knapplc
International Man of Mystery
Dirk Chatelain is rapidly becoming my favorite writer in the state.
Check below the article for some video from Bo, Martinez, some highlights and the OWH's video analysis.
Check below the article for some video from Bo, Martinez, some highlights and the OWH's video analysis.
Chatelain: A glimpse inside the lion's den
MANHATTAN, Kan. — The Nebraska football team gathered Wednesday night at its hotel to hear Bo Pelini speak.
It's typical pregame routine. Teams all over America do it the night before games.
Bo Pelini is anything but typical in the pregame pep talk category. He could fire up a church choir.
On the eve of Nebraska's first conference game in its last season in the Big 12, Pelini found a YouTube video.
Hunters chasing a lion. The lion escapes, hides in the brush. And then — at the snap of a finger — attacks.
“It was crazy,” Brandon Kinnie said. “The lion was seconds away from eating a guy's face off.”
Pelini's lesson: Be the hunter, not the hunted.
That's Nebraska football the next two months.
The Huskers can stumble out of this conference family, absorbing jeers from their kin. Or they can storm through Big 12 hamlets like Manhattan and Ames and Stillwater, shutting mouths and taking names, reminding old rivals that Nebraska is too good to call anyone a rival.
Bo Pelini is the man I want in the lion's den.
He's frequently volatile, hardheaded on a good day. But the man has pride. Immeasurable pride. And 2010 is all about pride.
Impressing millions on ESPN? Forget it. Moving up in the polls? Who cares.
Nebraska beat Kansas State 48-13 at Bill Snyder Family Stadium — and that's worth way more than a segment on “SportsCenter.”
The Big 12 — if you haven't noticed — hasn't been good to Nebraska. And programs have gotten a good laugh out of striking back at the Big Red bully. Nobody more than K-State.
Bill Snyder beat Nebraska 49-13 on this field in 2002 — and never took his starters out of the game. No joke. His backup quarterback didn't play a snap.
The next year in Lincoln, Bo Pelini took offense to similar methods, giving Snyder a piece of his mind after another K-State win.
Seven years later, hostility toward Nebraska has reached a fever pitch after a summer in which Nebraska declared itself a better cultural, academic and athletic fit for the esteemed Big Ten Conference.
In Big 12 country, the Dust Bowl was more popular than Nebraska football right now.
You had to be on the sidelines in the first half Thursday night to appreciate the contempt for all things red. Catcalls from K-Staters. A chorus of four-letter words for Pelini. Signs calling Huskers “quitters,” accusing them of “treason.”
Hours earlier, a Kansas City radio host — a Kansas State grad — ranted for 20 minutes about Nebraska.
“I'm going to tell you something about the character of the Nebraska football program. As long as they're winning, oh my God they are classy,” shock jock Kevin Kietzman said. “... Let me tell you what happens when you beat them, because this is the worst bunch of losers I've ever seen in my life. ...
“You wanna leave? Get the heck out of here. We don't care if you're leaving. Go. Goodbye.”
What's Nebraska's best strategy under fire?
Hunt.
Stifle K-State on fourth-and-two on its opening drive. Unleash Taylor Martinez. Pile up more rushing yards than any Wildcat opponent in 21 years. Send K-State students to the exits with 11 minutes left — in the third quarter.
Hunt.
This is not a task I would entrust to Frank Solich or Bill Callahan or most other coaches in America. This task is perfect for Pelini.
Some guys cower under duress, some guys lurch out of the thicket and fight. Pelini fights. His teams play better with an edge. They play better when lonely. Why else do they play better on the road than in Lincoln?
“He's built this culture here,” Cameron Meredith said. “It's our team. People are going to be coming at us. We've got to go out with our best shot, no matter the odds.”
Eight more challenges await. And Nebraska can't slip. The stakes are too high. The games mean too much to fans, who will forever regret an upset loss to a Big Eight brother on this farewell tour.
“So much about football — really anything in life — is about attitude,” Pelini said. “You've got to get after it. You've got to have a certain mind-set.”
A long time ago, when Bo was still in the NFL and Taylor Martinez was still in grade school and Nebraska and Kansas State looked like budding gridiron rivals, a giddy Wildcat fan posted a sign outside his little railroad town after K-State toppled Nebraska, directing Husker buses on the way back to Lincoln:
“Losers turn here.”
Friday morning, just after midnight in the middle of nowhere, Nebraska buses entered that little railroad town where the sign once stood. Quietly they passed through the dark.
Like a lion.