Jump to content


SN's pick #40: Nebraska


hack

Recommended Posts

 

SN's team previews: No. 40 Nebraska

July 14, 2008

 

Blair Kerkhoff

For Sporting News

 

More: Nebraska two-minute drill | Full top 50

 

Sporting News is counting down its top 50 teams in college football, one by one, from early July until kickoff of the season in late August. Here's a preview of the No. 40 Nebraska Cornhuskers.

 

More than 80,000 fans paid to watch Nebraska's spring scrimmage. Did they get their money's worth?

 

On the first play, yes -- on both sides of the ball.

 

The offense ran an option play, harkening back to the old days. But the play was disrupted when linebacker Tyler Wortman smacked the pitch away and recovered the fumble. Wortman didn't know the pitch was supposed to be allowed under the game script.

 

Those wearing red (everybody) had to like the defensive aggressiveness, and that will be the first step on the road to recovery under coach Bo Pelini's new regime. Pelini brings a fiery demeanor and history of success, and no lesson was more important than the one he learned in 2003.

 

In his only year as the program's defensive coordinator, Nebraska finished first nationally in passing efficiency defense, second in scoring defense and 11th in total defense.

 

Compare that to last season, when the Huskers surrendered a school-record 455 points, including 76 to Kansas and 65 to Colorado, ultimately costing Bill Callahan his job.

 

A fly-to-the-ball and play-through-the-whistle attitude is what made the 2003 defense dominant. It's the approach Pelini took to Oklahoma in 2004 and then to LSU for the past three seasons, including last year's national championship team.

 

The defense remains a work in progress. Nebraska has moved Cody Glenn from running back to linebacker, and the unit has plenty of question marks beginning with its pass rush. Ends Barry Turner and Zach Potter need to step up, as does tackle Ndamukong Suh, who is recovering from knee surgery. The Huskers ranked last in the Big 12 with 13 sacks in 2007.

 

Their turnover margin was also bad (-17). Within the Big 12, Nebraska finished ahead of only Baylor in that category.

 

The offense figures to be ahead of the game. When quarterback Joe Ganz took over for Sam Keller, who went down with a season-ending injury late in the Oct. 27 Texas game, Nebraska knew it had an experienced hand. After all, Ganz was a fourth-year junior.

 

What might not have been expected were 16 touchdowns, including a school-record seven against Kansas State, and most of Ganz's 1,435 yards in those three-plus games.

 

Pelini retained offensive coordinator Shawn Watson from the Callahan staff -- hey, nothing wrong with a unit that averaged 33.4 points a game.

 

Nebraska has one of the Big 12's top running backs in Marlon Lucky, and maybe the best offensive line to play in Lincoln in years. Matt Slauson, who has played tackle and guard, has 22 career starts. Guard Mike Huff has 19 starts and tackle Lydon Murtha 14.

 

Finding a big-play wide receiver to complement sure-handed Nate Swift and Todd Peterson, along with a steady tight end, will be issues in the fall.

 

But the mood is improving in Nebraska. A successful former defensive coordinator walks the sideline. Legendary coach Tom Osborne will be the athletic director for at least two more years. And the spring game was a sellout.

Link to comment

 

SN's team previews: No. 40 Nebraska

July 14, 2008

 

Blair Kerkhoff

For Sporting News

 

More: Nebraska two-minute drill | Full top 50

 

Sporting News is counting down its top 50 teams in college football, one by one, from early July until kickoff of the season in late August. Here's a preview of the No. 40 Nebraska Cornhuskers.

 

More than 80,000 fans paid to watch Nebraska's spring scrimmage. Did they get their money's worth?

 

On the first play, yes -- on both sides of the ball.

 

The offense ran an option play, harkening back to the old days. But the play was disrupted when linebacker Tyler Wortman smacked the pitch away and recovered the fumble. Wortman didn't know the pitch was supposed to be allowed under the game script.

 

Those wearing red (everybody) had to like the defensive aggressiveness, and that will be the first step on the road to recovery under coach Bo Pelini's new regime. Pelini brings a fiery demeanor and history of success, and no lesson was more important than the one he learned in 2003.

