in Nebraska
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – A deeper look tonight as First Alert 6 continues to dig deeper into the state of mental health care in Nebraska and possible solutions, ever since last week’s two instances involving law enforcement.
A Douglas County sheriff’s deputy was shot responding to a domestic call. Investigators said the suspect, Brian Huggins, had a history of behavioral health issues. Huggins died by suicide.
And then Noemi Guzman, who police say kidnapped a 3-year-old from inside an Omaha Walmart and cut him in the arm and face with a stolen kitchen knife. Omaha police officers shot and killed her before she could strike again.
Guzman had been on a court-ordered mental health treatment plan since last summer for her schizophrenia. According to court records, psychiatrists determined she could live in the community. Remember, this was after she was arrested for setting her father’s house on fire and threatening a priest with a knife.
Monitoring system
We wanted to know who is part of the system monitoring those who may not be following their mental health treatment plan and are a risk to others or themselves. When that happens, the Board of Mental Health will often notify the local sheriff so a warrant can be issued and deputies can track the individual down.
Here are the numbers since 2023:
In 2023, 842 warrants were issued for those not following their treatment plans according to the Board of Mental Health. In 2024, 756. In 2025, 690. So far in 2026, 190.
But out of these 2,500 warrants, 85% of them didn’t have a second warrant, meaning deputies picked them up, got them back into treatment and the individuals continued to thrive after the one hiccup.
But in 15% of these cases, the individuals messed up again and had another warrant issued by the Board of Mental Health. Twenty-five individuals had five or more issued in Douglas County.
Sheriff Hanson said there has to be a better way, a more team approach for this.
One model to explore is the way Nebraska’s problem-solving courts work like drug court and veterans’ treatment court where experts from a variety of stakeholders help individuals who are on the fringes to do everything to make them productive citizens.
Copyright 2026 WOWT. All rights reserved.
-
Science5 minutes agoPace of N.I.H. Funding Slows Further in Trump’s Second Year
-
Health11 minutes agoAging in Place: How Technology Might Help You Grow Old at Home
-
Culture23 minutes agoBook Review: ‘Israel: What Went Wrong?,’ by Omer Bartov
-
Lifestyle29 minutes agoStreet Style Look of the Week: Airy Beachy Clothes
-
Education35 minutes agoÉcole des Sables, Africa’s Premier Dance School, Faces a Precarious Future
-
Technology41 minutes agoIt’s amazing how good Alienware’s $350 OLED monitor is
-
World47 minutes agoIran reportedly fires on three ships in Strait of Hormuz
-
Politics53 minutes agoWATCH: Sen Warren unloads on Trump’s Fed nominee Kevin Warsh in explosive hearing showdown