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Nebraska Cornhuskers

The Nebraska Cornhuskers (often abbreviated to Huskers) are the intercollegiate athletic teams that represent the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. The university is a member of the Big Ten Conference and competes in NCAA Division I, fielding twenty-four varsity teams (ten men's, fourteen women's) in fifteen sports. Nineteen of these teams participate in the Big Ten, while rifle is a member of the single-sport Patriot Rifle Conference and beach volleyball and bowling compete as independents. The Cornhuskers have two official mascots, Herbie Husker and Lil' Red.

Nebraska Cornhuskers
UniversityUniversity of Nebraska–Lincoln
ConferenceBig Ten (primary)
Patriot Rifle (rifle)
Independent (beach volleyball, bowling)
NCAADivision I (FBS)
Athletic directorTrev Alberts
LocationLincoln, Nebraska
Varsity teams24 (10 men's, 14 women's)
Football stadiumMemorial Stadium
Basketball arenaPinnacle Bank Arena
Baseball stadiumHawks Field
Softball stadiumBowlin Stadium
Soccer stadiumHibner Stadium
Lacrosse stadiumCook Pavilion
Other venuesDevaney Center
Dillon Tennis Center
East Campus Bowling Lanes
Hawks Championship Center
Nebraska Rifle Range
Wilderness Ridge Golf Club
MascotHerbie Husker
Lil' Red
NicknameCornhuskers
Big Red
Fight songHail Varsity
ColorsScarlet and cream[1]
   
Websitewww.huskers.com
Big Ten logo in Nebraska's colors

Early nicknames for the university's athletic teams included the Antelopes (later adopted by the University of Nebraska at Kearney), the Old Gold Knights, the Bugeaters, and the Mankilling Mastodons.[2] Cornhuskers first appeared in a school newspaper headline ("We Have Met The Cornhuskers And They Are Ours"), after a 20–18 victory over Iowa in 1893; in this instance, the term referred to Iowa.[3][4][5] It was first applied to Nebraska in 1899 by Nebraska State Journal writer Cy Sherman, who would later help originate the AP Poll. The nickname was officially adopted by the school the following year and by the state of Nebraska itself in 1945, when it became known as "The Cornhusker State."[6][7][8]

Nebraska was a founding member of the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association in 1907 (later known as the Big Six, Big Seven, and Big Eight Conference) and competed in it for the next eighty-nine years, with a brief hiatus during World War I. In 1996, NU and the seven other members of the Big Eight merged with four Texas schools from the Southwest Conference to form the Big 12 Conference. Nebraska joined the Big Ten in 2011.

Nebraska's athletic programs have won twenty-nine national championships: eight in men's gymnastics and bowling, five in football and volleyball, and three in women's track and field.[9]

Varsity sports edit

Men's sports Women's sports
Baseball Basketball
Basketball Beach volleyball
Cross country Bowling
Football Cross country
Golf Golf
Gymnastics Gymnastics
Tennis Soccer
Track & field Softball
Wrestling Swimming and diving
Tennis
Track and field
Volleyball
Co-ed sports
Rifle[a]
† – Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor.

Baseball edit

Nebraska's baseball team was founded in 1889, making it the oldest athletic program at the school. It was disjointed in its first decades, frequently disbanding for years at a time. The hiring of Tony Sharpe in 1947 brought stability to the program, but success was limited. Sharpe and his successor John Sanders combined to lead NU for fifty-one seasons, making just three NCAA tournament appearances between them. Nebraska hired Dave Van Horn in 1998 and he quickly turned the Huskers into a national power, making the program's first two College World Series appearances in 2001 and 2002. Mike Anderson took over for Van Horn and in 2005 led NU to its most successful season ever, including another College World Series trip. Anderson could not sustain this, however; since his departure in 2011 Nebraska has experienced modest success under head coaches Darin Erstad and Will Bolt.

In 2002, the Huskers moved from the aging Buck Beltzer Stadium to Hawks Field at Haymarket Park, considered among the best collegiate baseball facilities in the country at the time. Nebraska has ranked in the top thirty nationally in average attendance each year since moving to Hawks Field.

  • Conference championships (8): 1929, 1948, 1950, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2017, 2021
  • Conference tournament championships (4): 1999–2001, 2005
  • NCAA Division I tournament (19) appearances: 1948, 1950, 1979, 1980, 1985, 1999–2003, 2005–08, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2021
  • College World Series appearances (3): 2001, 2002, 2005

Basketball edit

Men

Nebraska's men's basketball program has accomplished little of note since the establishment of the NCAA tournament in 1939. Nebraska has not won a regular-season conference championship since sharing the Big Seven title in 1950 and has not won an outright title since 1916. Nebraska's lengthiest period of success came in the first years of the sport's existence; the retroactive Premo-Porretta Power Poll ranked the Cornhuskers in the top ten three times between 1897 and 1903.[10]

Nebraska did not make an NCAA tournament appearance until 1986, forty-six years after its establishment, and is the only power-conference program without a tournament victory. Much of the team's modest recent success came under Danny Nee, who coached the Huskers from 1987 to 2000. Nee is the team's all-time winningest head coach and led Nebraska to five of its seven NCAA tournament appearances, the 1996 NIT championship, and the 1994 Big Eight tournament championship (NU's only conference championship of any kind since 1950). Nebraska has made just two NCAA tournament appearances since the departure of Nee in 2000. The program has been led by former Chicago Bulls and Iowa State head coach Fred Hoiberg since 2019.[11]

  • Conference championships (6): 1912–14, 1916, 1949, 1950
  • Conference tournament championships (1): 1994
  • NCAA Division I tournament appearances (7): 1986, 1991–94, 1998, 2014
  • NIT appearances (19): 1967, 1978, 1980, 1983–85, 1987, 1989, 1995–97, 1999, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2018, 2019
  • NIT championships (1): 1996

Women

 
Corncob Man at a football game at Memorial Stadium in 1958

Nebraska's women's basketball program began as a club sport in 1970 and became a varsity sport five years later. George Nicodemus led the Huskers to a 22–9 record and the second round of the AIAW Tournament in its first varsity season. Nicodemus left the program in 1977 and the school cycled through several head coaches before hiring Angela Beck in 1986. Beck led the Huskers to the Big Eight championship and the school's first NCAA tournament appearance in 1988. She left the program in 1997 and was replaced by Paul Sanderford, who took Nebraska to the tournament in each of his first three seasons. When Sanderford resigned in 2002 due to health issues, the school hired Creighton head coach Connie Yori.

Under Yori's guidance, Nebraska became a fixture in the national top 25 and NCAA tournament. In 2009–10 the Cornhuskers went 32-2, earned a number-one seed in the NCAA tournament, and reached the Sweet Sixteen for the first time in school history. Yori resigned in 2016 following an athletic department investigation into reports that she mistreated her players and assistant coaches. Former Huskers point guard Amy Williams was named Yori's replacement.

  • Conference championships (2): 1988, 2010
  • Conference tournament championships (1): 2014
  • AIAW (3) / NCAA Division I (15) tournament appearances: 1979–81, 1988, 1993, 1996, 1998–2000, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2012–15, 2018, 2022
  • WNIT appearances (8): 1976, 1992, 2004–06, 2009, 2016, 2023

Bowling edit

Bowling has been an official varsity sport at Nebraska since 1996. Bill Straub, who led the bowling club program to national championships in 1991 and 1995, was hired to lead the varsity program and won three more WIBC titles. The inaugural NCAA Bowling Championship was held in 2003 and Nebraska won the first two national titles. Nebraska has won four more titles since, and has never been ranked outside the top ten since national collegiate rankings debuted in 1990. In 2019, Straub retired and longtime assistant Paul Klempa was named head coach.[12]

Bowling competes as an independent, making it one of only three programs at Nebraska not affiliated with the Big Ten.

Nebraska's men's bowling club team won the American Bowling Congress intercollegiate championships in 1990 and 1996.

  • WIBC (13) / NCAA (19) tournament appearances: 1991–2019, 2021–23
  • WIBC (5) / NCAA (6) championships: 1991, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2004, 2005, 2009, 2013, 2015, 2021

Cross country edit

Nebraska's men's cross country team was established in 1938, winning its only conference championship just two years later. The women's program was established in 1975 to help satisfy Title IX requirements. Matt Wackerly has coached both teams since 2021, when he succeeded longtime coach David Harris.

Men

Women

  • Conference championships (5): 1985, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1993
  • NCAA Division I Championship appearances (14): 1984, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991–94, 1996–99, 2003, 2008

Football edit

 
Nebraska vs. USC at Memorial Stadium on September 16, 2007

Nebraska's football team competes as part of the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision in the Big Ten's West Division. Nebraska plays its home games at Memorial Stadium, where it has sold out every game since 1962.[13] The team has been coached by Matt Rhule since 2023.

Nebraska is among the most storied programs in college football history. NU claims forty-six conference championships and five national championships (1970, 1971, 1994, 1995, and 1997), and has won nine other national championships the school does not claim.[14][15] NU's 1971 and 1995 title-winning teams are considered to be among the best in college football history.[16] Heisman Trophy winners Johnny Rodgers, Mike Rozier, and Eric Crouch join twenty-two other Cornhuskers in the College Football Hall of Fame.

The program's first extended period of success came just after the turn of the century. Between 1900 and 1916, Nebraska had five undefeated seasons and completed a stretch of thirty-four consecutive games without a loss, still a program record.[17] Despite a span of twenty-one conference championships in thirty-three seasons, the Cornhuskers didn't experience major national success until Bob Devaney was hired in 1962. In eleven seasons as head coach, Devaney won two national championships, eight conference titles, and coached twenty-two All-Americans, but perhaps his most lasting achievement was the hiring of Tom Osborne as offensive coordinator in 1969.[18] Osborne was named Devaney's successor in 1973, and over the next twenty-five years established himself as one of the best coaches in college football history with his trademark I-form offense and revolutionary strength, conditioning, and nutrition programs.[19][20][21] Following Osborne's retirement in 1997, Nebraska cycled through five head coaches before hiring Matt Rhule in 2022.[22]

  • Conference championships (46): 1894, 1895, 1897, 1907, 1910–17, 1921–23, 1928, 1929, 1931–33, 1935–37, 1940, 1963–66, 1969–72, 1975, 1978, 1981–84, 1988, 1991–95, 1997, 1999
  • Division championships (10): 1996, 1997, 1999–2001, 2006, 2008–10, 2012
  • National championships (claimed in bold) (14): 1915, 1921, 1970, 1971, 1980–84, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1999

Golf edit

Men

Nebraska's golf program began in 1935, led by College Football Hall of Fame coach Dana X. Bible. The team's greatest successes came under longtime head coach Larry Romjue, who took NU to all four of its NCAA Championship appearances. The program has been coached by Judd Cornell since 2022.

