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Topic: 2024 Nebraska Offseason Thread

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FearlessF

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Re: 2024 Nebraska Offseason Thread
« Reply #70 on: April 14, 2024, 09:50:10 AM »
THIS WEEK IN HUSKER HISTORY
The week of April 13-19, looking back in five-year intervals

1929: Practices resume for Dana X. Bible's team after spring break.

1939: It's “Harvard” vs. “Yale” in three scrimmages (1, 2, 3), with the final one of spring still to come. Herm Rohrig is out for the rest of spring with a chipped bone in his ankle.

1949: In the final scrimmage of spring, the Whites score during extra time in the fourth quarter and defeat the Reds, 13-6, in front of a crowd of about 1,500.

1969: Assistant coach Jim Ross runs the first few spring practices as head coach Bob Devaney attends his father's funeral in Michigan.

1974: Dave Humm solidifies his hold on the starting quarterback job during spring drills.

1989: Senior Gerry Gdowski leads the race to succeed Steve Taylor as the Huskers' starter at quarterback.

1994: Steve Pederson leaves his job at Tennessee to become associate athletic director for football operations at Nebraska.

1999: Frank Solich finds consistent offense to be lacking in the spring game. Mean­while, the NCAA grants receiver Shevin Wiggins an extra year of eligibility.

2004: Fans get their first look at the new West Coast offense as the Reds bury the Whites in the spring game.
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

FearlessF

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Re: 2024 Nebraska Offseason Thread
« Reply #71 on: April 17, 2024, 02:51:20 PM »
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

FearlessF

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Re: 2024 Nebraska Offseason Thread
« Reply #72 on: April 21, 2024, 11:31:06 AM »
THIS WEEK IN HUSKER HISTORY
The week of April 20-26, looking back in five-year intervals

1914: Vic Halligan is elected captain of the 1914 Cornhusker football team. The senior tackle from North Platte would become Nebraska's first football All-American. 

1939: “Harvard” nips “Yale,” 10-7, as the Huskers’ spring practices end. Vike Francis’ 26-yard field goal late in the fourth quarter was the difference, and more than 2,000 fans attended.

Knight and Seeman
1944: A pair of former Husker teammates, end George Seeman (1936, ’38, ’39) and quarterback George “Bus” Knight (1938, ’39, ’40), describe their roles in low-altitude World War II bombing raids in the Pacific Theater.

1954: Husker football halfback Dirkes Rolston becomes a footnote in NU baseball history by walking with the bases loaded to give the Nebraska its only run in a no-hitter pitched by Nebraska's Richard Geier against Kansas. It remains the only nine-inning no-hit, no-walk game by a Husker pitcher.

1964: In a Saturday scrimmage, the lower units humble a complacent Red squad. The Daily Nebraskan speculates that linemen Dick Czap, Mike Grace and Dennis Carlson and backs Ron Kirkland, Harry Wilson and Pete Tatman could be moving up the depth chart.

1984: Greg McQuitter, a Husker defensive back in 1977, marries boxer Muhammad Ali's ex-wife, Khalilah Ali, in Las Vegas. The marriage would last just a few months.

1994: I-back Lawrence Phillips sets the stage for his sophomore season by rushing for 156 yards in the Red-White game.

"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

FearlessF

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Re: 2024 Nebraska Offseason Thread
« Reply #73 on: April 28, 2024, 08:04:13 AM »
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

FearlessF

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Re: 2024 Nebraska Offseason Thread
« Reply #74 on: May 05, 2024, 09:22:37 AM »
THIS WEEK IN HUSKER HISTORY
The week of May 4-10, looking back in five-year intervals:

1909: A loophole appears to allow Husker tackle William Chaloupka, team captain in 1908, an extra season of eligibility, but it wasn't to be. Also, the Athletic Board elections are spiced up by opposition to athletic director Raymond G. Clapp’s purported de-emphasis of football and baseball.

1929: In coach Dana X. Bible;s first season, the Reds defeat the Orange, 7-6, in the spring game. At least that's the score given by the Omaha World-Herald, the Lincoln Star and the State Journal. The Daily Nebraskan said the Reds won 13-12, and its game story provides second-half scoring details that the other reports lack.

1959: After a scoreless first half, the Varsity scores three touchdowns in the final 30 minutes for a 22-0 win over the Alumni in the spring game.


«1964: Soph­omore-to-be quarterback Bob Churchich leads the Whites to a 24-15 win in the spring game, a night contest at Seacrest Field.

1979: Transfer I-back Jarvis Redwine rushes for 94 yards as the Reds register a 27-13 win in the spring game.

2009: Sam Keller sues EA Sports and the NCAA over the use of players' likenesses in electronic games.

"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

FearlessF

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Re: 2024 Nebraska Offseason Thread
« Reply #75 on: Today at 05:29:00 PM »
This Spring, Rhule shared his thoughts on adapting to helmet communications, even noting that they’ve been able to use some helmet communication in practice last season.

“For the two freshmen, it’s all they know,” Matt Rhule said. “So, it’s like they’re kind of like, ‘Okay, this is what it is.’ We’ve been doing it non-stop all training camp and interestingly enough we did it some last year in the Spring. It’s a Lincoln-based company that does the NFL and so we have it. So, we used it last Spring with the hopes that this was gonna pass and it’s really, really powerful.”

Matt Rhule came to Nebraska from the NFL, where these types of helmet communications have been used since 1994. So, he has a familiarity with it that many other college coaches aren’t going to have.

“What I really like about it [that] people wouldn’t think about is all the quarterbacks are hearing what’s being said to the starting quarterback the entire practice. Does that make sense? So, if I get 20 reps, I don’t just take my helmet off now and sit there for 20 reps and kind of watch. I have the helmet on. I hear the coach say we’re running dada dada. Hey, if you get man here, don’t be afraid to go to this. So, they’re getting all these mental reps and I’m hearing it now. So, I can hear what’s being said.”


Prior to being allowed to communicate with one player on the field, coaches needed to use signals from the sideline to give the play to their team or have a player run to the sideline and be given the play verbally from a coach. Now, the coach can communicate with that one player, the quarterback on offense, and they communicate the play with everyone else on the field.

“I think they’re adjusting really well,” Rhule said. “I think it’s going to be a tool for a lot of people, but I think it’ll be a tool for us — I think it’s pretty useless on defense. It was misapplied on defense.”

Heinrich Haarberg shared his thoughts on helmet communication
Nebraska quarterback Heinrich Haarberg recently shared that he doesn’t feel helmet communication helps him as much as it does others.

“So for us, we had it last spring and then for me, at least, last year with the signals, you almost become fluent in signals. So the helmets help a little bit, for me, but not a ton just because of how — it gets to a point where Coach [Satterfield] or someone may just say the first word of the play and you just automatically know what the play is. And that’s experience,” Haarberg said.
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

 

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