Nebraska All-Conference Selections 1916-- H.H
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December 14,1988, Volume 25 Number 44 U.S
The NCAA Official Publication of the National Collegiate Athletic Association December 14,1988, Volume 25 Number 44 U.S. Supreme Court backs NCAA in Tarkanian case The U.S. Supreme CoGt has mended that his school suspend in this case,” said Richard D. procedures set in place by the mem- and seizure under the Fourth ruled that the NCAA cannot violate him for two years for NCAA rules Schultz, Association executive di- bership provide ample due process.” Amendment, or the due-process a person’s constitutional rights be- violations. rector. “The court reaffirmed that NCAA counsel John J. Kitchin amendment.” cause it is a private organization The Supreme Court said the the membership of the NCAA has of Kansas City, Missouri, said the The Supreme Court laid to rest and not subject to due-process re- NCAA is not a state agent and the right to enact and enforce legis- decision also could prove helpful in the question of whether the NCAA quirements of the U.S. Constitution. therefore is not subject to due- lation that is binding upon each other Association activities. can be enjoined for some“perceived In a ruling announced December process requirements in its investi- member. “As far as being sued for claimed violations of U.S. Constitutional 12, the Supreme Court held that the gations of rules violations and sub- “This decision will, we hope, dis- violations of the Federal Constitu- rights,” the NCAA counsel said. NCAA did not violate University of sequent penalties imposed. courage lawsuits regarding alleged tion, this decision should be helpful However, he noted that some Nevada, Las Vegas, head men’s “We are pleased that the U.S. -
2005 FOOTBALL Date of Release: Monday, Sept
2005 FOOTBALL Date of Release: Monday, Sept. 12, 2005 Nebraska vs. Pittsburgh Nebraska Media Relations–(402) 472-2263 Huskers.com Game 3 8Huskers-Panthers Briefl y Date: Saturday, Sept. 17, 2005 Time: 2:36 p.m. Site: Lincoln, Neb. Stadium: Memorial Stadium Field: Tom Osborne Field Surface: FieldTurf (2005) vs. Capacity: 73,918 (271st Consecutive Sellout) Nebraska Radio: (Jim Rose–Play-by-Play; Adrian Fiala–Analyst; Randy Lee–Booth; Matt Davison–Sideline) 55-station Pinnacle Sports Network Nebraska Pittsburgh TV: ABC Regional (Brent Musburger-Play-by-Play; Gary Danielson-Color; Jack Arute-Sidelines) (2-0) (0-2) Internet: Live Radio on Huskers.com Satellite Radio: Sirius Satellite Radio, Channel 141 Special Events: Red Cross Appreciation Day This Week in Husker Football Nebraska Looks to Continue Season-Opening Momentum vs. Pitt Monday, Sept. 12 Fresh off two dominant defensive efforts, Nebraska will look to complete non-conference play unbeaten this Saturday when the Huskers play host to defending Big East Conference champion Pittsburgh at Memorial Stadium. 11:50 a.m. ............Coach Callahan on Big 12 Teleconference The game will kickoff at 2:36 p.m. and will be televised to a regional audience by ABC, with Brent Musburger, Gary Tuesday, Sept. 13 Danielson and Jack Arute on the call. Weekly Press Conference Nebraska is off to a 2-0 start thanks in large part to a tenacious Blackshirt defense. After recording school 11 a.m. ........................................................................ Lunch records for sacks and tackles for loss in the opener against Maine, the Husker defense continued its assault on the 11:30 a.m-Noon ......................................... -
The Fifth Down
