I agree, but for different reasons.
1) This program was in an absolute talent black hole when Rhule arrived. We had zero drafted players in 2024. We had two 6th rounders in 2023 and both guys were one-year transfers. We've had a grand total of two guys get drafted higher than the 3rd round in 10 years. People for some reason don't believe the Jimmies and Joes applies to Nebraska, but then when we see an opposing RB run the length of the field against us we seem POed. Bottom line is talent MATTERS. A LOT. Go back and look at the number of players drafted in the 80s, 90s, and the first years of the 2000s. Rhule is finally getting a lot of these highly rated recruits to look at us.
2) We appear to now have two good coordinators and a pretty good staff overall. I wish that Satterfield had been fired earlier but I believe that Holgerson is a win for the program. I would like to see what Tony White can do with even more talent.
3) We have a good young group. The senior veterans (except for Ty Robinson and Nash Hutmacher) have been largely disappointing. Ty Robinson was the best recruit of the Frost years and he finally developed under Rhule. The other guys are marginal athletes that are probably better on this team than they would be elsewhere. Only two guys in all five seasons of Frost actually developed into good players: Cam Jergens and Cam Taylor-Britt. The rest floundered and left only to become better players elsewhere.
4) Our win over Colorado is an indication of what happens when you try to build a program almost all on transfers. They got better as the year went along but at the start of the season they were not a good team. The idea of blowing it up every offseason will have consequences as well. Indiana is a fluke and it appears they are coming back to Earth.
5) We need to get over the past. All of the shit coaches, all of the 'curse' BS. All of the crap about how great Pelini, etc was despite nobody else but a mid-major wanting him. Pelini won early on BECAUSE OF CALLAHAN's recruits. It was a fluke, along with playing in relatively weak conferences at the time. Solich took a program at the height of college football, the Alabama of the 90s, and turned it into a mediocre team that got boat-raced by good teams. Callahan was a good recruiter and it's entirely possible that given a chance to replace his DC (or had he been willing), he might have done reasonably well going forward. He has left HC and doesn't seem to want to do it anymore. Riley was a bad coach and a fit only at Oregon St where mediocre-at-best is fine. Frost was the all-time worst.
6) College football is a completely different world now. The super-conferences make it hard to win a majority of games. Iowa and Indiana avoided tough opponents the whole year and lost when they played anyone. That won't happen a lot going forward. Michigan is one year removed from an undefeated championship team and is going to finish 6-6. USC is full of NFL talent and appeared at the start of the season to be a sure-thing playoff team. They will finish 6-6. Don't be surprised if a 2 or 3 loss team wins the playoff. OSU spent 20 million and Texas close to that to position themselves for a chance. We will have to put up big NIL funds to get into the higher eschelon. Matt Rhule gets that. I'm not sure a lot of coaches from the old school will.