It’s Official; GOOD NEWS: Netflix set to Release a Documentary on Nebraska Cornhuskers football and Matt Rhule- A journey through college football Legacy and excellence…Read More

Matt Rhule has made headlines in recent weeks for reconfiguring his approach to roster building and staff deployment amid the rapidly evolving landscape of college football. As the sport undergoes seismic shifts – driven by transfers, expanded postseasons, and skyrocketing finances – speculation has followed on where Nebraska can carve out a niche and how the Huskers can thrive in this new era.

It first begs the question as to how much of what has worked historically at Nebraska can work in 2025.

“There’s a formula that worked at Nebraska for 30 years,” former head coach Scott Frost said upon his hire in 2017. “You’re stupid if you don’t look back and say, ‘What made our [program] the best?’”

The formula Frost referenced is common knowledge among Big Red faithful. For decades, coaches Bob Devaney and Tom Osborne recruited heavily from a 500-mile radius, giving particular focus to their home state, where success rates were high. The strategy combined securing top recruits with identifying lesser-known talent. If a player had a high ceiling, Nebraska’s renowned developmental program—pioneering strength & conditioning, training tables, and cutting-edge supplements like creatine—would bring out their full potential.

Part of that development came from the added practice reps afforded to a roster so big that it could operate with four independent practice stations, doubling the repetitions for its first and second string. Blue chip receivers didn’t want to play in a power run system in flyover country? That’s okay because Nebraska ran the ball and prioritized a system that was difficult for the opposition to prepare for. Come into our house with your prized pass catchers and watch the wind from the south dismantle your game plan in short order.

But how much of that formula is still viable in the 21st century? Frost himself failed to adhere to much of it and was ousted after four-plus years of dysfunction and frustration. Rhule has cited components of it as elements of his plan, but emphasized this offseason that Nebraska must effectively evolve or be left behind.

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