Women

NU established a women's golf program in 1975, initially under the leadership of men's coach Larry Romjue. In 1979, Nebraska hired its first coach exclusively to coach women's golf. The Cornhuskers have made the NCAA Championship three times. The program has been coached by Jeanne Sutherland since 2022.

Gymnastics edit

Men

Nebraska's men's gymnastics program is one of the most successful in the nation, with eight team national championships and forty-one NCAA event titles. Ten Huskers have represented the United States in the Olympics. Nebraska is one of only five Big Ten schools to sanction a men's gymnastics program.

  • Individual all-around national championships (9): Jim Hartung (1980, 1981), Wes Suter (1985), Tom Schlesinger (1987), Kevin Davis (1988), Patrick Kirksey (1989), Dennis Harrison (1994), Richard Grace (1995), Jason Hardabura (1999)
  • Conference championships (15): 1964, 1976, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988–90, 1992–94, 1997, 1999
  • NCAA Championship appearances (29): 1975, 1976, 1979–99, 2017–19, 2021–23
  • NCAA championships (8): 1979–83, 1988, 1990, 1994

Women

Nebraska's women's gymnastics program was established in 1975. The school's first team, led by head coach Karen Balke, was made up entirely of freshmen and sophomores. Judy Schalk replaced Balke after two seasons and led the Huskers to five conference titles and a national tournament bid. Rick Walton replaced Schalk and gave the school its first NCAA event title when Michele Bryant won the vault in 1990. He captured four straight Big Eight championships, each resulting in an NCAA Tournament appearance. Dan Kendig was named head coach in 1993 and was named Big Eight Coach of the Year after leading NU to the conference title. In 1997, Nebraska upset No. 1 Utah to reach the Super Six Finals for the first time in school history. Kendig won his sixth consecutive conference championship in 1999 and was named national coach of the year. Kendig's teams won four individual event titles; Heather Brink won the all-around and vault in 2000 and Richelle Simpson won the all-around and floor exercise in 2003. Brink was named Kendig's replacement in 2019 when he resigned in the midst of an NCAA investigation.

  • Individual all-around national championships (2): Heather Brink (2000), Richelle Simpson (2003)
  • Conference championships (2): 2014, 2017
  • Conference tournament championships (23): 1978–80, 1982, 1983, 1987–90, 1994–99, 2001–03, 2005, 2007, 2011–13
  • NCAA Championship appearances (28) 1982, 1983, 1987–90, 1995–97, 1999–2007, 2010–12, 2014–19, 2023

Rifle edit

Rifle became an official sport at the university in 1998. The team practices and hosts meets at the ten-point indoor firing range in NU's Military and Naval Sciences Building (ROTC). The team has been coached by Mindy Miles since 2021.

Although rifle is classified as a coeducational sport by the NCAA, Nebraska fields an all-female team. The program competed as an independent for six years before joining the Great America Rifle Conference in 2004. NU left the GARC for the Patriot Rifle Conference in 2021, making it one of only three programs at Nebraska not affiliated with the Big Ten.

  • Conference championships (1): 2006
  • Conference tournament championships (2): 2005, 2006
  • NCAA Championship appearances (17): 2000, 2001, 2004–08, 2010, 2013–18, 2020,[b] 2021, 2023

Soccer edit

In 1995, Nebraska became the first Big Eight school to sponsor a varsity women's soccer program. John Walker was hired lead the new program and took his team to the NCAA Championship in his third year, the first of eight consecutive tournament appearances. Since this streak ended in 2005 the Cornhuskers have reached the tournament just three times. The team has reached the round of 16 eight times and the national quarterfinals three twice. Walker has earned NSCAA National Coach of the Year, NSCAA Central Region Coach of the Year, and Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year during his tenure in Lincoln.

  • Conference championships (5): 1996, 1999, 2000, 2013, 2023
  • Conference tournament championships (7): 1996, 1998–2000, 2002, 2013
  • NCAA Division I Championship appearances (13): 1996–2005, 2013, 2016, 2023

Softball edit

Nebraska's softball program started in 1970, before it was an official NCAA sport. Since the NCAA sanctioned softball in 1983, the Cornhuskers have made eight appearances in the Women's College World Series, held annually in Oklahoma City, and won the tenth-most games of any program. The program's greatest successes came under head coach Wayne Daigle shortly after the tournament's creation, culminating in a national runner-up finish in 1985 (though it was quickly vacated by the NCAA Committee on Infractions). Rhonda Revelle became the program's head coach in 1992, and has since won more games than any coach in Nebraska athletics history. Revelle has won seven conference titles and was inducted into the National Fastpitch Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2010.

  • Conference championships (10): 1982, 1984–88, 1998, 2001, 2004, 2014
  • Conference tournament championships (9): 1982, 1984–88, 1998, 2000, 2004
  • NCAA Division I tournament appearances (27): 1982, 1984, 1985,[c] 1987, 1988, 1995–2007, 2009–11, 2013–16, 2022, 2023
  • Women's College World Series appearances (8): 1982, 1984, 1985,[d] 1987, 1988, 1998, 2002, 2013

Tennis edit

Men

Nebraska's men's tennis team was established in 1928 and has made the NCAA Championship twice, most recently in 2011. Five Cornhuskers have won conference championships, and seventeen have been named all-conference selections. In 1989, Steven Jung was the NCAA Singles runner-up and was named NU's first All-American.[24] Jung is the only men's tennis player in the Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame.[25]

NU made its only two NCAA appearances under Kerry McDermott, who led the program for thirty-seven years. Following the 2018 Big Ten tournament, Nebraska announced McDermott would not return and hired Sean Maymi as his replacement.[26][27]

Women

NU's women's tennis program was established in 1976 and has made the NCAA Championship six times since 2000, most recently in 2013. Fourteen Cornhuskers have won conference championships, and twenty have been named all-conference selections. The team was coached by Scott Jacobson from 1992 until his retirement in 2022.[28]

Track and field edit

Men

Nebraska's men's track and field team started in 1922 under coach Henry Schulte, who led the Huskers to nine conference titles before his retirement. His assistant, College Football Hall of Famer Ed Weir, replaced Schulte. Shortly after Weir retired to work as an athletic administrator in 1955, Frank Sevigne was hired to lead the program. Under Sevigne, the Huskers won eleven individual national championships, with forty-two All-American selections and 103 individual conference champions in combined indoor and outdoor events. Gary Pepin coached both the men's and women's teams from Sevigne's retirement in 1983 until his own retirement in 2022.

  • Indoor conference championships (38): 1930–33, 1936–38, 1940–42, 1949, 1951, 1963, 1972, 1973, 1978, 1985, 1987–89, 1992, 1994–98, 2000–05, 2007, 2015, 2016, 2019
  • Outdoor conference championships (29): 1921–24, 1926, 1929, 1932, 1933, 1936, 1937, 1939–42, 1950, 1966, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2016

Women

Nebraska's women's track and field program was created during the 1975–76 academic year and began competition in 1976. The team's first head coach was Roger Capan, but he left after only one season and was replaced by Carol Frost, whose son Scott would later quarterback the Cornhuskers to a national championship in 1997. Frost left Nebraska after the 1980 season, and Gary Pepin took over the program. Two years later Pepin assumed control of the men's program as well, a dual role he held until his retirement in 2022.

  • Indoor conference championships (24): 1980–97, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2005, 2011, 2012
  • Indoor AIAW (1) / NCAA Division I (2) championships: 1982–84
  • Outdoor conference championships (18): 1980–95, 2000, 2005

Volleyball edit

 
Nebraska vs. Penn State at the Devaney Center on November 30, 2013

Nebraska's volleyball program is among the best in the history of the sport. The Cornhuskers have won five national championships (1995, 2000, 2006, 2015, 2017) and reached the national semifinals on ten other occasions. NU has won more games than any other program, and ranks second in national semifinal appearances, tournament wins, and tournament winning percentage. Nebraska has made the NCAA tournament for thirty-nine consecutive seasons and has never been ranked outside of the national top 20. The Cornhuskers have featured more AVCA All-Americans than any other program, including four National Player of the Year award winners.

Nebraska volleyball is one of the most popular spectator attractions in the state. In 2008, AVCA executive director Kathy DeBoer described Nebraska as "the epicenter of volleyball fandom." The Cornhuskers have led the country in attendance every year since moving to the Bob Devaney Sports Center in 2013 and have sold out over 300 consecutive home matches, an NCAA record for any women's sport. Before moving to the larger Devaney Center, Nebraska played at the historic NU Coliseum; the Cornhuskers had fifteen undefeated seasons and a record of 454–30 at the Coliseum, including a then-NCAA-record ninety consecutive home victories from 2005 to 2009.

The Cornhuskers have played in several of the highest-attended games in NCAA history, including the 2021 national championship game, when a record 18,755 fans watched Wisconsin defeat Nebraska in five sets at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio.[29] NU played Omaha on August 30, 2023 at Memorial Stadium. 92,003 people showed up for the event, breaking the record for the largest attendance at a women's sporting event in history;[30] by the end of April, 82,900 tickets were already sold.[31]

  • Conference championships (35): 1976–92, 1994–96, 1998–2002, 2004–08, 2010, 2011, 2016, 2017, 2023
  • Conference tournament championships (Big Eight only) (18): 1976–86, 1988–91, 1993–95
  • AIAW (6) / NCAA Division I (42) tournament appearances: 1975–80, 1982–2023
  • NCAA Division I national semifinals (17): 1986, 1989, 1990, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2015–18, 2021, 2023
  • NCAA Division I championships (5): 1995, 2000, 2006, 2015, 2017

Beach volleyball

Nebraska added beach volleyball as the school's twenty-second intercollegiate varsity sport in 2013. In 2016, the NCAA began sponsoring a beach volleyball tournament (previously the sport was run by the AVCA), but Nebraska did not attempt to qualify. Nebraska runs one of the only beach volleyball programs in the Midwest and plays the bulk of its season during a spring break trip to California or Hawaii. NU's beach roster is made up entirely of players from its indoor program, and head coach John Cook has said the school views beach volleyball primarily as a training and recruiting tool for its indoor team. Beach volleyball competes as an independent, making it one of only three programs at Nebraska not affiliated with the Big Ten.