 

In his only year as the program's defensive coordinator, Nebraska finished first nationally in passing efficiency defense, second in scoring defense and 11th in total defense.

 

Compare that to last season, when the Huskers surrendered a school-record 455 points, including 76 to Kansas and 65 to Colorado, ultimately costing Bill Callahan his job.

 

A fly-to-the-ball and play-through-the-whistle attitude is what made the 2003 defense dominant. It's the approach Pelini took to Oklahoma in 2004 and then to LSU for the past three seasons, including last year's national championship team.

 

The defense remains a work in progress. Nebraska has moved Cody Glenn from running back to linebacker, and the unit has plenty of question marks beginning with its pass rush. Ends Barry Turner and Zach Potter need to step up, as does tackle Ndamukong Suh, who is recovering from knee surgery. The Huskers ranked last in the Big 12 with 13 sacks in 2007.

 

Their turnover margin was also bad (-17). Within the Big 12, Nebraska finished ahead of only Baylor in that category.

 

The offense figures to be ahead of the game. When quarterback Joe Ganz took over for Sam Keller, who went down with a season-ending injury late in the Oct. 27 Texas game, Nebraska knew it had an experienced hand. After all, Ganz was a fourth-year junior.

 

What might not have been expected were 16 touchdowns, including a school-record seven against Kansas State, and most of Ganz's 1,435 yards in those three-plus games.

 

Pelini retained offensive coordinator Shawn Watson from the Callahan staff -- hey, nothing wrong with a unit that averaged 33.4 points a game.

 

Nebraska has one of the Big 12's top running backs in Marlon Lucky, and maybe the best offensive line to play in Lincoln in years. Matt Slauson, who has played tackle and guard, has 22 career starts. Guard Mike Huff has 19 starts and tackle Lydon Murtha 14.

 

Finding a big-play wide receiver to complement sure-handed Nate Swift and Todd Peterson, along with a steady tight end, will be issues in the fall.

 

But the mood is improving in Nebraska. A successful former defensive coordinator walks the sideline. Legendary coach Tom Osborne will be the athletic director for at least two more years. And the spring game was a sellout.

 

A number 40 ranking at this juncture after what took place last year is really quite a nicety. The CFN people are therefore fairly optimistic about the Huskers. This seems to be where most national-level pundits have NU --- cautiously optimistic, thinking a 7-5 type record in one of the toughest conferences (perhaps the toughest alongside the SEC) and a ca. #40 ranking. The national pundits, I think, are pretty close to the mark and we as Husker nation should take heed and adjust our expectations accordingly. To finish 7-5 and #40 next season would be a major step in the right direction (especially if we are at least "in" and competitive in the 5 losses and have no meltdowns). Seems about right. Anything beyond that would be icing on the cake and, frankly, somewhat surprising. But, heres hoping.

Link to comment

In his only year as the program's defensive coordinator, Nebraska finished first nationally in passing efficiency defense, second in scoring defense and 11th in total defense.

 

Compare that to last season, when the Huskers surrendered a school-record 455 points, including 76 to Kansas and 65 to Colorado, ultimately costing Bill Callahan his job.

I truly believe that if the D-staff had been retained either a} NU would have had a couple of B12 championships and a NC or b} Callahan's ego and Pelini would have gone DEFCON-1 :box

Pelini retained offensive coordinator Shawn Watson from the Callahan staff -- hey, nothing wrong with a unit that averaged 33.4 points a game.

 

This is what impresses me about this staff - keeping quality staff members who have proven they are competent. What will really impress me would be if (and I really hope it doesn't happen) one of the assistant coaches after a couple of years for whatever reason cannot produce results, and Pelini fires him. Devaney did it, promoting TO up to OC. TO did it, hiring McBride as DC. Solich did it his last year, but wasn't given a chance (probably should have done it earlier). Callahan didn't and should have.

 

Ouch! Imagine canning your brother.

Link to comment

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Visit the Sports Illustrated Husker site



×
×
  • Create New...