“Everybody talks about accountability and how it had been a problem the last few years,” he says. “When you’re a player, people tell you it’s a problem, but you don’t necessarily see it. You don’t see it like a coach would. But being able to see it from the outside, it was very, very evident.”
People often ask what went wrong as Nebraska slid to 4-8 last season under Mike Riley, who was ousted as head coach a day after the final game. Obviously, a lot went wrong during Riley’s three-year tenure, but a lack of accountability among players surely would rank near the top of any list.
Once Gifford was able to leave the vortex of the storm, during rehab, that deficiency became clearer to him.
“I think being able to see it from that viewpoint, and the way (first-year strength coach) Zach Duval and (first-year head coach) Scott Frost talked about it and started changing things, really helps me understand what needed to be done,” says Gifford, who started each of the first seven games last season and made 39 tackles.
Listening to Gifford, Duval’s importance becomes evident. Duval makes it a point to teach leadership methods, Gifford says, and the overarching message is that it can’t be only the coaches who put their foot down when necessary.
LJS