Husker_x
New member
NU A.D. remains steady
BY RICH KAIPUST
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
LINCOLN — Nebraska Athletic Director Steve Pederson stopped short of fully answering a question Wednesday about what would be considered acceptable for the second half of the football season.
"I think we just have to see how it goes," he said.
As far as the first half? Pederson could see how many Husker followers would consider that unacceptable.
"We understand that this isn't where we want to be, but our plan isn't to stay here for an extended period of time," he said. "Our plan is to keep pushing ahead and make good things happen.
"Certainly people are frustrated, and we understand that and know that. Certainly people were disappointed in the way we played Saturday night. We all were."
Fans and critics alike have used NU for target practice since the 41-6 loss at Missouri. Pederson said the backlash and feedback have been similar to November 2005, when the Huskers lost 40-15 at Kansas to snap a 36-game winning streak over the Jayhawks.
For the third time in head coach Bill Callahan's four seasons, Nebraska is in a questionable enough stretch that Pederson is being called on the progress and direction of his marquee program.
"This isn't where we hoped we'd be at this point," Pederson said in a 20-minute interview in his office.
Nebraska is 4-2 overall and 1-1 in the Big 12 with back-to-back home games coming against Oklahoma State and Texas A&M. The record isn't so much the story as how the Huskers have played since an impressive season-opening win over Nevada.
That win, by the way, was followed by Pederson announcing a new contract for Callahan on Sept. 4 that locked him up through the 2011 season.
Pederson said there has not been interference or pressure from the outside, particularly the program's major boosters. His e-mail traffic remains steady, and as always he tries to respond to those written in a civil manner with appropriate language.
He reiterated that he supports Callahan and his staff — and is going to keep a "steady hand in all this because there are lots of people counting on me to do that."
"I think from my own experiences that overreactions generally cost you somewhere down the line," Pederson said. "And when you take a long-term view of things they generally work out.
"In sports, snapshots in time are the most dangerous thing you can do, because after every win it would seem great and after every loss it seems terrible. At some point you look at an entire picture of a season, but the time to do that is not midway through or a quarter of the way through, or whatever the case may be."
––––
To the bolded portion: No sh#t Sherlock. Pud's overreaction is the very thing that has brought the Callahan syndrome upon this team, and with it the cancer of Coz. Unfortunately it has gone on long enough that people are used to the idea of losing. I myself have grown to expect it, not having been a fan in the glory days. However I still have enough sense to look at season schedules from 10...7...4 years ago and go, "Hey, wait just a damn minute here."
Pud, I love ya buddy, but get the hell out.
X
BY RICH KAIPUST
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
LINCOLN — Nebraska Athletic Director Steve Pederson stopped short of fully answering a question Wednesday about what would be considered acceptable for the second half of the football season.
"I think we just have to see how it goes," he said.
As far as the first half? Pederson could see how many Husker followers would consider that unacceptable.
"We understand that this isn't where we want to be, but our plan isn't to stay here for an extended period of time," he said. "Our plan is to keep pushing ahead and make good things happen.
"Certainly people are frustrated, and we understand that and know that. Certainly people were disappointed in the way we played Saturday night. We all were."
Fans and critics alike have used NU for target practice since the 41-6 loss at Missouri. Pederson said the backlash and feedback have been similar to November 2005, when the Huskers lost 40-15 at Kansas to snap a 36-game winning streak over the Jayhawks.
For the third time in head coach Bill Callahan's four seasons, Nebraska is in a questionable enough stretch that Pederson is being called on the progress and direction of his marquee program.
"This isn't where we hoped we'd be at this point," Pederson said in a 20-minute interview in his office.
Nebraska is 4-2 overall and 1-1 in the Big 12 with back-to-back home games coming against Oklahoma State and Texas A&M. The record isn't so much the story as how the Huskers have played since an impressive season-opening win over Nevada.
That win, by the way, was followed by Pederson announcing a new contract for Callahan on Sept. 4 that locked him up through the 2011 season.
Pederson said there has not been interference or pressure from the outside, particularly the program's major boosters. His e-mail traffic remains steady, and as always he tries to respond to those written in a civil manner with appropriate language.
He reiterated that he supports Callahan and his staff — and is going to keep a "steady hand in all this because there are lots of people counting on me to do that."
"I think from my own experiences that overreactions generally cost you somewhere down the line," Pederson said. "And when you take a long-term view of things they generally work out.
"In sports, snapshots in time are the most dangerous thing you can do, because after every win it would seem great and after every loss it seems terrible. At some point you look at an entire picture of a season, but the time to do that is not midway through or a quarter of the way through, or whatever the case may be."
––––
To the bolded portion: No sh#t Sherlock. Pud's overreaction is the very thing that has brought the Callahan syndrome upon this team, and with it the cancer of Coz. Unfortunately it has gone on long enough that people are used to the idea of losing. I myself have grown to expect it, not having been a fan in the glory days. However I still have enough sense to look at season schedules from 10...7...4 years ago and go, "Hey, wait just a damn minute here."
Pud, I love ya buddy, but get the hell out.
X