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Is Carter Nelson running track? Dae'Vonn Hall a stud!

Is Carter Nelson fully competing in track this spring? He was a 7'0 high jumper last year and this year he is not even on the leader board with a 6'5 jump. Anyone know what is up? On another note, Dae'Vonn Hall is a stud athlete. He has high jumped 6'10 1/4 and run an electronic 10.62 `100 meters.,.. Wow! Great athlete!

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RIP Jim Brown

One of the best ever. Before my time, but mad respect for his talent and hard nosed approach.

Serious Coaches

Under Pelini, while there were problems and deficiencies with his coaching, but I never questioned how serious he and his staff was towards competing.

When we got Riley, that all changed and we were the laid back Huskers. It's took 3 years until total destruction.

Frost was going to fix this, but he was just as laid back as Riley, if not more. He had convinced himself in 3 years at UCF that this was easy, and when he got hit in the face with reality, it all crumbled.

I really get the vibe from this staff that we once again have serious and realistic coaches, coaches who while loving the players, keep some distance as they should to maintain themselves as the adults in the room. This gives the players a sense of security and belonging that they haven't had since Pelini.

We have had 5 new HCs since 1997:

1. The players cried when TO retired.
2. The players were angry when Solich was fired.
3. The players were indifferent to happy when Callahan was fired.
4. The players were again angry when Pelini was fired.
5. The players were totally indifferent when Riley got fired.
6. The players were generally happy when Frost got fired.

Let's hope we don't have to assess how the players felt about the current coach.

Football Questions for first Friday Mailbag

Hey everyone,

I'm launching a mailbag column this Friday, which will be a weekly piece for the site going forward (assuming there are enough questions to fill a mailbag column every week).

So, if you guys have any questions regarding Nebraska football, volleyball, baseball, etc. or any recruiting questions, drop them in the replies below, direct message me or email me at zackevancarpenter@gmail.com

Really excited about this and have been looking forward to starting it for a while! In the future, I'll call for questions a day or two earlier in the week.

Note: Questions or comments regarding the site won't be answered in the column itself, but I can answer them here or in my DMs/email.
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Basketball Eemeli Yalaho officially visits Nebrasketball (Update: He's headed to Lubbock)

Eemeli Yalaho, a 2023 forward from Finland, tells me he officially visited Nebraska on Friday.

The 6-foot-8 Yalaho is out of Western Reserve Academy in Ohio, the same school former Husker and current Wyoming Cowboy, Oleg Kojenets, played at.

Yalaho was offered by the Huskers last week. He also olds offers from Texas Tech, Georgetown, Providence, Mississippi State and others.

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Today in History - May 19

May 19

1536 - Anne Boleyn, the second wife of England's King Henry VIII, was beheaded.

1588 - The 130-ship strong Spanish Armada set sail for England. (It was defeated in August.)

1643 - The colonies of Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth, Connecticut and New Harbor met to form the New England Confederation.

1780 - A mysterious darkness enveloped much of New England and part of Canada in the early afternoon.

1913 - California Gov. Hiram Johnson signed the Webb-Hartley Law prohibiting “aliens ineligible to citizenship” from owning farm land, a measure targeting Asian immigrants, particularly Japanese.

1920 - Ten people were killed in a gun battle between coal miners, who were led by a local police chief, and a group of private security guards hired to evict them for joining a union in Matewan, a small “company town” in West Virginia.

1921- Congress passed and President Warren G. Harding signed, the Emergency Quota Act, which established national quotas for immigrants.

1935 - British author and soldier, T.E. Lawrence, also known as "Lawrence of Arabia," died from injuries sustained in a motorcycle crash.

1943 - In his second wartime address to the U.S. Congress, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill pledged his country’s full support in the fight against Japan; that evening, Churchill met with President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White House, where the two leaders agreed on May 1, 1944 as the date for the D-Day invasion of France (the operation ended up being launched more than a month later).

1962 - Marilyn Monroe performed her iconic rendition of "Happy Birthday" for President John F. Kennedy during a Democratic Party fundraiser at Madison Square Garden.

1967 - The Soviet Union ratified a treaty with the United States and Britain, banning nuclear and other weapons from outer space as well as celestial bodies such as the moon. (The treaty entered into force in October 1967.)

1993 - The Clinton White House set off a political storm by abruptly firing the entire staff of its travel office; five of the seven staffers were later reinstated and assigned to other duties.

