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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. -
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. -
Tim Young, Adam Fine, Tricia Southard.Pdf
\ earn name here TRASHMASTERS 2004 - UT-CHATTANOOGA ) Tim Young, Adam Fine, and Tricia Southard , J t-/ILJjl£; // / He led the American League in hits in his rookie season of 1942, but then spent three years fighting in World War / /fI. While with Detroit in 1952, he helped Virgil Trucks record his second no-hitter of the season after admitting that he ,/' misplayed a Phil Rizzuto ball originally called a hit. The goat of the 1946 World Series when he allowed Enos Slaughter / to score, FrP name this Red Sox shortstop, born John Paveskovich, the namesake of the right field foul pole in Fenway Park. Answer: Johnny Pesky 2. The title came about as a catch phrase among band members about what they hoped would happen to people "behaving in a shitty way." The piano riff in the chorus echoes another song about someone acting badly, the Beatles' "Sexy Sadie." The lyrics decry a man who "buzzes like a detuned radio" and a girl with a "Hitler hairdo," and hope that the titular entity will arrest them. We are told in the coda that the narrator "For a minute there . .I lost myself' over and over. FTPname this 1997 song, the third single from "OK Computer," a major hit for Radiohead. Answer: Karma Police 3. A 1979 graduate of Davidson College, this woman won an investigative reporting honor from the North Carolina Press Association for a series of articles about crime and prostitution in Charlotte. Her first book, An Uncommon Friend, was a biography of Billy Graham's wife, but her six years of work for the Virginia Chief Medical Examiner's Office inspired her best know series of a dozen novels. -
Huskers Earn NCAA-Record 32Nd Consecutive Bowl Bid Nebraska Takes on Northwestern in Eighth Annual Alamo Bowl Game #12–The Alamo Bowl No
2000 NEBRASKA FOOTBALL Huskers Earn NCAA-Record 32nd Consecutive Bowl Bid Nebraska Takes on Northwestern in Eighth Annual Alamo Bowl Game #12–The Alamo Bowl No. 9/8/8 (AP/Coaches/BCS) Nebraska (9-2) vs. No. 18/19 Northwestern (8-3) Bowl, Date, Time: Sylvania Alamo Bowl, Saturday, Dec. 30, 2000, 7 p.m., Central Stadium (Capacity), Game Site, Surface: Alamodome (65,000), San Antonio, Texas, AstroTurf The Coaches: Nebraska–Frank Solich (Nebraska, ‘66), 30-7, third year career/at Nebraska Northwestern–Randy Walker (Miami-Ohio, ‘76), 70-46-5, 11 year career, 11-11, 2nd year at NU National TV: ESPN, Dave Barnett (Play-by-Play), Bill Curry and Mike Golic (Color), Michele Tafoya (Sideline) Nebraska Radio: Pinnacle Sports, Warren Swain (Play-by-Play); Adrian Fiala (Color) National Radio: Westwood One, Chuck Cooperstein-(Play-by-Play); Jim Wacker-(Color) No. 9/8/8 Nebraska to Face No. 18/19 Northwestern in the Alamo Bowl The No. 9/8/8 (AP/Coaches/BCS) Nebraska Cornhuskers (9-2, 6-2 in Big 12, second Big 12 North) are headed to San Antonio, Texas, to face No. 18/19 Northwestern (8-3, 6-2, Big 10 Co-Champions) in the eighth annual Sylvania Alamo Bowl. The game features two teams who have not met since 1974 and two schools who will be playing in the Alamo Bowl for the first time. The Huskers will go bowling for the 32nd consecutive year (longest NCAA streak), and this is Nebraska’s 39th bowl Nebraska Head Coach Frank Solich appearance overall, which ranks tied for fourth all time behind Alabama (50), Tennessee (41), Texas (40) and USC (39). -
NCAA Team Records Held by the Huskers NCAA Individual Records
