Eric the Red
Team HuskerBoard
Anti-Husker Callahan Fans
This article was published on 13 Sep 2005. The author is Jeremy Divis
You may send the author an email by clicking on the name above, or you may add comments using the link at the end of this article.
Read other articles by this author. Have you clicked on the home page for other articles on The Observationist? The anti-Callahan Husker fans are blasting two wins. These fans are hypocritical. On one hand they claim that the NU staff that fired Solich during a 9-3 season was wrong and now these fans are guilty of the same hypocrisy.
Callahan and his coaches have put together one of the best defenses in recent Husker history. Some of his players may be leftovers from the Solich era, but Callahan and his group are providing the leadership necessary to motivate these players.
Does the offense need more work? Probably, but fans like Tom Shatel, a writer for the Omaha World-Herald, are always critical of Callahan and the NU Athletic Department. It is almost as if these types of fans will not allow the Solich bitterness to go away. These fans seem to have a chip on their shoulder.
Shatel writes, “Some folks are never satisfied. Everyone's a critic. But there were clouds of negativity, and anxiety, hanging over Husker Nation this week. You think Saturday night's game pumped in some sunshine and chased those clouds away? Doubtful” (September 11, 2005).
Or how about this, “Thanks to a lack of maintenance in recruiting, and a change in coaches and philosophy, Nebraska football has been reduced to a guess” (September 3, 2005).
In the September 3, 2005 edition of the Omaha World-Herald Barknecht quotes Solich as saying, “I feel good about the state of Nebraska itself, and I like many of the people in the athletic department. And I'll always appreciate what Bob Devaney and Tom Osborne built there, and was proud to have been a part of it. But I'm committed to Ohio University now. So tell the people I know back in Nebraska hello for me." If the man who was fired can let it go then shouldn’t the fans?
I am a relatively new Husker fan, but I cannot stand fans like Tom Shatel who claim to be fans of tradition, but then bash Callahan and the NU Athletic Department. The program needed a change in order to keep the tradition alive. Solich was not the answer and Steve Pederson knew it.
The Husker tradition is built on honesty, integrity, and leadership.
The Husker tradition is built on honesty, integrity, and leadership. The naysayer fans seem to think that the Husker football tradition means sticking with a group of old timers who keep the same old same old. People afraid of stepping outside the box and leading a group of kids on to bigger and greater things. Hindsight shows us that the Solich era provided very little Husker tradition other than he was a part of the Osborne crew.
All Husker fans should be grateful Steve Pederson had the courage to cut Solich and bring in a group of people with the ability to lead. A group of coaches who lead with integrity and honesty.
We need to keep our focus on the traditions that make our school and state great places to learn and live.
Go Big Red!
This article was published on 13 Sep 2005. The author is Jeremy Divis
You may send the author an email by clicking on the name above, or you may add comments using the link at the end of this article.
Read other articles by this author. Have you clicked on the home page for other articles on The Observationist? The anti-Callahan Husker fans are blasting two wins. These fans are hypocritical. On one hand they claim that the NU staff that fired Solich during a 9-3 season was wrong and now these fans are guilty of the same hypocrisy.
Callahan and his coaches have put together one of the best defenses in recent Husker history. Some of his players may be leftovers from the Solich era, but Callahan and his group are providing the leadership necessary to motivate these players.
Does the offense need more work? Probably, but fans like Tom Shatel, a writer for the Omaha World-Herald, are always critical of Callahan and the NU Athletic Department. It is almost as if these types of fans will not allow the Solich bitterness to go away. These fans seem to have a chip on their shoulder.
Shatel writes, “Some folks are never satisfied. Everyone's a critic. But there were clouds of negativity, and anxiety, hanging over Husker Nation this week. You think Saturday night's game pumped in some sunshine and chased those clouds away? Doubtful” (September 11, 2005).
Or how about this, “Thanks to a lack of maintenance in recruiting, and a change in coaches and philosophy, Nebraska football has been reduced to a guess” (September 3, 2005).
In the September 3, 2005 edition of the Omaha World-Herald Barknecht quotes Solich as saying, “I feel good about the state of Nebraska itself, and I like many of the people in the athletic department. And I'll always appreciate what Bob Devaney and Tom Osborne built there, and was proud to have been a part of it. But I'm committed to Ohio University now. So tell the people I know back in Nebraska hello for me." If the man who was fired can let it go then shouldn’t the fans?
I am a relatively new Husker fan, but I cannot stand fans like Tom Shatel who claim to be fans of tradition, but then bash Callahan and the NU Athletic Department. The program needed a change in order to keep the tradition alive. Solich was not the answer and Steve Pederson knew it.
The Husker tradition is built on honesty, integrity, and leadership.
The Husker tradition is built on honesty, integrity, and leadership. The naysayer fans seem to think that the Husker football tradition means sticking with a group of old timers who keep the same old same old. People afraid of stepping outside the box and leading a group of kids on to bigger and greater things. Hindsight shows us that the Solich era provided very little Husker tradition other than he was a part of the Osborne crew.
All Husker fans should be grateful Steve Pederson had the courage to cut Solich and bring in a group of people with the ability to lead. A group of coaches who lead with integrity and honesty.
We need to keep our focus on the traditions that make our school and state great places to learn and live.
Go Big Red!