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Football Matt Rhule never doubted Garret McGuire, who aims to find each WR's 'Why'

Doubts?

There weren't any for Matt Rhule when he decided to hire Garret McGuire to coach his Husker receivers. Here's more on that, which touches on a thought from Rhule about the issues that have arisen on the receiver recruiting trail:

Anyone else worried about the defensive scheme?

Is anyone else slightly worried about the new defensive scheme? Seems like a lot of the players like it, and I like that it's flexible and allows us to get athletic guys on the field, but the fact that no one really knows exactly how to define it, or what certain positions are/what they do isn't inspiring confidence.

I hear a lot of generic buzz terms being thrown around, but because of the pitfalls in the last 20 years when we bring guys like Diaco in that say all the right things, but couldn't stop a high school offense, I'm nervous. Plus White's system isn't only new to the players but also to the other coaches (none of whom have ever worked with him) so there are a lot of unknowns.

Obviously, I'm hopeful. I think we've got some great athletes on D, and some of the transfers were clutch, but I'm far more comfortable with the offense than the defense at the moment.

Make me feel better about the Defense.

Basketball WBB: Huskers sign Australian star Jessica Petrie

Australian National Program member Jessica Petrie will join the Nebraska WBB team for the 2023-2024 season as announced Wednesday on the first day of the spring signing period. Petrie, from Gold Coast, Queensland, is averaging 18 points, 8.8 rebounds and 3.5 assists through six games for the Basketball Centre of Excellence in Australia's semi-professional NBL1 East Division.

"We are so excited to officially welcome Jess Petrie to the Nebraska Women's Basketball family," Williams said. "Husker fans are going to love watching this exciting young woman grow in her time here in the United States. She is one of the most talented and promising women's basketball players in Australia, and we are very excited to have her joining the Huskers. She has already played with and against some of the best in the world and will continue to do so this summer at the U-19 World Championships representing Australia. She has a tremendous work ethic, and she matches the competitive desires we have in this program."

One Aussie out and one Aussie in for the Huskes as Petrie will replace fellow country man Issie Bourne who declined to use her fifth year of NCAA elgiblity and return home to Australia. This comes after star point guard Jaz Shelley announced her return to Nebraska for her fifth season a few weeks back.

Football Three Takeaways: Rhule's ideal spring game format, IGC on why he returned

Three Takeaways from today's post-practice presser:

– Rhule on the spring game format and why he wants QBs to be live
– Garcia-Castaneda explains why he entered the transfer portal, why he chose to come back and the process of making his return
– McGuire on building the receivers' brand of "Husker Speed" and what that means

Recruiting Signees on the sidelines, spring game visitors and McGuire's hurdle

Dove into a collection of random recruiting thoughts that have come up in the last couple days. I'm pretty interested if Garret McGuire can get over the hump with negative recruiting. Hit the link...

Legalized Sports Betting in KS - A Review

/I'm unclear what the betting landscape will look like in Nebraska (It's my understanding it will become legal at some point). It became legal in Kansas on 9/1, so I took advantage of the pretty cool sign-on bonuses.

There are 6 apps that are authorized to operate: Draft Kings, Fan Duel, MGM, Caesar's, Barstool, & PointsBet. I only opened accounts at the first 3, as the others all required a deposit in order to make a 'risk-free' bet.

MGM - 4 free $50 wagers to be used by 9/13. I am saving these for the NFL games this week. They promo'd $200 in free bets, but note that it is limited to the aforementioned $50 dollar bets.

Fan Duel - $100 in free bets. These have to be placed by 9/8. These can be carved up any way you like. They also had a cool gimmicky bet on the OSU-ND game, where you would win your bet if either team scored. I put $40 on that bet, and right after the first score, there was another $40 in my account. Note that the money won on the free bets can be used any way you like. You can keep betting, you can use it on fantasy sports, or you can cash it out.

Draft Kings - $100 in free bets. This is broken into 4, $25 bets. These need to be used by 9/8 as well. They had a follow up bonus where you could get an additional $200 in free bets if you made just a $5.00 bet on any college game over the weekend. I deposited $25 there in order to make a $5 bet on Clemson -22. They immediately added another 8, $25 bets to my account. Those need to be used by 9/13.

In summary, there is very little down-side to the free bets - only the limitations noted above. Also, once you make the bet, you can't cancel it - so be careful. But if you win the free bets, the cash is yours to keep.

After all of the free bets are exhausted, I will most likely consolidate into one app (most likely Draft Kings, since I have used them for fantasy football for several years).