NCAA Team Records Held by the Huskers Football Yards gained without loss, game 677, vs. New Mexico State, 1982 Fewest punts, game 0, nine times, last vs. Kansas, 2000 (tied with several other teams) Field goals made, game 7, vs. Missouri, 1985; Western Michigan vs. Marshall, 1984 First downs by rush, game 36, vs. New Mexico State, 1982 100-yard rushers, game 4, at Baylor, 2001--Thunder Collins, 165; Dahrran Diedrick, 137; Eric Crouch, 132; Judd Davies, 119 --(tied with five other teams) Touchdowns rushing per game, season 5.5, 1997 (66 TD, 12 games) Lowest average yards per play allowed, season (min. 600-699 rushes) 2.51, 1967 Lowest average yards per rush allowed, season (min. 500 rushes) 2.06, 1971 Consecutive sellouts (Entering 2018 Season) 361, 1962-present NCAA Individual Records Held by Huskers Field goals made, game Highest percentage of PATs/field goals made, season 7, Dale Klein, vs. Missouri, 1985; (32, 44, 42, 23, 48, 41, 27 yards); (min. 30 PATs/15 FG) Mike Prindle, Western Michigan, vs. Marshall, 1984 98.6 Pct. (54-54 PATs; 18-19 FG, Alex Henery, 2010 Best perfect record of field goals made, game Touchdowns scored on kick/punt returns, career 7, Dale Klein, vs. Missouri, 1985 8, Johnny Rodgers, 1970-72; Cliff Branch, Colorado, 1970-71; Wes Welker, Texas Tech, 2000-03; Antonio Touchdown by rush, pass and reception, game Perkins, Oklahoma, 2001-04; C.J. Spiller, Clemson, 2006- Joe Ganz, vs. New Mexico State, 2008 (tied with many) 09; Phillip Livas, Louisiana Tech, 2007-10 Eric Crouch, vs. -
NEBRASKA TEAM BOWL GAME RECORDS Team Records Punting Total Offense » Most Punts
NEBRASKA FOOTBALL BOWL RECORDS PAGE 77 NEBRASKA TEAM BOWL GAME RECORDS Team Records Punting Total Offense » Most Punts ....................................................10; 1980 Cotton Bowl vs. Houston » Most Plays ...........................................................94; 2014 Holiday Bowl vs. USC » Best Average ............................................. 51.5; 2005 Alamo Bowl vs. Michigan » Most Yards .......................................... 636; 2000 Alamo Bowl vs. Northwestern Scoring » Fewest Yards ................................................... 110; 1955 Orange Bowl vs. Duke » Most Points........................................... 66; 2000 Alamo Bowl vs. Northwestern » Best Per-Play Average ..........................7.7; 2000 Alamo Bowl vs. Northwestern » Most Touchdowns .................................. 9; 2000 Alamo Bowl vs. Northwestern » Most First Downs .....................................31; 2015 Foster Farms Bowl vs. UCLA » Largest Margin of Victory .................... 49; 2000 Alamo Bowl vs. Northwestern » Fewest First Downs ............................................. 6; 1955 Orange Bowl vs. Duke » Largest Margin of Defeat .................................. 27; 1955 Orange Bowl vs. Duke Rushing .........................................................................27; 1967 Sugar Bowl vs. Alabama » Most Attempts ..................................... 69; 2000 Alamo Bowl vs. Northwestern » Most Points in a Loss ..........................................42; 2014 Holiday Bowl vs. USC » Most Yards ...................................................... -
Nebraska All-Conference Selections 1916-- H.H
Nebraska All-Conference Selections 1916-- H.H. Corey, tackle 1935-- Bernard Scherer, end 516 total (2) Hugo Otopalik, back (5) Fred Shirey, tackle Big Eight (261) First-team all-conference picks by wire services, 1959-- Don Olson, guard 1917-- Roscoe Rhodes, end Lloyd Cardwell, back Omaha World-Herald, conference coaches. 1960-- Don Purcell, end (5) Edson Shaw, tackle Jerry LaNoue, back 1961-- Bill Thornton, back E.H. Schellenberg, back Sam Francis, back 1962-- Dennis Claridge, back John Cook, back 1936-- Charles Brock, center Husker Four-Time (3) Tyrone Robertson, tackle Paul Dobson, back (6) Les McDonald, end Bob Brown, guard All-Conference Selections 1921-- Clarence Swanson, end Fred Shirey, tackle 1963-- Dennis Claridge, back Tom Novak, back 1946, (4) John Pucelik, guard Lloyd Cardwell, back (3) Lloyd Voss, tackle center 1947-48-49 Glen Preston, back Sam Francis, back Bob Brown, guard Chick Hartley, back Ron Douglas, back 1964-- Lyle Sittler, C 1922-- Leo Scherer, end 1937-- Charles Brock, center (7) Tony Jeter, TE Husker Three-Time (7) Bub Weller, tackle (6) Elmer Dohrmann, end Freeman White, SE Adolph Wenke, tackle Johnny Howell, back All-Conference Picks Ted Vactor, DB Joy Berquist, guard Ted Doyle, tackle Vic Halligan, back, 1912-13-14 Walt Barnes, MG Glen Preston, back Fred Shirey, tackle Dick Rutherford, back, 1913-14-15 Kent McCloughan, DB Dave Noble, back Bob Mehring, guard H.H. Corey, tackle, 1914-15-16 Larry Kramer, tackle Chick Hartley, back 1938-- Charles Brock, center Steve Hokuf, end, 1929-30-32 1965-- Frank Solich, -