Members get half off on June 2006 Vol. 44, No. 2 Outland book Inside this issue coming in fall The Football Writers Association of President’s Column America is extremely excited about the publication of 60 Years of the Outland, Page 2 which is a compilation of stories on the 59 players who have won the Outland Tro- phy since the award’s inception in 1946. Long-time FWAA member Gene Duf- Tony Barnhart and Dennis fey worked on the book for two years, in- Dodd collect awards terviewing most of the living winners, spin- ning their individual tales and recording Page 3 their thoughts on winning major-college football’s third oldest individual award. The 270-page book is expected to go on-sale this fall online at www.fwaa.com. All-America team checklist Order forms also will be included in the Football Hall of Fame, and 33 are in the 2006-07 FWAA Directory, which will be College Football Hall of Fame. Dr. Outland Pages 4-5 mailed to members in late August. also has been inducted posthumously into As part of the celebration of 60 years the prestigious Hall, raising the number to 34 “Outland Trophy Family members” to of Outland Trophy winners, FWAA mem- bers will be able to purchase the book at be so honored . half the retail price of $25.00. Seven Outland Trophy winners have Nagurski Award watch list Ever since the late Dr. John Outland been No. 1 picks overall in NFL Drafts deeded the award to the FWAA shortly over the years, while others have domi- Page 6 before his death, the Outland Trophy has nated college football and pursued greater honored the best interior linemen in col- heights in other areas upon graduation. -
2005 FOOTBALL Date of Release: Monday, Oct
2005 FOOTBALL Date of Release: Monday, Oct. 31, 2005 Nebraska vs. Kansas Nebraska Media Relations–(402) 472-2263 Huskers.com Game 9 8Huskers-Jayhawks Briefl y Date: Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005 Time: Noon Site: Lawrence, Kan. Stadium: Memorial Stadium Surface: AstroPlay Capacity: 50,071 Nebraska Radio: (Jim Rose–Play-by-Play; Adrian Fiala–Analyst; Randy Lee–Booth; Matt Davison–Sideline) vs. 55-station Pinnacle Sports Network TV: None Internet: Live Radio on Huskers.com Satellite Radio: Sirius Satellite Radio, Channel 123 Nebraska Kansas Series Record: NU leads, 87-21-3 (100th Consecutive Meeting, Nation’s Longest Continuous Series) (5-3, 2-3) (4-4, 1-4) Last Meeting: Nebraska 14, Kansas 8, Oct. 2, 2004, in Lincoln This Week in Husker Football Huskers, Kansas Set to Meet for 100th Consecutive Year Monday, Oct. 31 Nebraska and Kansas renew one of the longest-standing series’ in college football this Saturday, when the 11:50 a.m. ............Coach Callahan on Big 12 Teleconference Huskers travel to Lawrence, Kan., to match up with the Jayhawks in a Big 12 Conference North Division matchup. The Nebraska-Jayhawk series is tied for the third-longest in Division I-A history, with this week’s matchup marking Tuesday, Nov. 1 the 112th meeting. The annual matchup is the nation’s longest continuous series, with Saturday’s game marking Weekly Press Conference the 100th straight year Nebraska and Kansas have met on the gridiron, dating back to 1906. 11 a.m. ........................................................................ Lunch The Huskers will travel to Lawrence looking to end a two-game slide. After a road loss at Missouri two weeks ago, 11:30 a.m-Noon ......................................... -
The Following Players Comprise the College Football Great Teams 2 Card Set
COLLEGE FOOTBALL GREAT TEAMS OF THE PAST 2 SET ROSTER The following players comprise the College Football Great Teams 2 Card Set. The regular starters at each position are listed first and should be used most frequently. Realistic use of the players below will generate statistical results remarkably similar to those from real life. IMPORTANT: When a Red "K" appears in the R-column as the result on any kind of running play from scrimmage or on any return, roll the dice again, refer to the K-column, and use the number there for the result. When a player has a "K" in his R-column, he can never be used for kicking or punting. If the symbol "F-K" or "F-P" appears on a players card, it means that you use the K or P column when he recovers a fumble. Players in bold are starters. If there is a difference between the player's card and the roster sheet, always use the card information. The number in ()s after the player name is the number of cards that the player has in this set. See below for a more detailed explanation of new symbols on the cards. 