On March 8, 2017, Nebraska hosted Missouri Baptist at the Hawks Championship Center. The match was closed to the public due to space limitations, but was noteworthy as the first collegiate beach volleyball match to take place in the state of Nebraska. The Cornhuskers swept the Spartans 5–0.

In 2007, Jordan Larson and Sarah Pavan defeated student-athletes from seven other schools to win the Collegiate Beach Volleyball Championship, an invitational tournament featuring two players per school.[32]

Wrestling edit

 
Jake Sueflohn of Nebraska (left) grapples with Cole VonOhlen of Air Force at the Cliff Keen Invitational on December 1, 2012

Nebraska's wrestling program started in 1910 under the guidance of head coach R.G. Clapp. Despite modest success in the program's early years, NU has been a mainstay in the national top ten since Tim Neumann was hired in 1985. Mark Manning has led the Huskers since 2000 and twice won conference coach of the year.[33] Former Nebraska standouts include 2000 Olympic gold medalist and 2004 bronze medalist Rulon Gardner, and two-time NCAA champion and 2012 Olympic gold medalist Jordan Burroughs.

Individual

  • National championships (11): Mike Nissen (1963 – 123 lbs), Jim Scherr (1984 – 177 lbs), Bill Scherr (1984 – 190 lbs), Jason Kelber (1991 – 126 lbs), Tony Purler (1993 – 126 lbs), Tolly Thompson (1995 – HWT), Brad Vering (2000 – 197 lbs), Jason Powell (2004 – 125 lbs), Paul Donahoe (2007 – 125 lbs), Jordan Burroughs (2009 – 157 lbs; 2011 – 165 lbs)

Team

  • Conference championships (7): 1911, 1915, 1924, 1949, 1993, 1995, 2009
  • NCAA Division I Championship appearances (56): 1928, 1942, 1946, 1949, 1954, 1958, 1959, 1961–63, 1973, 1975, 1978, 1980–2019, 2021–23

Club sports edit

The University of Nebraska–Lincoln sponsors club programs in badminton, baseball, women's basketball, bowling, broomball, climbing, cricket, curling, cycling, dodgeball, golf, men's hockey, women's hockey, judo, women's lacrosse, pickleball, rifle, rowing, men's rugby, running, sailing, shotgun, women's soccer, fast-pitch softball, swimming, table tennis, taekwondo, tennis, men's ultimate Frisbee, men's volleyball, women's volleyball, and water ski.

Athletic directors edit

In its earliest days, the Nebraska Department of Athletics had no central figure serving as the head of the department, and the history of how this position developed is unclear. Early on, the head of the athletics department often had only a partial or part-time role and held other titles and responsibilities. The first six heads of the Athletics Department held the title "Athletics Manager," first held by Raymond G. Clapp, NU's basketball coach and a professor of physical education.[34] The first individual to hold the title "athletic director" was E. J. Stewart, who served from 1916 to 1919, while also coaching men's basketball and football during parts of his tenure.[35] However, he is not considered Nebraska's first athletic director because it was not considered a full-time administrative position by the Board of Regents; this designation belong to Fred Luehring, who held the position from 1920 to 1922.[36]

Many of Nebraska's athletic directors simultaneously coached one of the university's varsity programs. These included basketball, baseball, and swimming, but the majority of dual-role administrators were football coaches: Stewart, Fred Dawson, Dana X. Bible, Biff Jones, Glenn Presnell, Adolph J. Lewandowski, George Clark, and Bob Devaney.[e] NU's longest-serving athletic director was Devaney, who led the department from 1967 to 1992. Trev Alberts was appointed Nebraska's fifteenth full-time athletic director on July 14, 2021.[37]

Facilities edit

 
Nebraska vs. Fresno State at Hawks Field at Haymarket Park on March 11, 2011

Home venues

Venue Built Sport(s)
City Campus
Bob Devaney Sports Center 1976 Gymnastics
Swimming & diving
Track & field
Volleyball
Wrestling
Hawks Championship Center 2006 Beach volleyball
Memorial Stadium 1923 Football
Military and Naval Science Building 1947 Rifle
Unnamed track & field stadium N/A[f][38] Track & field
Cross country
East Campus
East Campus Bowling Lanes 1977 Bowling
Off campus
Barbara Hibner Soccer Stadium 2015 Soccer
Bowlin Stadium 2001 Softball
Hawks Field 2001 Baseball
John Breslow Ice Hockey Center 2015 Ice hockey (club)
Pinnacle Bank Arena 2013 Basketball
Sid and Hazel Dillon Tennis Center 2015 Tennis
Wilderness Ridge Golf Club[g] 2001 Golf

Additional facilities

Venue Built Purpose
City Campus
Francis Allen Training Complex 2020 Gymnastics training facility
Hawks Championship Center 2006 Football practice facility
Hendricks Training Complex 2011 Basketball & wrestling training facility
Nebraska Coliseum 1926 Basketball (former home venue)
Volleyball (former home venue)
Wrestling (former home venue)
Osborne Athletic Complex 2006 Administration
Health & medicine
Strength & conditioning
Unnamed football facility 2023[h] Football practice facility
Off campus
Alex Gordon Training Complex 2011 Baseball & softball practice facility

Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame edit

The University of Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame was established in 2015, located just northeast of Memorial Stadium. Twenty-two former student-athletes were honored in the inaugural class.[39] At least one student-athlete from each of Nebraska's varsity sports has been inducted into the Hall of Fame. Football is the most-represented sport with thirteen student-athletes and coaches inducted.

Class of 2015

Steve Friesen – Golf
Alex Gordon – Baseball
Charlie Greene – Track & field
Jim Hartung – Gymnastics
Penny Heyns – Swimming & diving
Karen Jennings – Basketball
Steve Jung – Tennis
Joe Kirby – Cross country
Christine Latham – Soccer
Liz Mooney – Tennis
Merlene Ottey – Track & field
Eric Piatkowski – Basketball
Adam Pine – Swimming & diving
Shannon Pluhowsky – Bowling
Dave Rimington – Football
Sarah Sasse-Kildow – Golf
Bill Scherr – Wrestling
Richelle Simpson – Gymnastics
Lori Sippel – Softball
Fran ten Bensel – Cross country
Amanda Trujillo – Rifle
Allison Weston – Volleyball

Class of 2016

Heather Brink – Gymnastics
Phil Cahoy – Gymnastics
Janet Kruse – Volleyball
Nicole Martial – Track & field
Nancy Metcalf – Volleyball
Johnny Rodgers – Football
Will Shields – Football

Class of 2017

Bob Brown – Football
Karen Dahlgren – Volleyball
Denise Day – Softball
Rich Glover – Football
Dave Hoppen – Basketball
Scott Johnson – Gymnastics

Class of 2018

Bob Devaney – Football
Darin Erstad – Baseball
Peaches James – Softball
Tom Osborne – Football
Sarah Pavan – Volleyball
Mike Rozier – Football
Tom Schlesinger – Gymnastics

Class of 2019

Francis Allen – Gymnastics
Rhonda Bladford-Green – Track & field
Greichaly Cepero – Volleyball
Carol Frost – Track & field
Wes Suter – Gymnastics
Ed Weir – Football
Grant Wistrom – Football

Class of 2020

Amanda Burgoyne – Bowling
Eric Crouch – Football
Sam Francis – Football
Maurtice Ivy – Basketball
Jordan Larson – Volleyball
Terry Pettit – Volleyball

Class of 2021

Therese Alshammar – Swimming
Jordan Burroughs – Wrestling
Bob Cerv – Baseball
Kelsey Griffin – Basketball
Larry Jacobson – Football
Cathy Noth – Softball

Class of 2022

Guy Chamberlin – Football
Christina Houghtelling – Volleyball
Patrick Kirksey – Gymnastics
Shane Komine – Baseball
Louise Pound – Administrator
Bill Straub – Bowling
Angela Thacker – Track & field
Ali Viola – Softball

Class of 2023

Lori Endicott – Volleyball
Tommie Frazier – Football
Emily Parsons – Gymnastics
Gary Pepin – Track & field
Tolly Thompson – Wrestling
Brittany Timko – Soccer

Olympians edit

 
Jordan Burroughs won a gold medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics

A total of 111 athletes from NU have combined to compete in 163 Olympic Games. Nebraska athletes have won fifty-four medals, including sixteen gold medals, while representing thirty countries. Merlene Ottey is Nebraska's most decorated Olympian, winning nine medals and competing in seven Olympic Games, a record for track and field competitors.[40][41]

Olympic gold medals won by Nebraska athletes
Athlete Sport Medals
Penny Heyns   Swimming      
Don Quarrie   Sprinting        
Adam Pine   Swimming      
Jordan Larson   Volleyball      
Curtis Tomasevicz   Bobsleigh    
Charlie Greene   Sprinting    
Kelsey Robinson   Volleyball
Rulon Gardner   Wrestling
Jordan Burroughs    
Justine Wong-Orantes   Volleyball
Trent Dimas   Gymnastics
Jim Hartung  
Scott Johnson  
Jim Mikus  
Linetta Wilson   Sprinting

Mascots edit

 
Lil' Red on the sideline at Memorial Stadium

Nebraska cycled through several official mascots before settling on the now-familiar Herbie Husker and Lil' Red. The first of these was Corncob Man, a man in green overalls with an ear of corn for a head. After just a few years, the university sought a more "representative" mascot and debuted Huskie the Husker, a farmer who stood ten feet tall and wore overalls with a straw hat on top of a fiberglass head.[42] Huskie soon gave way to Mr. Big Red (more commonly known as Harry Husker); Harry was equally tall but dressed in a blazer and red wide-brim hat. Harry's head was so large it couldn't fit on the team's traveling bus and was so heavy the student wearing the costume had to be switched every forty-five minutes.[43]

 
Herbie Husker as he looked from 2003 to 2023

The physical demands of the Harry costume meant the university was soon looking for another mascot, and in 1974 NU acquired the rights to Herbie Husker, based on the design of Lubbock, Texas artist Dirk West. Nebraska hired Disney cartoonist Bob Johnson to refine West's design into a costume and Herbie made his first appearance at a Nebraska football game at the 1974 Cotton Bowl Classic, a 19–3 Cornhuskers victory over Texas.[44] Mr. Big Red wasn't officially retired until 1988, but was infrequently seen while coexisting with Herbie.[45]

Historically, Herbie had blond hair and dressed in denim overalls (with an ear of corn in the pocket), a white undershirt, and a red cowboy hat. Prior to the 2003 season, Herbie's appearance was altered to include a red workshirt, blue jeans, and workboots in an effort to update the overall appearance of the state's agricultural workers and general public; however, the new design was not well-received and many of the modifications were reverted in 2023.[46][47]

Since 1994, Herbie has often been joined on the sideline by the inflatable Lil' Red. Initially, Lil' Red was created to appeal to younger fans and to primarily represent the school's volleyball team, which occasionally played at the same time as Nebraska's football team. Lil' Red was so popular that then-athletic director Bill Byrne considered discontinuing Herbie entirely, but later decided the mascots would coexist.[45] The mascots are now frequently seen together across all sports.