Baseball Live Thread BSB FINAL (10): Omaha 6, Nebraska 5

For game No. 30 of the season we're back at Haymarket Park after a six-game road trip that saw the Huskers go 4-2 including a series win against Michigan over the weekend. Tonight it's game two between Nebraska (18-10-1, 4-2) and Omaha (11-14, 4-5) in this in-state rivalry. The Mavericks will have a chance to secure the season series tonight as they cook care of the Huskers 10-6 back on March 14 at Hawks Field. Michael Garza tossed three shutout innings in his start that night, but the bullpen gave up all 10 Omaha runs including four off tonight's starter Caleb Clark. The freshman lefty will take on Charlie Bell - who started in the last contest between both programs. Here's the series preview:


In case you missed this weekend, Nebraska took two of three games from Michigan over the including a dominant win in the series finale. Here's that recap:

An analogy of sorts....

...you might have heard that Taylor Swift just broke up with her umpteenth boyfriend, which means a song is coming, but reminds me of my FAVORITE bumper sticker ...Hey, Taylor...did you ever think YOU might be the problem?
Now you might think...what does this have to do with Husker Board? MAYBE, if we trace our own threads and find that we are constantly 'into it' with someone, well.....

Not a single mention of the B1G Commish. He’s utterly irrelevant and insubstantial!

How pathetic has the B1G conference become, as is it’s leadership, including the university presidents, who are freaking clueless in picking Kevin Warren! No mention of him and he is still hiding under a rock! Sounds like most of them are like Harvey Perlman. Sheesh!

See: Pause Expansion amid Realignment and implications for the college football playoffs. SEC wants it all.

Pac-12 commish leads voices suggesting College Football Playoff expansion be paused amid SEC additions​