2009 History.Indd
Nebraska's academic All-Americans | Coaching Staff | Outlook | Meet the Huskers | Review | Record Book | History | Administration | Media | All-Time (Chosen by CoSIDA): 51 Players; 13 Double Winners; 64 Total (first-team) Last 33 seasons: 44 Players; 12 Double Winners; 56 Total *Four others chosen academic All-American by other groups, giving NU 68 first-team academic All-Americans. Bob Oberlin Don Fricke* Pat Clare* Jim Huge Dennis Claridge Jim Osberg* Tony Jeter* Marvin Mueller Center, 1952-53 Center, 1960 Back, 1960 End, 1962 Back, 1963 Off. Guard, 1965 Off. End, 1965 Def. Back, 1966 Randy Reeves Jeff Kinney Larry Jacobson Frosty Anderson Rik Bonness Tom Heiser Vince Ferragamo Ted Harvey Def. Back, 1969 Halfback, 1971 Def. Tackle, 1971 Off. Back/End, 1973 Center, 1975 Off. Back, 1975 Quarterback, 1976 Def. Back, 1976-77 Jim Pillen George Andrews Rod Horn Randy Schleusener Kelly Saalfeld Jeff Finn Ric Lindquist Randy Theiss Def. Back, 1978 Def. Tackle, 1978 Def. Tackle, 1979 Off. Guard, 1979-80 Off. Line, 1979 Off. End, 1980 Def. Back, 1981 Off. Tackle, 1981 Dave Rimington Scott Strasburger Rob Stuckey Mark Traynowicz Dale Klein Tom Welter Jeff Jamrog Mark Blazek Center, 1981-82 Def. End, 1983-84 Def. Line, 1983-84 Off. Line, 1984 Place-Kicker, 1986 Off. Line, 1986 Def. End, 1987 Def. Back, 1987-88 168 John Kroeker Gerry Gdowski Jake Young David Edeal Pat Tyrance Jim Wanek Pat Engelbert Mike Stigge Punter, 1988 Quarterback, 1989 Center, 1989 Center, 1990 Linebacker, 1990 Off. Guard, 1990 Nose Guard, 1991 Punter, 1991-92 Trev Alberts Terry Connealy Rob Zatechka Matt Shaw Aaron Graham Grant Wistrom Joel Makovicka Chad Kelsay OLB, 1993 Nose Tackle, 1993-94 Off. -
The Andy Reid Era 7
Excerpt • Temple University Press The Andy Reid Era 7 t was only a generation, but for many Ea gles fans the span they hired back in 1995. Rhodes was fi red after the Ea gles between the Golden Years and the twenty- fi rst century— went into a tailspin and dropped 19 of their last 24 games. Ithe agonizing wait for another Super Bowl— seemed like a Reid was the quarterbacks coach at Green Bay under Mike lifetime. Holmgren. He never had been an NFL coordinator or a head In many ways, it was. coach at any level. Lurie’s football operations chief, Tom When the Ea gles played in Super Bowl XV in 1981, people Modrak, favored the other fi nalist, Pittsburgh Steelers defensive hadn’t begun to watch DVDs, drive SUVs, or listen to iPods. coordinator Jim Haslett, for the job. The laptop had just been invented, and cell phones cost $3,500. Most teams at the time would only consider hiring a head Postage stamps were 15 cents, and the minimum wage was coach from a major college or someone with experience as an $3.35. Average house hold income for Americans was a little NFL offensive or defensive coordinator. over $19,000, and the prime rate was 21.5 percent, the highest since the Civil War. By the time the Ea gles returned to Super Bowl XXXIX in 2005, coaches were carry ing computers instead of clipboards. They were scouting with videotape, challenging the offi cials with instant replay, communicating via satellite, and devising their game plans with the help of digital photography. -
Nebraska All-Conference Selections 1916-- H.H
Nebraska All-Conference Selections 1916-- H.H. Corey, tackle 1935-- Bernard Scherer, end 514 total (2) Hugo Otopalik, back (5) Fred Shirey, tackle Big Eight (261) First-team all-conference picks by wire services, 1959-- Don Olson, guard 1917-- Roscoe Rhodes, end Lloyd Cardwell, back Omaha World-Herald, conference coaches. 