Herbie was named the 2005 National Mascot of the year at halftime of the 2006 Capital One Bowl. Lil' Red won the NCA National Mascot Competition in 1999 and was inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2007.[48]

Fan support edit

 
A fan attends a football game at Memorial Stadium in 1973

Decades of high attendance and well-traveling crowds across all sports have earned Nebraska fans a reputation for being fiercely loyal and dedicated. The school's athletic department proclaimed their fans "the greatest fans in college football" in an inscription above each of the twenty-four gates at Memorial Stadium.[49][50] In 2001, President George W. Bush stated that he "can't go without saying how impressed I am by the Nebraska fan base. Whether it be for women's volleyball or football, there's nothing like the Big Red."[51]

Memorial Stadium is sometimes referred to as The Sea of Red due to the home crowd's propensity to wear the color. Nebraska has sold out every home football game since November 3, 1962; at 389 it is the longest sellout streak in college athletics history.[52] The streak, historically a source of pride for the school and its fans,[53] has been scrutinized in the decades following Tom Osborne's retirement as NU's athletic department has occasionally been forced to sell a large number of tickets at a discounted rate to keep the streak alive.[54] Cornhuskers fans are noted for often applauding the visiting team as they leave the field at the end of the game.[55] Nebraska is considered to have one of the best-traveling fanbases in the country – the most famous example of this occurred in 2000, when an estimated 35,000 Nebraska fans watched No. 1 Nebraska defeat No. 25 Notre Dame at Notre Dame Stadium.[56][57]

Nebraska's volleyball program has sold out 303 consecutive matches between the Nebraska Coliseum and Devaney Center, the longest streak of its kind in women's college sports. The Cornhuskers have led the country in attendance for nine straight seasons,[i] and have played in nine of the ten highest-attended college volleyball matches ever played. Nebraska's five-set loss to Wisconsin in the 2021 national championship match broke college volleyball records for both attendance and viewership.[58]

Academic success edit

Nebraska has produced 347 Academic All-Americans, more than any other Division I school and second only to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology among all universities.[59] Nebraska's 108 Academic All-Americans in football is forty-one more than second-place Penn State; the school also leads all volleyball programs in Academic All-Americans with thirty-eight.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Although classified as coeducational by the NCAA, Nebraska fields an all-female team
  2. ^ Nebraska qualified for the 2020 NCAA Rifle Championship, which was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
  3. ^ Nebraska's 1985 Women's College World Series runner-up finish was vacated by the NCAA in 1986[23]
  4. ^ Nebraska's 1985 Women's College World Series runner-up finish was vacated by the NCAA in 1986[23]
  5. ^ Tom Osborne served as both football coach and athletic director, but not simultaneously
  6. ^ The $16.5 million facility began construction in 2019 on Nebraska Innovation Campus and will serve as the primary home venue for outdoor track & field and cross country. Construction was scheduled to be completed in 2022, but has paused with no scheduled opening date
  7. ^ Wilderness Ridge is the primary home course for Nebraska's golf team but is not owned or operated by the university
  8. ^ Planned opening date. The $135 million, 315,000 square foot facility began construction in 2019 on the former site of the Ed Weir Track
  9. ^ This does not count the spring 2021 season in which many schools, including Nebraska, did not host fans due to the COVID-19 pandemic

References edit

  1. ^ Nebraska Athletics Brand Guide (PDF). July 1, 2023. Retrieved September 17, 2023.
  2. ^ Mike Babcock (April 8, 2019). "History of Nebraska Football". Huskers.com. Retrieved October 16, 2022.
  3. ^ Fricke, Mark (2005). Nebraska Cornhusker Football. Arcadia Publishing. p. 17. ISBN 9780738534374.
  4. ^ McHugh, Jolene (November 19, 2011). "From the archives: The Cornhuskers". omaha.com. Archived from the original on October 26, 2016. Retrieved October 26, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  5. ^ Fricke, Mark. (PDF). library.la84.org. p. 11. Archived from the original on October 26, 2016. Retrieved October 26, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ . Huskers.com. July 24, 2017. Archived from the original on March 27, 2019. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  7. ^ . May 11, 2008. Archived from the original on May 11, 2008. Retrieved October 8, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  8. ^ Christopherson, Brian (June 20, 2009). . journalstar.com. Archived from the original on October 26, 2016. Retrieved October 26, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  9. ^ National Champions
  10. ^ ESPN, ed. (2009). ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game. New York: ESPN Books. pp. 529–30. ISBN 978-0-345-51392-2.
  11. ^ "Hoiberg to Lead Nebraska Men's Basketball Program".
  12. ^ "Bill Straub retiring as Nebraska bowling coach". August 29, 2019. Retrieved April 11, 2021.
  13. ^ "Nebraska vs. Missouri 1962". HuskerMax.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on May 4, 2016. Retrieved October 23, 2016.
  15. ^ "Title teams – HuskerMax™". Retrieved October 23, 2016.
  16. ^ "Best college football teams of all-time". Retrieved October 6, 2018.
  17. ^ "Nebraska Football Schedules 1910–1919". HuskerMax. Retrieved September 2, 2010.
  18. ^ "Tom's Time: Devaney Selects His Successor". HuskerMax. October 3, 2017. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  19. ^ "The 150 greatest coaches in college football's 150-year history". Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  20. ^ "The Greatest Coaches in College Football History". Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  21. ^ "Epley leaving Huskers". Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  22. ^ "Nebraska officially announces hiring of Scott Frost, introductory press conference scheduled for Sunday". Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  23. ^ a b "SPORTS PEOPLE; Nebraska Penalized". The New York Times. October 21, 1986. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  24. ^ "STEVEN JUNG". Huskers.com. Retrieved March 10, 2021.
  25. ^ "University of Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame". Huskers.com. Retrieved March 10, 2021.
  26. ^ "SEAN MAYMI". Huskers.com. Retrieved March 9, 2021.
  27. ^ Brent Wagner (June 13, 2018). "Nebraska hires college assistant as men's tennis coach". Lincoln Journal Star. Retrieved March 10, 2021.
  28. ^ "SCOTT JACOBSON". Huskers.com. Retrieved March 31, 2022.
  29. ^ "Badger volleyball wins national championship over Nebraska".
  30. ^ "Nebraska sets women's sport attendance world record with 92,003 fans at college volleyball game".
  31. ^ "Volleyball Day in Nebraska Tickets Sold Out" (Press release). Nebraska Cornhuskers. April 27, 2023. Retrieved May 4, 2023.
  32. ^ . Huskers.com. University of Nebraska Athletics. April 9, 2008. Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved April 14, 2021.
  33. ^ "The Leader". Nebraska-Omaha University. Retrieved January 1, 2014.
  34. ^ Leon Nyberg (June 20, 1961). "NU History Boasts 15 Athletic Directors". Daily Nebraskan. Nebraska Newspapers. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  35. ^ "1919 Cornhusker, University of Nebraska Yearbook". Archives and Special Collections, University of Nebraska–Lincoln. p. 252. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  36. ^ "1926 Cornhusker, University of Nebraska Yearbook". Archives and Special Collections, University of Nebraska–Lincoln. p. 437. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  37. ^ Sam McKewon (July 14, 2021). "Nebraska hires UNO A.D., ex-Husker Trev Alberts as athletic director". Omaha World Herald. Retrieved July 14, 2021.
  38. ^ Brian Beech (April 5, 2023). "OPINION: Husker track athletes deserve a completed outdoor facility". Retrieved June 16, 2023.
  39. ^ "University of Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame". Retrieved June 15, 2021.
  40. ^ "Husker Olympians: By the Numbers". news.unl.edu. University of Nebraska-Lincoln. February 19, 2018. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
  41. ^ "2018-19 Nebraska All-Sports Record Book" (PDF). Nebraska Communications Office. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
  42. ^ "Herbie Husker: the history of a Nebraska icon". MyHusker. December 11, 2021. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  43. ^ "Lil' Red's forebears: The history of Nebraska's on-field mascots". Lincoln Journal Star. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  44. ^ "Herbie Husker | The Mascot, The Myth, The Husker Legend". All Huskers, All the Time | MyHusker. December 11, 2021. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  45. ^ a b "All Hail Herbie". Nebraska Alumni Association. December 11, 2021. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  46. ^ "Husker mascots, through the years". Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  47. ^ Kaleb Henry (April 17, 2023). "Nebraska Athletics Unveils Updated Herbie Husker". Retrieved June 15, 2023.
  48. ^ "Nebraska Mascots". huskers.com. Retrieved April 23, 2018.
  49. ^ . ncaa.org. National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2007. Archived from the original on February 24, 2007. Retrieved March 10, 2007.
  50. ^ "Greatest Fans in College Football". Retrieved October 8, 2017.
  51. ^ "President Bush Welcomes University of Nebraska Volleyball Champions to the White House". georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov. Retrieved October 8, 2017.
  52. ^ "Road Trip". CNN. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
  53. ^ Jon Johnston (September 28, 2022). "Why The Nebraska Sellout Streak Is Important (And Why You Should Keep Going to Games)". Retrieved June 15, 2023.
  54. ^ Dave Feit (October 11, 2022). "Dave Feit: Not Like This". Retrieved June 15, 2023.
  55. ^ . MSNBC. Archived from the original on October 14, 2001. Retrieved October 8, 2017.
  56. ^ "Cotton Bowl News -Sports News -Dallas Morning News -News for Dallas, Texas". Retrieved October 8, 2017.
  57. ^ "Three and out". CNN. November 30, 2004. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
  58. ^ Lee Feinswog (December 22, 2021). "Record attendance, viewership for Wisconsin-Nebraska NCAA volleyball championship". VolleyballMag. Retrieved April 1, 2022.
  59. ^ "Academic All American by Rank" (PDF). CoSIDA.