By Dennis Dodd
Jul 29, 2021 at 8:21 pm ET 7 min read
The Pac-12's new commissioner said out loud this week what his peers had been thinking for the last seven days: College Football Playoff expansion must be reconsidered. Not so much the actual expansion itself, but how there seems to be a bum rush towards it.
CBS Sports spoke with several high-profile administrators who will have a direct hand in the discussions. Their conclusion is that the entire proposed structure and access to the CFP must be reevaluated as a result of forthcoming conference realignment as triggered by the moves of Texas and Oklahoma to the SEC.
How can there be certainty when we don't even know how many conferences will exist or what teams will be in them by the time this proposed expansion goes into effect?
"It's certainly going to be readdressed," George Kliavkoff, who took over as Pac-12 commissioner earlier this year, told CBS Sports. "Remember that was a two-year process done by four people. The proposal is good, but it's not done. We've mis-set fans' expectations that it's going to move on a very fast timeline."
That timeline was set in an April press release when CFP executive director Bill Hancock said the soonest expansion could be implemented was 2023. The issue had been studied for two years by a CFP subcommittee that included Greg Sankey (SEC commissioner), Bob Bowlsby (Big 12 commissioner), Jack Swarbrick (Notre Dame athletic director) and Craig Thompson (Mountain West commissioner).
However, with the SEC's pending addition of the Big 12's two powers, that seems to have slowed the process on several tracks.
One of those tracks is something no administrator has mentioned publicly. Texas and Oklahoma moving to the SEC changes not only college athletics but the entire college sports business model.
In devastating the Big 12 to the point it has lost 50% to 75% of its value, the SEC enhanced its power, leverage and earning potential to the point some college leaders fear the conference could earn six of the 12 available playoff spots in the proposed expansion.
"With 12 teams, we could just be watching a lot of SEC teams in the 12-team playoff," a highly-placed Power Five source told CBS Sports.
One Power Five AD added: "Why on God's green Earth would the Pac-12 and Big Ten hand over these [playoff] rights, which only strengthens the SEC?"
A second Power Five AD agreed: "I don't care if there are 10 SEC teams in; we just can't make that a bonanza [every] year for them. You can't strangle everybody else financially."
An easy fix for the CFP would be limiting the number teams from one conference that could enter a 12-team field. The problem? None of the stakeholders want that. As dominant as the SEC could become, other power conferences do not want to give up the possibility of unlimited berths for their leagues.
Kliavkoff being a rookie in his job does not mean his voice stands alone. He is supported by three other Power Five conference commissioners and some of most powerful college administrators in the country.
They assert that one thing has become clear: Sankey was one of those "four people" working on expansion while simultaneously engaging in a significant side hustle -- negotiating a blockbuster deal to lure Texas and Oklahoma to his conference. All while participating in those proceedings with Bowlsby.
That at least calls into question the CFP expansion process. Sankey was working on formulating logistics of a CFP expansion parallel while ensuring his conference would hold a more significant advantage in dominating the CFP.
"[The SEC] was not the conference clamoring ever for expansion," Sankey told CBS Sports. "I heard that from essentially every other conference. Not this conference."
With Sankey as one of the leading voices in the room, the appearance of a conflict of interest has led some to suggest he should have recused himself from the process.
"No," Sankey said, denying such an assertion. "There's a lot of checks and balances in the system. Things happened rapidly in the last eight days."
Meanwhile, CFP executive director Bill Hancock told CBS Sports that the expansion timeline has not changed.
"The summer assessment period is continuing -- the management committee members are gathering comments from their schools' presidents, athletics directors, coaches, faculty and student-athletes," he said.
The financial gain for having an outsized competitive advantage in a 12-team playoff would seemingly be minimal. Under the current contract, each Power Five conference gets $66 million per year from the CFP. Conferences get $6 million in additional funds for each semifinal berth and $4 million for a New Year's Six bowl berth.
What's of greater concern is a possible reshaping of college sports overseen by SEC and ESPN.
By taking Texas and Oklahoma, SEC and ESPN -- exclusive partners in the conference's media rights deal -- damaged Fox's investment in the Big 12. Fox splits rights with ESPN in the Big 12, Pac-12 and Big Ten.
To some, the takeover was bigger than realignment. It was a significant business maneuver.
That's why one high-profile AD tells CBS Sports he has "major issues" with the 12-team expansion as proposed.
The 10 FBS commissioners are due to meet with the CFP Board of Managers (conference presidents) regarding expansion in September. The goal is to summarize findings after in-depth talks with athletes, coaches and administrators on their campuses. That's the next step toward finalizing a 12-team structure.
However, more than one Power Five source told CBS Sports that the September date could be pushed back because of the SEC's actions. Complicating matters is Bowlsby's assertion that ESPN conspired with Texas, Oklahoma and the American Athletic Conference to take down his conference in realignment.
"Just looking at some of the public comments, it seems to be people are changing their minds a little bit," Bowlsby told CBS Sports.
Per the CFP, it would take a unanimous vote of the conferences to approve playoff expansion. Could one conference refusing to play along scuttle the entire plan?
"We mange by unanimous consent, but it isn't going to fall apart on that basis, I don't think," Bowlsby said. "I don't think people want to have a situation where most of the strength is in one area."
The greatest concern is the concept of expanding a playoff while realignment is reshaping college football. Does the proposal change if there are only two, three or four power conferences?
"It just feels uneasy relative to the 12 [teams]," Kliavkoff told CBS Sports. "I'm assuming my colleagues, nationally, this is a reason to pause on the 12. We need to pause."
As proposed, an expanded playoff would include the top six ranked conference champions with no automatic bids. The top four ranked teams would receive first-round byes.
However, Sankey has raised the idea of accepting the 12 best teams, regardless of conference titles.
"Should we just say the 12 best teams?" Sankey proposed. "I've been asked that by our own membership."
Such a structure would help the SEC, the nation's strongest football conference. In the 12-team field was in effect over the first seven years of the CFP, the SEC would have averaged three entrants per season (based on final CFP Rankings 2014-20). Including Texas and Oklahoma in that mix, the average would have been approximately four.
With so much happening, more and more administrators in power are now asking: Why wouldn't the CFP wait and go on the open market to maximize the value of product after the 2025 season? That's when the current deal with ESPN ends. ESPN has exclusive negotiating rights with the CFP until then.
However, as one administrator pointed out, it's a complete unknown what the media rights landscape will look like in five years. The general assumption is that the CFP will double in value to $1 billion per season. That could skyrocket with multiple bidders in the mix, including streaming services.
"Streaming is the future," Kliavkoff said.
If the contract were open to bid, it could further be maximized by placing each level of the playoff on a different network.
Deeper into the discussion, the strengthening of the SEC with the Longhorns and Sooners creates a likelihood it is given more favorable broadcast windows on ESPN. Oklahoma AD Joe Castiglione has been public with his distaste for the historic Nebraska-Oklahoma rivalry game being played at 11 a.m. CT in the heat of September in Norman, Oklahoma.
The Pac-12 has long been stuck with the logistic problem of playing on the West Coast. When its rights come up for bid in 2024, it's doubtful whatever money the conference gets will include games still lasting well into the night on the East Coast.
"The Pac-12 doesn't get in the playoff very often in the current format," Sankey told CBS Spots. "I think we all felt a responsibility to look at different models to provide access.
"If somebody wants to suggest this was motivated by some self interest, they're missing a big picture. Why would I support any automatic conference access? Why would I have said pretty openly we shouldn't leave the West Coast part of the country out of the playoff?"
It's safe to say Bowlsby is bitter having worked alongside Sankey and Castiglione for years. Kliavkoff brought up the fact that only two of the Power Five conferences (SEC, Big 12) were involved in shaping the expansion process over a two-year period.
"That's unfortunate," Kliavkoff told CBS Sports. "Remember: The commissioners of the Big Ten, Pac-12 and ACC weren't in the room."