1960-- Don Purcell, end (5) Edson Shaw, tackle Jerry LaNoue, back 1961-- Bill Thornton, back E.H. Schellenberg, back Sam Francis, back 1962-- Dennis Claridge, back John Cook, back 1936-- Charles Brock, center Husker Four-Time (3) Tyrone Robertson, tackle Paul Dobson, back (6) Les McDonald, end Bob Brown, guard All-Conference Selections 1921-- Clarence Swanson, end Fred Shirey, tackle 1963-- Dennis Claridge, back Tom Novak, back 1946, (4) John Pucelik, guard Lloyd Cardwell, back (3) Lloyd Voss, tackle center 1947-48-49 Glen Preston, back Sam Francis, back Bob Brown, guard Chick Hartley, back Ron Douglas, back 1964-- Lyle Sittler, C 1922-- Leo Scherer, end 1937-- Charles Brock, center (7) Tony Jeter, TE Husker Three-Time (7) Bub Weller, tackle (6) Elmer Dohrmann, end Freeman White, SE Adolph Wenke, tackle Johnny Howell, back All-Conference Picks Ted Vactor, DB Joy Berquist, guard Ted Doyle, tackle Vic Halligan, back, 1912-13-14 Walt Barnes, MG Glen Preston, back Fred Shirey, tackle Dick Rutherford, back, 1913-14-15 Kent McCloughan, DB Dave Noble, back Bob Mehring, guard H.H. Corey, tackle, 1914-15-16 Larry Kramer, tackle Chick Hartley, back 1938-- Charles Brock, center Steve Hokuf, end, 1929-30-32 1965-- Frank Solich, -
The 2001 Nebraska (0-0) Football Schedule Day
TCU - Pigskin Classic Preview Page 1 Date of Release: Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2001 Husker Records and Streaks Game 1: No. 4/4 Nebraska (0-0) vs. TCU (0-0) NACDA Pigskin Classic 4 NCAA-record 239 consecutive sellouts in DATE: Saturday, Aug. 25, 2001; TIME: Noon Memorial Stadium SITE: Memorial Stadium, Tom Osborne Field, Lincoln, Nebraska 4 39 consecutive winning seasons–current STADIUM CAPACITY: 73,918; SURFACE: FieldTurf NCAA record 4 32 consecutive nine-win seasons–NCAA TV: ABC National (Mike Tirico-Play-by-Play, Tim Brant-Color, Todd Harris-Sideline) record NEBRASKA RADIO: Pinnacle Sports Network (Warren Swain-Play-by-Play; Color-Adrian 4 32 consecutive bowl bids–NCAA record Fiala; Dave Weber-booth assistant) 4 39 bowl appearances–tied for fourth in NATIONAL RADIO: Pacific Sports Network (Larry Kahn-PBP; Bruce Snyder-Color) NCAA 4 326 consecutive weeks ranked by the No. 4/4 Nebraska Cornhuskers (0-0) Host TCU (0-0) in Pigskin Classic Associated Press, a continuing AP record Nebraska opens its 112th season by playing host to the TCU Horned Frogs in the NACDA Pigskin 4 32 consecutive years ranked in AP top 25 Classic. It is the season opener for both teams and a national television audience will watch the early 4 13-game home winning streak kickoff in a Noon ABC national broadcast. The Huskers are 4-0 in preseason games, but this is the first 4 91-10 record since 1993 (eight years) time NU has participated in a Pigskin Classic. Nebraska is 5-1 against TCU in a series that dates back to 1951, when TCU upset the 12th-ranked Huskers 28-7. -
Titans Hold 29Th Overall Pick, Seven Total Selections in 2020 Nfl Draft
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE APRIL 16, 2020 TITANS HOLD 29TH OVERALL PICK, SEVEN TOTAL SELECTIONS IN 2020 NFL DRAFT Draft to be held in virtual format from April 23-25 NASHVILLE — Plans are in place for the 85th Annual National Football League Player Selection Meeting, set to take place from April 23-25. The Titans currently own seven total 2020 NFL DRAFT SCHEDULE picks in the draft, including the 29th overall selection in the first round. Round 1: Thursday, April 23, 7:00 p.m. CT The draft opens with the first round on Rounds 2-3: Friday, April 24, 6:00 p.m. CT Thursday, April 23 at 7 p.m. CDT. Rounds Rounds 4-7: Saturday, April 25, 11:00 a.m. CT 2 and 3 are set for the following evening, beginning at 6 p.m., and the draft concludes with TV Coverage: NFL Network Rounds 4-7 on Saturday at 11 a.m. ABC (WKRN-TV News 2 in Nashville) The NFL will conduct the draft in a virtual format this ESPN year. NFL team personnel, including Titans executive vice president/general ESPN Deportes manager Jon Robinson and head coach Mike Vrabel, will remain away from club facilities in compliance with coronavirus-related government mandates and health recommendations, as well as to ensure equality among all 32 Nashville Radio: Titans Radio (Flagship 104.5 The Zone) organizations. The 2020 NFL Draft originally was scheduled to take place in Las Vegas, National Radio: Westwood One Radio the new home of the Raiders. However, the league announced on March 16 SiriusXM NFL Radio that all public elements of the draft would be canceled.