1994 - Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, wife of President John F. Kennedy, died in New York City at age 64.

2003 - WorldCom Inc. agreed to pay investors $500 million to settle civil fraud charges.

2018 - Britain’s Prince Harry wed American actress Meghan Markle in a service that reflected Harry’s royal heritage and his bride’s biracial roots, as well as their shared commitment to put a more diverse, modern face on the monarchy.

2018 - First lady Melania Trump returned to the white House following a weeklong hospitalization for kidney treatment.

2020 - A Trump administration policy of quickly expelling most migrants stopped along the border because of the COVID-19 pandemic was indefinitely extended.

Birthdays
22 - Nolan Lyons (actor)
24 - Erin Thumann (model)
31 - Eleanor Tomlinson (actress)
31 - Sam Smith (singer)
31 - Lainey Wilson (singer)
32 - Mali-koa Hood (singer)
32 - Lindsey Pelas (model)
37 - Eric Lloyd (actor)
38 - Aleister Black (professional wrestler)
40 - Michael Che (actor/comedian)
43 - Drew Fuller (actor)
44 - Shooter Jennings (singer)
45 - Kim Zolciak (reality star)
47 - Kevin Garnett (basketball player)
51 - Jenny Berggren (singer)
53 - Jason Gray-Stanford (actor)
57 - Polly Walker (actress)
63 - Toni Lewis (actress)
67 - Steven Ford (actor)
72 - Grace Jones (singer/actress)
74 - Archie Manning (football player)
78 - Pete Townshend (singer)
84 - Nancy Kwan (actress)
84 - James Fox (actor)
88 - David Hartman (TV personality)

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Today in Sports History - May 19

1910 - Cy Young of the Cleveland Indians recorded his 500th pitching victory.

1912 - American League president Ban Johnson told the Detroit Tigers that if they continued to protest Ty Cobb suspension they would be banned from baseball.

1935 - The National Football League (NFL) adopted an annual college draft to begin in 1936.

1962 - Stan Musial set the National League hit record when he got his 3,431st hit, breaking the old mark held by Honus Wagner.

1974 - The Philadelphia Flyers became the first expansion team to win the Stanley Cup after defeating the Boston Bruins.

1984 - The Edmonton Oilers won their first Stanley Cup, defeating the New York Islanders.

1988 - The Boston Red Sox retired Bobby Doerr's #1.

2002 - Roger Clemens (New York Yankees) got his 287th win. He tied for 22nd place on the all-time victory list.
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Football Most impactful transfer addition & departure for each Husker foe: Illinois

Up next on our look at each Husker opponent's transfer additions/departures: Illinois


In case you missed them, here are the previous installments:

Minnesota
Colorado
Northern Illinois
Louisiana Tech
Michigan
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Recruiting Recruiting Rundown: QB offers and positive trends in the trenches

The latest Recruiting Rundown is here. I tackled new quarterback offers, positive trends in the trenches and talked about my new favorite June visitor. Hit the link...

Several ACC schools exploring possibility of breaking grant of rights


ACC Realignment Rumblings: 7 schools are examining the grant of rights. But can they leave?
by Nicole Auerbach, The Athletic

The ACC's annual spring meetings are underway in Amelia Island, Florida, and are expected to end by midday Wednesday. It's the first time the league's top administrators will gather in person since Florida State athletic director Michael Alford publicly lambasted the ACC's current equal revenue sharing model and said "something has to change," because FSU could not compete nationally if it falls $30 million behind its peers in the SEC and Big Ten on an annual basis.

Those comments, made in front of his board of trustees back in February, made waves nationally and were followed up by similar calls for consideration of uneven revenue sharing from his counterparts at Clemson, Miami, and North Carolina.

ACC commissioner Jim Phillips has acknowledged the league's position relative to the SEC and the Big Ten and has hired outside help to find new revenue streams for a conference locked in to its media rights deal through 2036. What it would cost to try to get out of the ACC before that time is unclear; the exit fee alone is $120 million and there is also the issue of breaking the ACC's grant of rights, which has not been challenged to date and is presumed to be airtight by most.

Lawyers for a subset of schools have been thoroughly examining the document. One industry source said he was told that seven ACC schools are interested in exploring ways to leave the ACC.

"If it were simple, everybody would have done it already," an ACC source pointed out.

The GOR piece is important because the ACC would continue to own the broadcast rights of all of its teams' home games, even if that team were to pay the exit fee and leave. Is there a dollar figure that a school could pay to get its rights back? Even if it is exorbitant, it could be worth paying to get to a league that will bring in $30 million more per member annually.