Educated and yet Uneducated 2023 Big Ten predictions

West:

1. Illinois - Best defense and easiest schedule. Lovie Smith never got to play schedules like this one.
2. Wisconsin- New system won't be under a lot of pressure because schedule is pud. Nobody can tell me that Alvarez didn't sit in those scheduling meetings a few years ago and have some input on Wisconsin schedules. Its too easy.
3. Nebraska- Huskers get a major break playing at Minnesota when they have their most inexperienced team in 5 seasons. Home schedule is very manageable. Win at Minnesota and Colorado and 8 wins is definitely plausible.
4. Iowa - Hawks might have 3 losses before October.
5. Minnesota- 1st difficult schedule for Fleck since he's been in Minneapolis. Even if they beat Nebraska, making a bowl game will be tough.
6. Purdue - I am absolutely serious when I suggest Purdue will be 1-6 when they come into Lincoln in October. That schedule is brutal, and considering all the experience they lost, I think Brohm absolutely left at the right time.
7. Northwestern- The Cats were awful last season and yet they absolutely could have 2 first round draft picks. In fact, they will have 3 players get drafted. They are losing 3 draft picks from a 1-11 team and will be returning the fewest combined starts on their offensive line. Yikes.


East:

1. Michigan- Wolverines return the most production on both sides of the ball in the Big Ten. And they get Ohio State at home. It's quite possible that they only play one ranked team on the road. Their game at Nebraska will be their first road game of the season, despite it being the 5th game of the season.

2. Ohio State- Buckeyes should roll thru the league but suddenly look overmatched by Harbaugh.
3. Michigan State- I believe Tucker will be one of those coaches who ebbs and flows based on experience. Their defense should be much better and an offensive line that was mainly new in 2022 suddenly looks old.
4. Penn State- I think we learn about Franklin's ability to coach in 2023. They recruit very well, so they should be in a good shape. But they are losing more talent and experience than any team in the East. That schedule isn't easy either.
5. Maryland - The Terps should be competitive, but they lost 13 starters, including 4 offensive linemen. Their also sending 5 dudes to the NFL draft this month. I really think Maryland's trip to Lincoln will mean the difference between a bowl game or staying home in the post season. I don't think they get to 6 wins without a win in Lincoln.
6. Rutgers - if they had any option at QB, I could see them getting to 6 wins. But they are basically a less talented Iowa offense.
7. Indiana - This will be Tom Allen's last season with the Hoosiers.


Big Ten Offensive player of the Year- JJ McArthy - Michigan

Big Ten Defensive player of the year- Gabe Jacas - Illinois

Football Biggest storylines, impressions midway through Nebraska spring football

There are so many different angles, storylines and questions to analyze and answer from the first three weeks of spring ball. So @Steve Marik, @Greg Smith and I hopped on a Zoom for a deep dive into some of the most important ones. Watch our video breakdown or listen in audio form in the Apple Podcast or Spotify links below:

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Apple Podcasts:

Spotify:
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Here's a time-stamped summary of what we discussed:

>>> They begin by each giving one of their biggest takeaways from the first nine practices (4:37). Then, they shift their focus to three of the most important topics from the first three weeks:

>>> Overall impressions as Rhule is setting his foundation for the program and the importance of the offensive line as Nebraska begins a new era. (13:10)

>>> Analyzing every level of the defense as Tony White begins to install his 3-3-5 system and which players have stood out in each position group. (32:29)

>>> The quarterbacks: their usage in the run game, "The Spring of Heinrich Haarberg," and the first steps being taken in the position battle between Jeff Sims and Casey Thompson as they bring contrasting skillsets to the table. (1:03:55)
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