1971 NEBRASKA 1971 NEBRASKA 1972 USC 1972 USC OFFENSE DEFENSE OFFENSE DEFENSE EB: Woody Cox End: John Adkins EB: Lynn Swann TA End: James Sims Johnny Rodgers (2) TA TB, OA Willie Harper Edesel Garrison Dale Mitchell Frosty Anderson Steve Manstedt John McKay Ed Powell Glen Garson TC John Hyland Dave Boulware (2) PA, KB, KOB Tackle: John Grant Tackle: Carl Johnson Tackle: Bill Janssen Chris Chaney Jeff Winans Daryl White Larry Jacobson Tackle: Steve Riley John Skiles Marvin Crenshaw John Dutton Pete Adams Glenn Byrd Al Austin LB: Jim Branch Cliff Culbreath LB: Richard Wood Guard: Keith Wortman Rich Glover Guard: Mike Ryan Monte Doris Dick Rupert Bob Terrio Allan Graf Charles Anthony Mike Beran Bruce Hauge Allan Gallaher Glen Henderson Bruce Weber Monte Johnson Booker Brown George Follett Center: Doug Dumler Pat Morell Don Morrison Ray Rodriguez John Kinsel John Peterson Mike McGirr Jim Stone ET: Jerry List CB: Jim Anderson TC Center: Dave Brown Tom Bohlinger Brent Longwell PC Joe Blahak Marty Patton CB: Charles Hinton TB. -
Big 12 Conference Schools Raise Nine-Year NFL Draft Totals to 277 Alumni Through 2003
Big 12 Conference Schools Raise Nine-Year NFL Draft Totals to 277 Alumni Through 2003 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Apr. 26, 2003 DALLAS—Big 12 Conference teams had 10 of the first 62 selections in the 35th annual NFL “common” draft (67th overall) Saturday and added a total of 13 for the opening day. The first-day tallies in the 2003 NFL draft brought the number Big 12 standouts taken from 1995-03 to 277. Over 90 Big 12 alumni signed free agent contracts after the 2000-02 drafts, and three of the first 13 standouts (six total in the first round) in the 2003 draft were Kansas State CB Terence Newman (fifth draftee), Oklahoma State DE Kevin Williams (ninth) Texas A&M DT Ty Warren (13th). Last year three Big 12 standouts were selected in the top eight choices (four of the initial 21), and the 2000 draft included three alumni from this conference in the first 20. Colorado, Nebraska and Florida State paced all schools nationally in the 1995-97 era with 21 NFL draft choices apiece. Eleven Big 12 schools also had at least one youngster chosen in the eight-round draft during 1998. Over the last six (1998-03) NFL postings, there were 73 Big 12 Conference selections among the Top 100. There were 217 Big 12 schools’ grid representatives on 2002 NFL opening day rosters from all 12 members after 297 standouts from league members in ’02 entered NFL training camps—both all-time highs for the league. Nebraska (35 alumni) was third among all Division I-A schools in 2002 opening day roster men in the highest professional football configuration while Texas A&M (30) was among the Top Six in total NFL alumni last autumn. -
Redskins Live on the Edge, Then Fall Off ST
NATIONALS THINKING BIGGER THAN ONCE THOUGHT POSSIBLE, C1 EXPANDED COVERAGE, R4: Replacement offi cials lose control Secondary exposed by Rams’ Amendola; Carriker, Orakpo add to injury woes 31 28 G AMEDAY MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2012 ☆☆ washingtontimes.com/sports/football DOWN TO EARTH Big lead, Week 1 momentum go out window with loss BY RICH CAMPBELL THE WASHINGTON TIMES ST. LOUIS |The men who play professional foot- ball will tell you it is the most emotional of sports. That’s a byproduct of its physical nature and the machismo that inevitably accompanies that. This is the NFL, where the players are the biggest and fastest in the world. Fame and fortune only raise the stakes. Players also will tell you the retaliator usually is the one penalized. When emotions boil over on the fi eld, victory can be determined by poise and composure. When your opponent illegally hits you, how do you respond? That was on Joshua Morgan’s mind as he sat at his locker Sunday evening, towel wrapped around his waist, staring at his cellphone. For all the skir- mishes that occurred during and after plays in the Washington Redskins’ 31-28 loss to the St. Louis Rams, and for all the good and bad plays the Red- skins made while staying within reach of victory, one truth mattered more than any other. Morgan was the retaliator. And, of course, he was caught. The Redskins wide receiver was penalized 15 yards for throwing the ball at Rams cornerback Cortland Finnegan with 1:18 remaining in a 3-point game. -
