It's also interesting to look back at the guy who turned everything around, using the hindsight of what we now expect of Husker football:
Nebraska[SIZE=small]
[edit][/SIZE]Devaney was the fourth choice of Nebraska's athletic director,
Tippy Dye.
Utah's
Ray Nagel and
Utah State's
John Ralston had turned down the job. Michigan State coach
Duffy Daugherty also turned down Dye, but recommended Devaney, his former assistant, for the Cornhuskers. When Devaney balked at leaving Wyoming for Nebraska, it was Daugherty who convinced him to accept the position because he could potentially win a national title at Nebraska, a goal that Wyoming was very unlikely to obtain. Devaney joined
Nebraska in 1962 and immediately reestablished the program as a force in the
Big Eight Conference. Prior to Devaney's arrival, Nebraska football had fallen on hard times with seven consecutive losing seasons. The
1961 team under
Bill Jennings went 3–6–1 overall and 2–5 in conference. After a winning tradition up until the early 1940s, Nebraska had only two winning seasons in the two decades preceding Devaney's arrival.
[2]
Devaney engineered an immediate turnaround with a 9–2 record in
1962 that included a victory in the
Gotham Bowl at
Yankee Stadium over the
Miami Hurricanes. It was the first of forty consecutive winning seasons for Nebraska. Devaney followed this up with an even better 10–1 season the next year, including a perfect 7–0 record in the Big Eight to claim the conference title and an
Orange Bowl victory over
Auburn. His success continued through 1966, with records of 9–2, 10–1, and 9–2, bringing his record at Nebraska to 47–8 (.855). This had so revived Nebraska football that
Memorial Stadium was enlarged significantly by enclosing both ends. For the first time, Nebraska was on television once or twice a year and fans all over the state sat down to watch the Bob Devaney TV show each week, in which he used his folksy manner to review the tape of the game for all of the fans who hadn't seen it in person.
Consecutive 6–4 seasons followed in 1967 and 1968. Allegedly known as a drinker,[
citation needed] Devaney became subject to a whispering campaign about whether he had peaked. However, he had brought in an innovative offensive thinker as an assistant coach,
Tom Osborne. Devaney and Osborne revamped the offensive scheme, an
I formation with an unbalanced line, and upgraded the recruiting effort. Nebraska began the 1969 season with just a 2–2 start and
in its fifth game needed a last-minute comeback at home to beat aKansas team that finished the season 1–9*. But the
1969 Huskers kept winning and concluded the season with a 9–2 record, including a 45–6 rout of
Georgia in the
Sun Bowl. This set the stage for the highlight of Devaney's coaching career.[
citation needed]
* I went to that game with my dad.