External links edit

  • Official website  

nebraska, cornhuskers, often, abbreviated, huskers, intercollegiate, athletic, teams, that, represent, university, nebraska, lincoln, university, member, conference, competes, ncaa, division, fielding, twenty, four, varsity, teams, fourteen, women, fifteen, sp. The Nebraska Cornhuskers often abbreviated to Huskers are the intercollegiate athletic teams that represent the University of Nebraska Lincoln The university is a member of the Big Ten Conference and competes in NCAA Division I fielding twenty four varsity teams ten men s fourteen women s in fifteen sports Nineteen of these teams participate in the Big Ten while rifle is a member of the single sport Patriot Rifle Conference and beach volleyball and bowling compete as independents The Cornhuskers have two official mascots Herbie Husker and Lil Red Nebraska CornhuskersUniversityUniversity of Nebraska LincolnConferenceBig Ten primary Patriot Rifle rifle Independent beach volleyball bowling NCAADivision I FBS Athletic directorTrev AlbertsLocationLincoln NebraskaVarsity teams24 10 men s 14 women s Football stadiumMemorial StadiumBasketball arenaPinnacle Bank ArenaBaseball stadiumHawks FieldSoftball stadiumBowlin StadiumSoccer stadiumHibner StadiumLacrosse stadiumCook PavilionOther venuesDevaney CenterDillon Tennis CenterEast Campus Bowling LanesHawks Championship CenterNebraska Rifle RangeWilderness Ridge Golf ClubMascotHerbie HuskerLil RedNicknameCornhuskersBig RedFight songHail VarsityColorsScarlet and cream 1 Websitewww wbr huskers wbr comBig Ten logo in Nebraska s colorsEarly nicknames for the university s athletic teams included the Antelopes later adopted by the University of Nebraska at Kearney the Old Gold Knights the Bugeaters and the Mankilling Mastodons 2 Cornhuskers first appeared in a school newspaper headline We Have Met The Cornhuskers And They Are Ours after a 20 18 victory over Iowa in 1893 in this instance the term referred to Iowa 3 4 5 It was first applied to Nebraska in 1899 by Nebraska State Journal writer Cy Sherman who would later help originate the AP Poll The nickname was officially adopted by the school the following year and by the state of Nebraska itself in 1945 when it became known as The Cornhusker State 6 7 8 Nebraska was a founding member of the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association in 1907 later known as the Big Six Big Seven and Big Eight Conference and competed in it for the next eighty nine years with a brief hiatus during World War I In 1996 NU and the seven other members of the Big Eight merged with four Texas schools from the Southwest Conference to form the Big 12 Conference Nebraska joined the Big Ten in 2011 Nebraska s athletic programs have won twenty nine national championships eight in men s gymnastics and bowling five in football and volleyball and three in women s track and field 9 Contents 1 Varsity sports 1 1 Baseball 1 2 Basketball 1 3 Bowling 1 4 Cross country 1 5 Football 1 6 Golf 1 7 Gymnastics 1 8 Rifle 1 9 Soccer 1 10 Softball 1 11 Tennis 1 12 Track and field 1 13 Volleyball 1 14 Wrestling 2 Club sports 3 Athletic directors 4 Facilities 5 Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame 6 Olympians 7 Mascots 8 Fan support 9 Academic success 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksVarsity sports editMen s sports Women s sportsBaseball BasketballBasketball Beach volleyballCross country BowlingFootball Cross countryGolf GolfGymnastics GymnasticsTennis SoccerTrack amp field SoftballWrestling Swimming and divingTennisTrack and field VolleyballCo ed sportsRifle a Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor Baseball edit Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers baseball Nebraska s baseball team was founded in 1889 making it the oldest athletic program at the school It was disjointed in its first decades frequently disbanding for years at a time The hiring of Tony Sharpe in 1947 brought stability to the program but success was limited Sharpe and his successor John Sanders combined to lead NU for fifty one seasons making just three NCAA tournament appearances between them Nebraska hired Dave Van Horn in 1998 and he quickly turned the Huskers into a national power making the program s first two College World Series appearances in 2001 and 2002 Mike Anderson took over for Van Horn and in 2005 led NU to its most successful season ever including another College World Series trip Anderson could not sustain this however since his departure in 2011 Nebraska has experienced modest success under head coaches Darin Erstad and Will Bolt In 2002 the Huskers moved from the aging Buck Beltzer Stadium to Hawks Field at Haymarket Park considered among the best collegiate baseball facilities in the country at the time Nebraska has ranked in the top thirty nationally in average attendance each year since moving to Hawks Field Conference championships 8 1929 1948 1950 2001 2003 2005 2017 2021 Conference tournament championships 4 1999 2001 2005 NCAA Division I tournament 19 appearances 1948 1950 1979 1980 1985 1999 2003 2005 08 2014 2016 2017 2019 2021 College World Series appearances 3 2001 2002 2005Basketball edit Men Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers men s basketball Nebraska s men s basketball program has accomplished little of note since the establishment of the NCAA tournament in 1939 Nebraska has not won a regular season conference championship since sharing the Big Seven title in 1950 and has not won an outright title since 1916 Nebraska s lengthiest period of success came in the first years of the sport s existence the retroactive Premo Porretta Power Poll ranked the Cornhuskers in the top ten three times between 1897 and 1903 10 Nebraska did not make an NCAA tournament appearance until 1986 forty six years after its establishment and is the only power conference program without a tournament victory Much of the team s modest recent success came under Danny Nee who coached the Huskers from 1987 to 2000 Nee is the team s all time winningest head coach and led Nebraska to five of its seven NCAA tournament appearances the 1996 NIT championship and the 1994 Big Eight tournament championship NU s only conference championship of any kind since 1950 Nebraska has made just two NCAA tournament appearances since the departure of Nee in 2000 The program has been led by former Chicago Bulls and Iowa State head coach Fred Hoiberg since 2019 11 Conference championships 6 1912 14 1916 1949 1950 Conference tournament championships 1 1994 NCAA Division I tournament appearances 7 1986 1991 94 1998 2014 NIT appearances 19 1967 1978 1980 1983 85 1987 1989 1995 97 1999 2004 2006 2008 2009 2011 2018 2019 NIT championships 1 1996Women nbsp Corncob Man at a football game at Memorial Stadium in 1958Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers women s basketball Nebraska s women s basketball program began as a club sport in 1970 and became a varsity sport five years later George Nicodemus led the Huskers to a 22 9 record and the second round of the AIAW Tournament in its first varsity season Nicodemus left the program in 1977 and the school cycled through several head coaches before hiring Angela Beck in 1986 Beck led the Huskers to the Big Eight championship and the school s first NCAA tournament appearance in 1988 She left the program in 1997 and was replaced by Paul Sanderford who took Nebraska to the tournament in each of his first three seasons When Sanderford resigned in 2002 due to health issues the school hired Creighton head coach Connie Yori Under Yori s guidance Nebraska became a fixture in the national top 25 and NCAA tournament In 2009 10 the Cornhuskers went 32 2 earned a number one seed in the NCAA tournament and reached the Sweet Sixteen for the first time in school history Yori resigned in 2016 following an athletic department investigation into reports that she mistreated her players and assistant coaches Former Huskers point guard Amy Williams was named Yori s replacement Conference championships 2 1988 2010 Conference tournament championships 1 2014 AIAW 3 NCAA Division I 15 tournament appearances 1979 81 1988 1993 1996 1998 2000 2007 2008 2010 2012 15 2018 2022 WNIT appearances 8 1976 1992 2004 06 2009 2016 2023Bowling edit Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers bowling Bowling has been an official varsity sport at Nebraska since 1996 Bill Straub who led the bowling club program to national championships in 1991 and 1995 was hired to lead the varsity program and won three more WIBC titles The inaugural NCAA Bowling Championship was held in 2003 and Nebraska won the first two national titles Nebraska has won four more titles since and has never been ranked outside the top ten since national collegiate rankings debuted in 1990 In 2019 Straub retired and longtime assistant Paul Klempa was named head coach 12 Bowling competes as an independent making it one of only three programs at Nebraska not affiliated with the Big Ten Nebraska s men s bowling club team won the American Bowling Congress intercollegiate championships in 1990 and 1996 WIBC 13 NCAA 19 tournament appearances 1991 2019 2021 23 WIBC 5 NCAA 6 championships 1991 1995 1997 1999 2001 2004 2005 2009 2013 2015 2021Cross country edit Nebraska s men s cross country team was established in 1938 winning its only conference championship just two years later The women s program was established in 1975 to help satisfy Title IX requirements Matt Wackerly has coached both teams since 2021 when he succeeded longtime coach David Harris Men Conference championships 1 1940 NCAA Division I Championship appearances 9 1969 1986 89 1996 1997 2000 2001Women Conference championships 5 1985 1988 1989 1991 1993 NCAA Division I Championship appearances 14 1984 1986 1988 1989 1991 94 1996 99 2003 2008Football edit nbsp Nebraska vs USC at Memorial Stadium on September 16 2007Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers football Nebraska s football team competes as part of the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision in the Big Ten s West Division Nebraska plays its home games at Memorial Stadium where it has sold out every game since 1962 13 The team has been coached by Matt Rhule since 2023 Nebraska is among the most storied programs in college football history NU claims forty six conference championships and five national championships 1970 1971 1994 1995 and 1997 and has won nine other national championships the school does not claim 14 15 NU s 1971 and 1995 title winning teams are considered to be among the best in college football history 16 Heisman Trophy winners Johnny Rodgers Mike Rozier and Eric Crouch join twenty two other Cornhuskers in the College Football Hall of Fame The program s first extended period of success came just after the turn of the century Between 1900 and 1916 Nebraska had five undefeated seasons and completed a stretch of thirty four consecutive games without a loss still a program record 17 Despite a span of twenty one conference championships in thirty three seasons the Cornhuskers didn t experience major national success until Bob Devaney was hired in 1962 In eleven seasons as head coach Devaney won two national championships