2016 GN CFL Pg 01 Cover Wks 18-20
2016 CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE · GAME NOTES November 5, 2016 - 1:00 pm ET Montréal at Hamilton CFL Week: 20 Game: 88 MTL (6-11) HAM (7-10) Head Coach: Jacques Chapdelaine Head Coach: Kent Austin CFL Record: 3-2 vs HAM 0-0 Club Game #: 964 CFL Record: 48-41 vs MTL 8-3 Club Game #: 1078 2016 CFL RESULTS & SCHEDULE 2016 CFL STANDINGS TO WEEK #19 2016 WEEK #19 RESULTS VISITOR HOME EAST DIV. G W L T Pct PF PA Pts Hm Aw Oct 28/16 83 Edmonton 29 Hamilton 26 Tim Hortons Ottawa-x,y 17 8 8 1 .500 466 465 17 2-5-1 6-3 Oct 29/16 84 Ottawa 23 Winnipeg 10 Field Hamilton-x 17 7 10 0 .412 482 470 14 3-5 4-5 Oct 29/16 85 BC 24 Sask'n 6 Hamilton, ON Montréal 17 6 11 0 .353 351 390 12 3-6 3-5 Oct 30/16 86 Calgary 8 Montréal 17 Toronto 17 5 12 0 .294 366 527 10 2-7 3-5 2016 WEEK #20 SCHEDULE VISITOR HOME WEST DIV. G W L T Pct PF PA Pts Hm Aw Nov 04/16 87 7:00 pm ET Winnipeg Ottawa Calgary-x,y 18 15 2 1 .861 586 369 31 9-0 6-2-1 Nov 05/16 88 1:00 pm ET Montréal Hamilton BC-x 17 11 6 0 .647 504 436 22 5-3 6-3 Nov 05/16 89 2:00 pm MT Toronto Edmonton Winnipeg-x 17 10 7 0 .588 464 434 20 4-5 6-2 Nov 05/16 90 4:00 pm PT Saskatchewan BC Edmonton-x 17 9 8 0 .529 508 479 18 4-4 5-4 WEEK #20 BYE: Calgary Saskatchewan 17 5 12 0 .294 332 489 10 3-6 2-6 A/T SERIES TO 2016 Hamilton vs Montréal CLUB CONTACTS CFL.ca / LCF.ca Since 1946: GP W L TAll-Time at Hamilton HOME: Hamilton 184 85 92 7 56-31-3 HAM Hamilton Aaron Gogishvili Dir, Communications Montréal 184 92 85 7 [email protected] www.ticats.ca 2016 Series: HAM (2) MTL (0) VISITORS: Sep 16/16 at Hamilton Hamilton -
Football Bowl Subdivision Records
FOOTBALL BOWL SUBDIVISION RECORDS Individual Records 2 Team Records 24 All-Time Individual Leaders on Offense 35 All-Time Individual Leaders on Defense 63 All-Time Individual Leaders on Special Teams 75 All-Time Team Season Leaders 86 Annual Team Champions 91 Toughest-Schedule Annual Leaders 98 Annual Most-Improved Teams 100 All-Time Won-Loss Records 103 Winningest Teams by Decade 106 National Poll Rankings 111 College Football Playoff 164 Bowl Coalition, Alliance and Bowl Championship Series History 166 Streaks and Rivalries 182 Major-College Statistics Trends 186 FBS Membership Since 1978 195 College Football Rules Changes 196 INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Under a three-division reorganization plan adopted by the special NCAA NCAA DEFENSIVE FOOTBALL STATISTICS COMPILATION Convention of August 1973, teams classified major-college in football on August 1, 1973, were placed in Division I. College-division teams were divided POLICIES into Division II and Division III. At the NCAA Convention of January 1978, All individual defensive statistics reported to the NCAA must be compiled by Division I was divided into Division I-A and Division I-AA for football only (In the press box statistics crew during the game. Defensive numbers compiled 2006, I-A was renamed Football Bowl Subdivision, and I-AA was renamed by the coaching staff or other university/college personnel using game film will Football Championship Subdivision.). not be considered “official” NCAA statistics. Before 2002, postseason games were not included in NCAA final football This policy does not preclude a conference or institution from making after- statistics or records. Beginning with the 2002 season, all postseason games the-game changes to press box numbers. -
Santa Catalina Handicap in Track Record