The ACC source said his expectation for this week's meetings was to "advance the ball on revenue distribution changes," though he acknowledged it wouldn't close the gap for schools like Clemson and Florida State compared to schools in the Big Ten and SEC. It's about incremental change and moving toward a system that rewards on-field (or on-court) success, he said. Some of the schools' presidents are expected to be in Florida in person for their portion of the meetings; others will video conference in.

Tension among ACC schools has been a hot topic both inside and out of the league this offseason. The question has come up in nearly every conversation with any administrator in any league for weeks: When is one or more ACC schools going to challenge the ACC's grant of rights? Could it be this summer? Next year? Or much closer to the end of the contract that runs through 2036? Everyone knows there are disgruntled members, led by Florida State and Clemson, but it's not quite clear what would be required, legally and financially, to attempt to exit the ACC prior to 2036.

"There's a big difference between saying you want to do something like that and actually executing it," one league source said.

What was perhaps most interesting was the amount of attention paid to the ACC at another set of spring meetings -- those that took place earlier this month in Scottsdale, Arizona. The Big 12 and Pac-12 formally met there, as they always do, and a good amount of Big Ten football coaches and athletic directors came out for a few days for the Fiesta Bowl-sponsored events (and vacation). There were agents, search firm representatives, and other industry leaders networking there as well as reporters.

There was much speculation about the future of the ACC and what it could mean for the rest of major college athletics. Most of the administrators who spoke to The Athletic in Scottsdale were much more interested in in the possibility of ACC floodgates being open -- and what that could mean for the Big Ten and SEC, which will be both at 16 members as of 2024 -- than they were about discussing the current standoff between the Pac-12 and Big 12 over schools such as Colorado and Arizona.

If Florida State, Clemson, Virginia, North Carolina and Miami were to become available, that's a real and major domino to fall in conference realignment. As one Big Ten source put it, "Those schools are where the real value is."

That person was particularly interested in Virginia and North Carolina as new states and/or markets for the Big Ten to extend down the East Coast. This Big Ten source believes expansion out East makes far more sense than expanding into the Pacific Northwest, which has not had nearly enough support internally or among the league's media partners since the idea was first broached. University of Illinois chancellor Robert J. Jones told The Athletic last month that "there was no sense of urgency" for the league to expand beyond USC and UCLA.

"Are we thinking about (realignment)? Of course," said Jones, chair of the Big Ten's Council of Presidents and Chancellors. "We're doing analysis, the cost, the benefits of staying at 16 or moving up. It’s not something we’re going to do just to react to what other conferences may choose to do. We’re only going to do what’s best for our current membership, and there has to be some value added for expanding beyond.”

The SEC does not appear interested in going beyond 16 members anytime soon (though that could change if certain ACC schools became available), and the Big Ten, with new commissioner Tony Petitti, has said its main priority right now is determining how to integrate its two Los Angeles schools into the league. The Big Ten’s new media rights deals expire at the end of the decade, so perhaps the topic is tabled for a few years as the dust settles out west and the industry watches what happens with the ACC.

But someone (or someones) will have to challenge the ACC grant of rights to get out, and they wouldn’t want to do that unless they knew they had a landing spot in one of the two richest leagues. But they also can’t commit to one of those leagues without knowing for sure they can get out of the GOR.

It’s a chicken-or-the-egg situation. As of now, the ACC schools are not available. Will it stay that way?

Baseball Live Thread GAME 51 FINAL: Nebraska 10, Purdue 5

Back for the final series of the 2023 regular season as Nebraska (29-20-1, 13-8) takes on Purdue (23-27, 10-11) for the final three games of the season before the Huskers head off to Omaha to take part in the Big Ten Tournament from May 23-28. With a dominant sweep over Penn State last week and an Illinois loss in its series finale, the Huskers enter this series with no chance of missing the conference tournament.

Nebraska will want to enact some revenge on the Boilermakers from last season as they played a heavy hand in denying the Huskers a shot in the conference tournament last season when they canceled their season finale against Maryland.

Tonight we'll have LHP Emmett Olson (6-3, 4.42 ERA) vs. RHP Khal Stephen (7-3, 5.01 ERA)

Here's your series preview:


Additionally, Will Bolt, Max Anderson and Corbin Hawkins spoke with the media on Wednesday before heading to Lafayette.

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