eight conference titles and coached twenty two All Americans but perhaps his most lasting achievement was the hiring of Tom Osborne as offensive coordinator in 1969 18 Osborne was named Devaney s successor in 1973 and over the next twenty five years established himself as one of the best coaches in college football history with his trademark I form offense and revolutionary strength conditioning and nutrition programs 19 20 21 Following Osborne s retirement in 1997 Nebraska cycled through five head coaches before hiring Matt Rhule in 2022 22 Conference championships 46 1894 1895 1897 1907 1910 17 1921 23 1928 1929 1931 33 1935 37 1940 1963 66 1969 72 1975 1978 1981 84 1988 1991 95 1997 1999 Division championships 10 1996 1997 1999 2001 2006 2008 10 2012 National championships claimed in bold 14 1915 1921 1970 1971 1980 84 1993 1994 1995 1997 1999Golf edit Men Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers men s golf Nebraska s golf program began in 1935 led by College Football Hall of Fame coach Dana X Bible The team s greatest successes came under longtime head coach Larry Romjue who took NU to all four of its NCAA Championship appearances The program has been coached by Judd Cornell since 2022 Conference championships 2 1936 1937 NCAA Division I Championship appearances 4 1973 1978 1998 1999Women Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers women s golf NU established a women s golf program in 1975 initially under the leadership of men s coach Larry Romjue In 1979 Nebraska hired its first coach exclusively to coach women s golf The Cornhuskers have made the NCAA Championship three times The program has been coached by Jeanne Sutherland since 2022 Conference championships 2 1976 1983 NCAA Division I Championship appearances 3 2000 2003 2006Gymnastics edit Men Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers men s gymnastics Nebraska s men s gymnastics program is one of the most successful in the nation with eight team national championships and forty one NCAA event titles Ten Huskers have represented the United States in the Olympics Nebraska is one of only five Big Ten schools to sanction a men s gymnastics program Individual all around national championships 9 Jim Hartung 1980 1981 Wes Suter 1985 Tom Schlesinger 1987 Kevin Davis 1988 Patrick Kirksey 1989 Dennis Harrison 1994 Richard Grace 1995 Jason Hardabura 1999 Conference championships 15 1964 1976 1980 1982 1983 1985 1986 1988 90 1992 94 1997 1999 NCAA Championship appearances 29 1975 1976 1979 99 2017 19 2021 23 NCAA championships 8 1979 83 1988 1990 1994Women Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers women s gymnastics Nebraska s women s gymnastics program was established in 1975 The school s first team led by head coach Karen Balke was made up entirely of freshmen and sophomores Judy Schalk replaced Balke after two seasons and led the Huskers to five conference titles and a national tournament bid Rick Walton replaced Schalk and gave the school its first NCAA event title when Michele Bryant won the vault in 1990 He captured four straight Big Eight championships each resulting in an NCAA Tournament appearance Dan Kendig was named head coach in 1993 and was named Big Eight Coach of the Year after leading NU to the conference title In 1997 Nebraska upset No 1 Utah to reach the Super Six Finals for the first time in school history Kendig won his sixth consecutive conference championship in 1999 and was named national coach of the year Kendig s teams won four individual event titles Heather Brink won the all around and vault in 2000 and Richelle Simpson won the all around and floor exercise in 2003 Brink was named Kendig s replacement in 2019 when he resigned in the midst of an NCAA investigation Individual all around national championships 2 Heather Brink 2000 Richelle Simpson 2003 Conference championships 2 2014 2017 Conference tournament championships 23 1978 80 1982 1983 1987 90 1994 99 2001 03 2005 2007 2011 13 NCAA Championship appearances 28 1982 1983 1987 90 1995 97 1999 2007 2010 12 2014 19 2023Rifle edit Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers rifle Rifle became an official sport at the university in 1998 The team practices and hosts meets at the ten point indoor firing range in NU s Military and Naval Sciences Building ROTC The team has been coached by Mindy Miles since 2021 Although rifle is classified as a coeducational sport by the NCAA Nebraska fields an all female team The program competed as an independent for six years before joining the Great America Rifle Conference in 2004 NU left the GARC for the Patriot Rifle Conference in 2021 making it one of only three programs at Nebraska not affiliated with the Big Ten Conference championships 1 2006 Conference tournament championships 2 2005 2006 NCAA Championship appearances 17 2000 2001 2004 08 2010 2013 18 2020 b 2021 2023Soccer edit Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers women s soccer In 1995 Nebraska became the first Big Eight school to sponsor a varsity women s soccer program John Walker was hired lead the new program and took his team to the NCAA Championship in his third year the first of eight consecutive tournament appearances Since this streak ended in 2005 the Cornhuskers have reached the tournament just three times The team has reached the round of 16 eight times and the national quarterfinals three twice Walker has earned NSCAA National Coach of the Year NSCAA Central Region Coach of the Year and Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year during his tenure in Lincoln Conference championships 5 1996 1999 2000 2013 2023 Conference tournament championships 7 1996 1998 2000 2002 2013 NCAA Division I Championship appearances 13 1996 2005 2013 2016 2023Softball edit Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers softball Nebraska s softball program started in 1970 before it was an official NCAA sport Since the NCAA sanctioned softball in 1983 the Cornhuskers have made eight appearances in the Women s College World Series held annually in Oklahoma City and won the tenth most games of any program The program s greatest successes came under head coach Wayne Daigle shortly after the tournament s creation culminating in a national runner up finish in 1985 though it was quickly vacated by the NCAA Committee on Infractions Rhonda Revelle became the program s head coach in 1992 and has since won more games than any coach in Nebraska athletics history Revelle has won seven conference titles and was inducted into the National Fastpitch Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2010 Conference championships 10 1982 1984 88 1998 2001 2004 2014 Conference tournament championships 9 1982 1984 88 1998 2000 2004 NCAA Division I tournament appearances 27 1982 1984 1985 c 1987 1988 1995 2007 2009 11 2013 16 2022 2023 Women s College World Series appearances 8 1982 1984 1985 d 1987 1988 1998 2002 2013Tennis edit Men Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers men s tennis Nebraska s men s tennis team was established in 1928 and has made the NCAA Championship twice most recently in 2011 Five Cornhuskers have won conference championships and seventeen have been named all conference selections In 1989 Steven Jung was the NCAA Singles runner up and was named NU s first All American 24 Jung is the only men s tennis player in the Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame 25 NU made its only two NCAA appearances under Kerry McDermott who led the program for thirty seven years Following the 2018 Big Ten tournament Nebraska announced McDermott would not return and hired Sean Maymi as his replacement 26 27 NCAA Division I Championship appearances 2 2010 2011Women Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers women s tennis NU s women s tennis program was established in 1976 and has made the NCAA Championship six times since 2000 most recently in 2013 Fourteen Cornhuskers have won conference championships and twenty have been named all conference selections The team was coached by Scott Jacobson from 1992 until his retirement in 2022 28 Conference championships 4 1977 1978 2013 2020 NCAA Division I Championship appearances 6 2005 2006 2010 13Track and field edit MenNebraska s men s track and field team started in 1922 under coach Henry Schulte who led the Huskers to nine conference titles before his retirement His assistant College Football Hall of Famer Ed Weir replaced Schulte Shortly after Weir retired to work as an athletic administrator in 1955 Frank Sevigne was hired to lead the program Under Sevigne the Huskers won eleven individual national championships with forty two All American selections and 103 individual conference champions in combined indoor and outdoor events Gary Pepin coached both the men s and women s teams from Sevigne s retirement in 1983 until his own retirement in 2022 Indoor conference championships 38 1930 33 1936 38 1940 42 1949 1951 1963 1972 1973 1978 1985 1987 89 1992 1994 98 2000 05 2007 2015 2016 2019 Outdoor conference championships 29 1921 24 1926 1929 1932 1933 1936 1937 1939 42 1950 1966 1987 1989 1990 1995 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2009 2010 2013 2016WomenNebraska s women s track and field program was created during the 1975 76 academic year and began competition in 1976 The team s first head coach was Roger Capan but he left after only one season and was replaced by Carol Frost whose son Scott would later quarterback the Cornhuskers to a national championship in 1997 Frost left Nebraska after the 1980 season and Gary Pepin took over the program Two years later Pepin assumed control of the men s program as well a dual role he held until his retirement in 2022 Indoor conference championships 24 1980 97 2000 2001 2004 2005 2011 2012 Indoor AIAW 1 NCAA Division I 2 championships 1982 84 Outdoor conference championships 18 1980 95 2000 2005Volleyball edit Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers women s volleyball nbsp Nebraska vs Penn State at the Devaney Center on November 30 2013Nebraska s volleyball program is among the best in the history of the sport The Cornhuskers have won five national championships 1995 2000 2006 2015 2017 and reached the national semifinals on ten other occasions NU has won more games than any other program and ranks second in national semifinal appearances tournament wins and tournament winning percentage Nebraska has made the NCAA tournament for thirty nine consecutive seasons and has never been ranked outside of the national top 20 The Cornhuskers have featured more AVCA All Americans than any other program including four National Player of the Year award winners Nebraska volleyball is one of the most popular spectator attractions in the state In 2008 AVCA executive director Kathy DeBoer described Nebraska as the epicenter of volleyball fandom The Cornhuskers have led the country in attendance every year since moving to the Bob Devaney Sports Center in 2013 and have sold out over 300 consecutive home matches an NCAA record for any women s sport Before moving to the larger Devaney Center Nebraska played at the historic NU Coliseum the Cornhuskers had fifteen undefeated seasons and a record of 454 30 at the Coliseum including a then