Your Host Wins Santa Catalina Handicap in Track Record Time I Winner Favorite Does 1:481-5 De Mawby Re-elected Outdoors With Bill Leetch All At Once Is Now that the duck hunting sea- Hing in mid-February and on until same Feature For Mile and Head ol son is over and all hunting in ithe middle of March. The In Tropical Eighth Washington iis true of another fa- Maryland has had to cease, those Pig Point, Ey th« Associated Press vored a little later. who still have time, energy and location, MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 6—J. W. At Santa Anita money are At Once, a candidate Bridle Trails Group Now that year-round angling is Nizlek’s All turning toward for the rich Widener and Mc- By the Associated Pres* Changing from the usual routine 1permitted in Maryland for fall- Virginia and Lennan Handicaps at Hialeah, ARCADIA, Calif., Jan. 6.—Your of a formal annual business meet- the States far- fish, suckers, bluegills, etc., no registered his first triumoh of the Host, an even money favorite, ing and election of officers, the for ther south doubt some of you may want to new year today as he Deat six broke the track record for a mile Washington Bridle Trails Associa- quail, turkey, try your luck for them in neaby rivals in the $G,000 Ponce de Leon and outrun- tion hung out the SRO sign last one-eighth today by etc. Virginia’s Purse at Park. as members turned out in ponds and streams. Be sure you Tropical ning nine rivals in Santa Anita’s night season on up- force to at rend a dinner have a Maryland fishing license. -
Game 12: Sept
2009 CORNHUSKE R F O O T BALL Nebraska Media Relationsw One Memorial Stadium w Lincoln, NE 68588-0123 w Phone: (402) 472-2263 w [email protected] 2009 Nebraska Schedule Date Opponent (TV) Time/Result Game 12: Sept. 5 Florida Atlantic (FSN PPV) W, 49-3 Sept. 12 Arkansas State (FSN PPV) W, 38-9 Nebraska at Sept. 19 at Virginia Tech (ABC) L, 16-15 Sept. 26 Louisiana-Lafayette (FSN PPV) W, 55-0 Colorado Oct. 8 at Missouri (ESPN) W, 27-12 Nov. 27, 2009 | Folsom Field Oct. 17 Texas Tech (ABC) L, 31-10 Boulder, Colo.| 2:30 p.m. (CST) Oct. 24 Iowa State (FSN) L, 9-7 Oct. 31 at Baylor (Versus) W, 20-10 Nov. 7 Oklahoma (ABC) W, 10-3 Huskers Game Information Buffaloes Nov. 14 at Kansas (ABC) W, 31-17 Record: 8-3, 5-2 Television: ABC-HD Record: 3-8, 2-5 Nov. 21 Kansas State (ESPN) W, 17-3 Rankings: Radio: Husker Sports Network Rankings: Nov. 27 at Colorado (ABC) 2:30 p.m. Coaches-23 Stadium: Folsom Field not ranked Dec. 5 Big 12 Championship Game AP-not ranked Capacity: 53,750 Last Game: vs. Texas (ABC) 7 p.m. Last Game: Surface: Natural Grass lost to Oklahoma St., 31-28 All times Central and subject to change def. Kansas St., 17-3 Series Record: NU leads, 47-18-2 Coach: Dan Hawkins Coach: Bo Pelini Career/CU Record: Last Meeting: NU 40, Colorado 31 Television Career/NU Record: 108-55-1, 14th season/ Nov. 28, 2008 in Lincoln ABC-HD 18-7/2nd year 16-32, fourth season Ron Franklin, Play-by-Play vs. -
UCF FOOTBALL UCF Athletics Communications | UCF Bright House Networks Stadium, 4465 Knights Victory Way, Orlando, FL 32816 | Ucfknights.Com
2016 UCF FOOTBALL UCF Athletics Communications | UCF Bright House Networks Stadium, 4465 Knights Victory Way, Orlando, FL 32816 | UCFKnights.com GAME INFORMATION UCF KNIGHTS FIU PANTHERS Date 9.24.16 NR/NR Ranking NR/NR Time 7 p.m. ET 1-2, 0-0 American Record 0-3, 0-0 Site Miami, Fla. Scott Frost Head Coach Ron Turner Stadium FIU Stadium 1-2 (1st Year) Record at Current School 10-29 (4th Year) 1-2 (1st Year) Career NCAA Record 52-90 (13th Year) Surface Field Turf Capacity 20,000 Series Tied, 2-2 THE MATCHUP Last Meeting FIU 15-14, 9.3.15 (Orlando) UCF and FIU will square off for the fifth time in six years Saturday night at FIU ON THE AIR Stadium. TELEVISION UCF enters the contest with a 1-2 record, coming off a heart-breaking 30-24, beIN Sports double-overtime loss to the Maryland Terrapins. FIU is 0-3 in 2016. The Panthers Matt Martucci (Play-by-Play) have losses to Indiana, Maryland and Massachusetts, most recently falling to the Brett Romberg (Analyst) Minutemen 21-13 on the road. Jordan Daigle (Sideline) RADIO FIU and UCF have a common opponent in Maryland. The Terrapins traveled to Flor- WYGM 96.9 FM/740-AM ORLANDO ida to play both squads in back-to-back weeks. The Panthers fell to Maryland 41-14, Marc Daniels (Play-by-Play) while UCF took the Terrapins to extra sessions to determine a winner. Gary Parris (Analyst) Jerry O’Neill (Sidelines) For comparison’s sake, FIU put up 372 yards of total offense vs.