Nebraska's New Rhule: Huskers have a plan for returning to college football's land of contenders
Matt Rhule rebuilt Temple and Baylor, but can he lift Nebraska back to the land of contenders after a generation was lost in the college football wilderness? It will take innovation, old-school principles and a commitment to excellence.
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Matt Rhule rebuilt Temple and Baylor, but can he lift Nebraska back to the land of contenders after a generation was lost in the college football wilderness? It will take innovation, old-school principles and a commitment to excellence.
A few hundred yards away, construction workers raced to complete a state-of-the-art, $165 million football performance center along the northeast side of Memorial Stadium. Rhule says his current office inside the Osborne Athletics Complex is the nicest he has ever called home. He'll get an upgrade soon when he receives the keys to a new office inside the adjacent 315,000-square-foot facility.“He's gonna hate that I said this,” said Nebraska defensive line coach Terrance Knighton, who played for Rhule at Temple, “but he is borderline genius. He does everything with a purpose. He knows how to get things out of certain guys and coaches. He builds a competitive nature within a locker room. He's just got this way to express himself. You can feel it's authentic.”
“The talent is great, the university is great, the resources are great,” Rhule said. “It's kind of like a beast we need to awaken.”
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