TGHusker
Heisman Trophy Winner
The bold below is really frustrating.   The defense did enough to win the game but again the Offense could not generate the points when needed.  Outside of EJ we had little O.  
	
	
		
			
				
					
						
					
				
			
			
				
					
						
							
						
					
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				Solid Game Plan, Costly Game Management: How Nebraska Football Let USC Off the Hook
The Nebraska football team lost a heartbreaker in Lincoln on Saturday night to #23 USC, 21-17. The Big Red led for pretty much all of the 1st half and a good ch
				I still believe Matt Rhule is the right guy to lead this program, and I believe he can figure out how to get Nebraska to the point of being a perennial college football playoff contender. But you can believe those things and still call out shortcomings when you see them. Whether it’s hiring an assistant, or an analytics guy, or whatever it might be, he has to get better at game management. Furthermore, something needs to change on offense. With Dana Holgorsen running the offense originally installed by Marcus Satterfield two years ago, it seems they are floundering without an identity. The Husker O has now been held to under 300 total yards in four of its last five games.
Game Management + Play Calling. I’m going to lump these into the same section because, at least for this game, they go hand-in-hand to explain why Nebraska lost. In my opinion, Nebraska lost this game as a result of the first three drives of the 2nd half.
- First of all, it is inexcusable to come out of halftime with a 14-6 lead, receive the ball, and go 3-and-out. I can’t for the life of me understand why Holgorsen dialed up a deep shot on the first play of the half. Nothing about the Huskers’ offense to this point in the season would suggest that’s a high confidence, high probability play. It of course didn’t connect, and Nebraska punted two plays later.
 
- Not to worry, you say? The Blackshirts picked off Jayden Maiava on the very next play, you say? What a fantastic effort by cornerback Andrew Marshall, and a huge break for the Big Red. The Huskers’ next three plays went like this: Emmett Johnson 7 yard run; incompletion; Emmett Johnson 4 yard run. At 1st and 10 at the USC 23 yard line, Nebraska was in prime position to get points, and the move seemed abundantly clear: feed Emmett all the way to the end zone. What did the Huskers do instead? They dialed up a pass play which led to a Raiola fumble and injury that kept him out the remainder of the game. In the moment, it was a disaster for Nebraska. Long term, as of this writing, it looks like Raiola is out for the remainder of the season. Absolutely brutal outcome for this team.
 At this point, the old sinking feeling started to come back. With more than five minutes left in the 3rd quarter, we had squandered two golden opportunities, and burned two timeouts. When USC scored 5 plays later, and converted the two point conversion to tie it at 14, it felt like the momentum had completely shifted.
- Even after that debacle, the Blackshirts responded once again. The Trojans got one 1st down, but then the Husker defense stoned the Trojans on 4th and 2, getting the ball back to the offense with Nebraska still holding a 14-6 lead. After two Emmett Johnson runs led to a 1st down, a USC defender pushed Nebraska offensive lineman Turner Corcoran well after the play. It should have been a penalty. It was a bad no-call. But then Matt Rhule called a timeout to plead his case with the officials. I have no idea what Nebraska’s head man was thinking here. It was a bad missed call, but it’s not something that can be overturned upon review. There was no reason to call the timeout. Three plays later, the Huskers faced a 4th and 1 at the USC 34. It initially looked like Nebraska was going to go for it, with Tight End/former quarterback Heinrich Haarberg under center. Instead, the Huskers burned a second timeout, opting to try a 52 yard field goal which just missed.
 
	