NCAA record ninety consecutive home victories from 2005 to 2009 The Cornhuskers have played in several of the highest attended games in NCAA history including the 2021 national championship game when a record 18 755 fans watched Wisconsin defeat Nebraska in five sets at Nationwide Arena in Columbus Ohio 29 NU played Omaha on August 30 2023 at Memorial Stadium 92 003 people showed up for the event breaking the record for the largest attendance at a women s sporting event in history 30 by the end of April 82 900 tickets were already sold 31 Conference championships 35 1976 92 1994 96 1998 2002 2004 08 2010 2011 2016 2017 2023 Conference tournament championships Big Eight only 18 1976 86 1988 91 1993 95 AIAW 6 NCAA Division I 42 tournament appearances 1975 80 1982 2023 NCAA Division I national semifinals 17 1986 1989 1990 1995 1996 1998 2000 2001 2005 2006 2008 2015 18 2021 2023 NCAA Division I championships 5 1995 2000 2006 2015 2017Beach volleyball Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers women s volleyball Beach volleyball Nebraska added beach volleyball as the school s twenty second intercollegiate varsity sport in 2013 In 2016 the NCAA began sponsoring a beach volleyball tournament previously the sport was run by the AVCA but Nebraska did not attempt to qualify Nebraska runs one of the only beach volleyball programs in the Midwest and plays the bulk of its season during a spring break trip to California or Hawaii NU s beach roster is made up entirely of players from its indoor program and head coach John Cook has said the school views beach volleyball primarily as a training and recruiting tool for its indoor team Beach volleyball competes as an independent making it one of only three programs at Nebraska not affiliated with the Big Ten On March 8 2017 Nebraska hosted Missouri Baptist at the Hawks Championship Center The match was closed to the public due to space limitations but was noteworthy as the first collegiate beach volleyball match to take place in the state of Nebraska The Cornhuskers swept the Spartans 5 0 In 2007 Jordan Larson and Sarah Pavan defeated student athletes from seven other schools to win the Collegiate Beach Volleyball Championship an invitational tournament featuring two players per school 32 Wrestling edit Main article Nebraska Cornhuskers wrestling nbsp Jake Sueflohn of Nebraska left grapples with Cole VonOhlen of Air Force at the Cliff Keen Invitational on December 1 2012Nebraska s wrestling program started in 1910 under the guidance of head coach R G Clapp Despite modest success in the program s early years NU has been a mainstay in the national top ten since Tim Neumann was hired in 1985 Mark Manning has led the Huskers since 2000 and twice won conference coach of the year 33 Former Nebraska standouts include 2000 Olympic gold medalist and 2004 bronze medalist Rulon Gardner and two time NCAA champion and 2012 Olympic gold medalist Jordan Burroughs Individual National championships 11 Mike Nissen 1963 123 lbs Jim Scherr 1984 177 lbs Bill Scherr 1984 190 lbs Jason Kelber 1991 126 lbs Tony Purler 1993 126 lbs Tolly Thompson 1995 HWT Brad Vering 2000 197 lbs Jason Powell 2004 125 lbs Paul Donahoe 2007 125 lbs Jordan Burroughs 2009 157 lbs 2011 165 lbs Team Conference championships 7 1911 1915 1924 1949 1993 1995 2009 NCAA Division I Championship appearances 56 1928 1942 1946 1949 1954 1958 1959 1961 63 1973 1975 1978 1980 2019 2021 23Club sports editThe University of Nebraska Lincoln sponsors club programs in badminton baseball women s basketball bowling broomball climbing cricket curling cycling dodgeball golf men s hockey women s hockey judo women s lacrosse pickleball rifle rowing men s rugby running sailing shotgun women s soccer fast pitch softball swimming table tennis taekwondo tennis men s ultimate Frisbee men s volleyball women s volleyball and water ski Athletic directors editMain article List of Nebraska Cornhuskers athletic directors In its earliest days the Nebraska Department of Athletics had no central figure serving as the head of the department and the history of how this position developed is unclear Early on the head of the athletics department often had only a partial or part time role and held other titles and responsibilities The first six heads of the Athletics Department held the title Athletics Manager first held by Raymond G Clapp NU s basketball coach and a professor of physical education 34 The first individual to hold the title athletic director was E J Stewart who served from 1916 to 1919 while also coaching men s basketball and football during parts of his tenure 35 However he is not considered Nebraska s first athletic director because it was not considered a full time administrative position by the Board of Regents this designation belong to Fred Luehring who held the position from 1920 to 1922 36 Many of Nebraska s athletic directors simultaneously coached one of the university s varsity programs These included basketball baseball and swimming but the majority of dual role administrators were football coaches Stewart Fred Dawson Dana X Bible Biff Jones Glenn Presnell Adolph J Lewandowski George Clark and Bob Devaney e NU s longest serving athletic director was Devaney who led the department from 1967 to 1992 Trev Alberts was appointed Nebraska s fifteenth full time athletic director on July 14 2021 37 Facilities edit nbsp Nebraska vs Fresno State at Hawks Field at Haymarket Park on March 11 2011Home venues Venue Built Sport s City CampusBob Devaney Sports Center 1976 Gymnastics Swimming amp diving Track amp field Volleyball WrestlingHawks Championship Center 2006 Beach volleyballMemorial Stadium 1923 FootballMilitary and Naval Science Building 1947 RifleUnnamed track amp field stadium N A f 38 Track amp field Cross countryEast CampusEast Campus Bowling Lanes 1977 BowlingOff campusBarbara Hibner Soccer Stadium 2015 SoccerBowlin Stadium 2001 SoftballHawks Field 2001 BaseballJohn Breslow Ice Hockey Center 2015 Ice hockey club Pinnacle Bank Arena 2013 BasketballSid and Hazel Dillon Tennis Center 2015 TennisWilderness Ridge Golf Club g 2001 Golf Additional facilities Venue Built PurposeCity CampusFrancis Allen Training Complex 2020 Gymnastics training facilityHawks Championship Center 2006 Football practice facilityHendricks Training Complex 2011 Basketball amp wrestling training facilityNebraska Coliseum 1926 Basketball former home venue Volleyball former home venue Wrestling former home venue Osborne Athletic Complex 2006 AdministrationHealth amp medicineStrength amp conditioningUnnamed football facility 2023 h Football practice facilityOff campusAlex Gordon Training Complex 2011 Baseball amp softball practice facilityNebraska Athletic Hall of Fame editThe University of Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame was established in 2015 located just northeast of Memorial Stadium Twenty two former student athletes were honored in the inaugural class 39 At least one student athlete from each of Nebraska s varsity sports has been inducted into the Hall of Fame Football is the most represented sport with thirteen student athletes and coaches inducted Class of 2015 Steve Friesen Golf Alex Gordon Baseball Charlie Greene Track amp field Jim Hartung Gymnastics Penny Heyns Swimming amp diving Karen Jennings Basketball Steve Jung Tennis Joe Kirby Cross country Christine Latham Soccer Liz Mooney Tennis Merlene Ottey Track amp field Eric Piatkowski Basketball Adam Pine Swimming amp diving Shannon Pluhowsky Bowling Dave Rimington Football Sarah Sasse Kildow Golf Bill Scherr Wrestling Richelle Simpson Gymnastics Lori Sippel Softball Fran ten Bensel Cross country Amanda Trujillo Rifle Allison Weston Volleyball Class of 2016 Heather Brink Gymnastics Phil Cahoy Gymnastics Janet Kruse Volleyball Nicole Martial Track amp field Nancy Metcalf Volleyball Johnny Rodgers Football Will Shields FootballClass of 2017 Bob Brown Football Karen Dahlgren Volleyball Denise Day Softball Rich Glover Football Dave Hoppen Basketball Scott Johnson GymnasticsClass of 2018 Bob Devaney Football Darin Erstad Baseball Peaches James Softball Tom Osborne Football Sarah Pavan Volleyball Mike Rozier Football Tom Schlesinger Gymnastics Class of 2019 Francis Allen Gymnastics Rhonda Bladford Green Track amp field Greichaly Cepero Volleyball Carol Frost Track amp field Wes Suter Gymnastics Ed Weir Football Grant Wistrom FootballClass of 2020 Amanda Burgoyne Bowling Eric Crouch Football Sam Francis Football Maurtice Ivy Basketball Jordan Larson Volleyball Terry Pettit VolleyballClass of 2021 Therese Alshammar Swimming Jordan Burroughs Wrestling Bob Cerv Baseball Kelsey Griffin Basketball Larry Jacobson Football Cathy Noth Softball Class of 2022 Guy Chamberlin Football Christina Houghtelling Volleyball Patrick Kirksey Gymnastics Shane Komine Baseball Louise Pound Administrator Bill Straub Bowling Angela Thacker Track amp field Ali Viola SoftballClass of 2023 Lori Endicott Volleyball Tommie Frazier Football Emily Parsons Gymnastics Gary Pepin Track amp field Tolly Thompson Wrestling Brittany Timko SoccerOlympians editMain article List of University of Nebraska Lincoln Olympians nbsp Jordan Burroughs won a gold medal at the 2012 Summer OlympicsA total of 111 athletes from NU have combined to compete in 163 Olympic Games Nebraska athletes have won fifty four medals including sixteen gold medals while representing thirty countries Merlene Ottey is Nebraska s most decorated Olympian winning nine medals and competing in seven Olympic Games a record for track and field competitors 40 41 Olympic gold medals won by Nebraska athletes Athlete Sport MedalsPenny Heyns nbsp Swimming nbsp nbsp nbsp Don Quarrie nbsp Sprinting nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Adam Pine nbsp Swimming nbsp nbsp nbsp Jordan Larson nbsp Volleyball nbsp nbsp nbsp Curtis Tomasevicz nbsp Bobsleigh nbsp nbsp Charlie Greene nbsp Sprinting nbsp nbsp Kelsey Robinson nbsp VolleyballRulon Gardner nbsp WrestlingJordan Burroughs nbsp nbsp Justine Wong Orantes nbsp VolleyballTrent Dimas nbsp GymnasticsJim Hartung nbsp Scott Johnson nbsp Jim Mikus nbsp Linetta Wilson nbsp SprintingMascots edit nbsp Lil Red on the sideline at Memorial StadiumNebraska cycled through several official mascots before settling on the now familiar Herbie Husker and Lil Red The first of these was Corncob Man a man in green overalls with an ear of corn for a head After just a few years the university sought a more representative mascot and debuted Huskie the Husker a farmer who stood ten feet tall and wore overalls with a straw hat on top of a fiberglass head 42 Huskie soon gave way to Mr Big Red more commonly known as Harry Husker Harry was equally tall but dressed in a blazer and red wide brim hat Harry s head was so large it couldn t fit on the team s traveling bus and was so heavy the student wearing the costume had to be switched every forty five minutes 43 nbsp Herbie Husker as he looked from 2003 to 2023The physical demands of the Harry costume meant the university was soon looking for another mascot and in 1974 NU acquired the rights to Herbie Husker based on the design of Lubbock Texas artist Dirk West Nebraska hired Disney cartoonist Bob Johnson to refine West s design into a costume