Published Thursday July 17, 2008
BY JON NYATAWA
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
C.J. Zimmerer is trying his best not to think about the day he starts wearing the same colors as the legendary Husker players on his bedroom posters.
There's no question he's excited about playing fullback for Nebraska — he accepted a scholarship offer last May in less than 24 hours.
But Zimmerer, who grew up in south Omaha, doesn't want to be distracted during his final year at Gross High School, where he's surrounded by lifelong friends and where he's the leader of a football team that wants to improve on last fall's Class B quarterfinal finish.
"I really want football season to get here and I can focus on that," he said. "I have a year ahead of me. They say your senior year of high school flies by. I want to enjoy it."
Zimmerer didn't have to run the gantlet of summer football camps, which in this day and age have become a sort of self-promotion tour for players in the hunt for a college opportunity. Unheralded nationally and regionally, he once thought that would be the only way he'd earn a college scholarship.
Zimmerer's summer plans were rearranged the moment Nebraska assistant coach Barney Cotton offered him a scholarship.
"I almost had to ask, 'Are you playing games with me?'" Zimmerer said. "I did not expect that at all."
Neither did his mom, who used to support Nebraska by arranging her post-Christmas plans around its bowl destination. After hearing the news, she gave Zimmerer a playful slap, assuming her son was kidding around.
"I think my parents might have been in more shock than me," Zimmerer said.
But two months later, it's all set in, which means Zimmerer gets to live like a normal high school kid — sort of. He works out for an hour in the mornings and does demolition work — tearing out and lifting cement and drywall as part of construction and remodeling projects — with his dad in the late mornings and afternoons. Weekends are for downtime with friends.
He doesn't get too many phone calls, not like that first week after being offered a scholarship by Nebraska.
No more than five minutes after receiving the scholarship offer, the first reporter called. About 30 minutes later, two of Zimmerer's friends from Hastings, Neb., wanted to make sure he planned to accept it. More friends, family members and reporters called during the next few days.
Zimmerer still gets greeted by strangers who just want to shake hands with the next Husker player. At a church event Sunday, he heard a similar question all day: "Hey, you're C.J., right?"
As expected, Zimmerer's handled it all nicely, according to Gross High School coach Tim Johnk, once an NU fullback himself.
"There is a little bit of pressure when you are a scholarship guy," Johnk said. "Now you have to live up to those expectations. People are going to be putting a target on your chest. But I think he understands that."
Maybe that's why Johnk thinks that Zimmerer seems more focused now. He's not the loudest one in the weight room, but his quiet confidence seems to fuel his teammates to work harder.
"His work ethic kind of oozes into everyone else," Johnk said. "Those kids want to work hard because he wants to work hard. He's raised the bar."
As a 6-foot-1, 215-pound fullback, Zimmerer rushed for 701 yards (7.97 per carry) and 11 touchdowns last season. Zimmerer says he even feels a little faster now after running sprint events for the track team last spring.
Johnk does want a better blocker out of Zimmerer, a skill that takes time to perfect. The effort's definitely there, though. Zimmerer loves playing the position.
"That's just the linebacker of offense basically," said Zimmerer, named a Class B all-state linebacker by The World Herald last year. "I love going out and hitting. There's nothing better than lining up before the play and knowing that you're going to go and hit that guy. And he has no idea it's coming."
Zimmerer will play both positions in the fall for Gross, a season free from the added pressure of having to impress college coaches.
Just like last year, though, he'll likely continue to check the Internet to see what is said about his play on the field. He never really got that much interest, and he tried not to pay attention to the recruiting analysts' perceptions.
Zimmerer's thankful that Cotton and the NU staff made their own evaluations.
"I must be doing something right," he said. "Even if I wasn't getting a whole lot of offers, I got one. That's all you need."