and Herbie made his first appearance at a Nebraska football game at the 1974 Cotton Bowl Classic a 19 3 Cornhuskers victory over Texas 44 Mr Big Red wasn t officially retired until 1988 but was infrequently seen while coexisting with Herbie 45 Historically Herbie had blond hair and dressed in denim overalls with an ear of corn in the pocket a white undershirt and a red cowboy hat Prior to the 2003 season Herbie s appearance was altered to include a red workshirt blue jeans and workboots in an effort to update the overall appearance of the state s agricultural workers and general public however the new design was not well received and many of the modifications were reverted in 2023 46 47 Since 1994 Herbie has often been joined on the sideline by the inflatable Lil Red Initially Lil Red was created to appeal to younger fans and to primarily represent the school s volleyball team which occasionally played at the same time as Nebraska s football team Lil Red was so popular that then athletic director Bill Byrne considered discontinuing Herbie entirely but later decided the mascots would coexist 45 The mascots are now frequently seen together across all sports Herbie was named the 2005 National Mascot of the year at halftime of the 2006 Capital One Bowl Lil Red won the NCA National Mascot Competition in 1999 and was inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2007 48 Fan support edit nbsp A fan attends a football game at Memorial Stadium in 1973Decades of high attendance and well traveling crowds across all sports have earned Nebraska fans a reputation for being fiercely loyal and dedicated The school s athletic department proclaimed their fans the greatest fans in college football in an inscription above each of the twenty four gates at Memorial Stadium 49 50 In 2001 President George W Bush stated that he can t go without saying how impressed I am by the Nebraska fan base Whether it be for women s volleyball or football there s nothing like the Big Red 51 Memorial Stadium is sometimes referred to as The Sea of Red due to the home crowd s propensity to wear the color Nebraska has sold out every home football game since November 3 1962 at 389 it is the longest sellout streak in college athletics history 52 The streak historically a source of pride for the school and its fans 53 has been scrutinized in the decades following Tom Osborne s retirement as NU s athletic department has occasionally been forced to sell a large number of tickets at a discounted rate to keep the streak alive 54 Cornhuskers fans are noted for often applauding the visiting team as they leave the field at the end of the game 55 Nebraska is considered to have one of the best traveling fanbases in the country the most famous example of this occurred in 2000 when an estimated 35 000 Nebraska fans watched No 1 Nebraska defeat No 25 Notre Dame at Notre Dame Stadium 56 57 Nebraska s volleyball program has sold out 303 consecutive matches between the Nebraska Coliseum and Devaney Center the longest streak of its kind in women s college sports The Cornhuskers have led the country in attendance for nine straight seasons i and have played in nine of the ten highest attended college volleyball matches ever played Nebraska s five set loss to Wisconsin in the 2021 national championship match broke college volleyball records for both attendance and viewership 58 Academic success editMain article Nebraska Cornhuskers academic honors and awards Nebraska has produced 347 Academic All Americans more than any other Division I school and second only to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology among all universities 59 Nebraska s 108 Academic All Americans in football is forty one more than second place Penn State the school also leads all volleyball programs in Academic All Americans with thirty eight Notes edit Although classified as coeducational by the NCAA Nebraska fields an all female team Nebraska qualified for the 2020 NCAA Rifle Championship which was canceled due to the COVID 19 pandemic Nebraska s 1985 Women s College World Series runner up finish was vacated by the NCAA in 1986 23 Nebraska s 1985 Women s College World Series runner up finish was vacated by the NCAA in 1986 23 Tom Osborne served as both football coach and athletic director but not simultaneously The 16 5 million facility began construction in 2019 on Nebraska Innovation Campus and will serve as the primary home venue for outdoor track amp field and cross country Construction was scheduled to be completed in 2022 but has paused with no scheduled opening date Wilderness Ridge is the primary home course for Nebraska s golf team but is not owned or operated by the university Planned opening date The 135 million 315 000 square foot facility began construction in 2019 on the former site of the Ed Weir Track This does not count the spring 2021 season in which many schools including Nebraska did not host fans due to the COVID 19 pandemicReferences edit Nebraska Athletics Brand Guide PDF July 1 2023 Retrieved September 17 2023 Mike Babcock April 8 2019 History of Nebraska Football Huskers com Retrieved October 16 2022 Fricke Mark 2005 Nebraska Cornhusker Football Arcadia Publishing p 17 ISBN 9780738534374 McHugh Jolene November 19 2011 From the archives The Cornhuskers omaha com Archived from the original on October 26 2016 Retrieved October 26 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Fricke Mark Nebraska Football In The 1890s PDF library la84 org p 11 Archived from the original on October 26 2016 Retrieved October 26 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Origin of the Cornhusker Nickname Huskers com July 24 2017 Archived from the original on March 27 2019 Retrieved July 23 2019 Husker Press Box The Beginning Of The Huskers May 11 2008 Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved October 8 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Christopherson Brian June 20 2009 Deep Red The story behind the name Cornhuskers journalstar com Archived from the original on October 26 2016 Retrieved October 26 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link National Champions ESPN ed 2009 ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia The Complete History of the Men s Game New York ESPN Books pp 529 30 ISBN 978 0 345 51392 2 Hoiberg to Lead Nebraska Men s Basketball Program Bill Straub retiring as Nebraska bowling coach August 29 2019 Retrieved April 11 2021 Nebraska vs Missouri 1962 HuskerMax Nebraska Conference Championships Archived from the original on May 4 2016 Retrieved October 23 2016 Title teams HuskerMax Retrieved October 23 2016 Best college football teams of all time Retrieved October 6 2018 Nebraska Football Schedules 1910 1919 HuskerMax Retrieved September 2 2010 Tom s Time Devaney Selects His Successor HuskerMax October 3 2017 Retrieved May 24 2019 The 150 greatest coaches in college football s 150 year history Retrieved May 30 2020 The Greatest Coaches in College Football History Retrieved May 30 2020 Epley leaving Huskers Retrieved May 24 2019 Nebraska officially announces hiring of Scott Frost introductory press conference scheduled for Sunday Retrieved May 24 2019 a b SPORTS PEOPLE Nebraska Penalized The New York Times October 21 1986 Retrieved March 30 2022 STEVEN JUNG Huskers com Retrieved March 10 2021 University of Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame Huskers com Retrieved March 10 2021 SEAN MAYMI Huskers com Retrieved March 9 2021 Brent Wagner June 13 2018 Nebraska hires college assistant as men s tennis coach Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved March 10 2021 SCOTT JACOBSON Huskers com Retrieved March 31 2022 Badger volleyball wins national championship over Nebraska Nebraska sets women s sport attendance world record with 92 003 fans at college volleyball game Volleyball Day in Nebraska Tickets Sold Out Press release Nebraska Cornhuskers April 27 2023 Retrieved May 4 2023 Volleyball Field Set for Collegiate Nationals Huskers com University of Nebraska Athletics April 9 2008 Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved April 14 2021 The Leader Nebraska Omaha University Retrieved January 1 2014 Leon Nyberg June 20 1961 NU History Boasts 15 Athletic Directors Daily Nebraskan Nebraska Newspapers Retrieved July 9 2021 1919 Cornhusker University of Nebraska Yearbook Archives and Special Collections University of Nebraska Lincoln p 252 Retrieved July 9 2021 1926 Cornhusker University of Nebraska Yearbook Archives and Special Collections University of Nebraska Lincoln p 437 Retrieved July 9 2021 Sam McKewon July 14 2021 Nebraska hires UNO A D ex Husker Trev Alberts as athletic director Omaha World Herald Retrieved July 14 2021 Brian Beech April 5 2023 OPINION Husker track athletes deserve a completed outdoor facility Retrieved June 16 2023 University of Nebraska Athletic Hall of Fame Retrieved June 15 2021 Husker Olympians By the Numbers news unl edu University of Nebraska Lincoln February 19 2018 Retrieved March 12 2021 2018 19 Nebraska All Sports Record Book PDF Nebraska Communications Office Retrieved March 12 2021 Herbie Husker the history of a Nebraska icon MyHusker December 11 2021 Retrieved March 3 2022 Lil Red s forebears The history of Nebraska s on field mascots Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved March 17 2022 Herbie Husker The Mascot The Myth The Husker Legend All Huskers All the Time MyHusker December 11 2021 Retrieved January 3 2022 a b All Hail Herbie Nebraska Alumni Association December 11 2021 Retrieved March 17 2022 Husker mascots through the years Retrieved June 9 2020 Kaleb Henry April 17 2023 Nebraska Athletics Unveils Updated Herbie Husker Retrieved June 15 2023 Nebraska Mascots huskers com Retrieved April 23 2018 Past Division I Football Bowl Subdivision Division I FBS National Champions formerly called Division I A ncaa org National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA 2007 Archived from the original on February 24 2007 Retrieved March 10 2007 Greatest Fans in College Football Retrieved October 8 2017 President Bush Welcomes University of Nebraska Volleyball Champions to the White House georgewbush whitehouse archives gov Retrieved October 8 2017 Road Trip CNN Retrieved May 20 2010 Jon Johnston September 28 2022 Why The Nebraska Sellout Streak Is Important And Why You Should Keep Going to Games Retrieved June 15 2023 Dave Feit October 11 2022 Dave Feit Not Like This Retrieved June 15 2023 MSNBC Breaking News Top Stories amp Show Clips MSNBC Archived from the original on October 14 2001 Retrieved October 8 2017 Cotton Bowl News Sports News Dallas Morning News News for Dallas Texas Retrieved October 8 2017 Three and out CNN November 30 2004 Retrieved May 20 2010 Lee Feinswog December 22 2021 Record attendance viewership for Wisconsin Nebraska NCAA volleyball championship VolleyballMag Retrieved April 1 2022 Academic All American by Rank PDF CoSIDA External links editOfficial website nbsp nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Nebraska athletics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nebraska Cornhuskers amp oldid 1204154511, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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