Tag Archives: Nebraska

Nebraska football picks up second OL transfer this offseason

Matt Rhule and Co. are on a mission to add talent to the 2023 Nebraska roster out of the transfer portal, and they did it again with Walter Rouse.

Rouse, a 6-foot-6, 318-pounder who started 39 games at left tackle for Stanford, entered the portal on Dec. 15 and committed to Nebraska today. He chose the Huskers over Oklahoma and Iowa, two programs he visited during the recruiting process. He has one year of eligibility left.

Adding as much talent as possible at the line of scrimmage was something Rhule said he and his staff were going to do this offseason.

“We have tried to bring in some depth. We wanted to bring in a great young group that we can develop and watch them grow. The previous staff had done a nice job of identifying,” Rhule said during his early signing day press conference. “I like the players, but we are also going to continue to look. I will never not take a talented offensive or defensive lineman. That’s what wins games.”

Rouse becomes the ninth transfer addition for the Huskers and the second offensive lineman, joining center/right tackle Ben Scott (Arizona State). Rouse, originally from Silver Spring, Maryland, was a four-star recruit in the 2019 class out of Sidwell Friends (D.C.). He was rated as the No. 34 tackle nationally and the No. 4 overall recruit in D.C.

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Rouse, a biomechanical engineering major, started for four seasons with the Cardinal, playing in 40 career games. He was a Freshman All-American in 2019 and All-Pac-12 honorable mention in 2020. In 2022 he was a finalist for the William V. Campbell Trophy, commonly referred to as the Academic Heisman.

According to Pro Football Focus, Rouse played 1,383 snaps the past two seasons — 650 in 2022 and 733 in 2021. He was given an overall grade of 67.3 in 2022 along with a run-blocking grade of 71.4 and a pass-blocking grade of 54.6. His 2021 overall grade was 71.4 while his run-blocking mark was 72.2 and his pass-blocking mark was 72.6.

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Nebraska football picks up second WR transfer this offseason

Nebraska football loses three of its top four pass catchers from the 2022 season in the school record-breaking Trey Palmer along with tight end Travis Vokolek and receiver Oliver Martin. The Huskers just added a talent who can help replace those departures: Virginia WR transfer Billy Kemp IV has committed to Nebraska.

During a recent press conference, new Husker offensive coordinator Marcus Satterfield said the team needed more depth at the receiver position and would be looking in the transfer portal for immediate help.

“We’ve got some good receivers, I just think we’ve got to build some depth there and the different types of receivers,” Satterfield said. “You don’t want them all to look the same, you need different types and body types and stuff.”

Satterfield found what he was looking for in Kemp, who announced his decision on Monday night at halftime of the CFP national championship game.

Kemp, a productive and veteran receiver who spent the past five seasons in the ACC at Virginia, is a grad transfer for the Huskers. Kemp, a 5-foot-9, 172-pounder, becomes the eighth overall transfer addition Nebraska has made this offseason. He’s the second transfer receiver, joining Josh Fleeks from Baylor.

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Kemp has recorded 192 catches during his five seasons, which ranks fourth all-time for the Cavaliers. Those receptions have totaled 1,774 yards and eight touchdowns, and that receiving yardage mark ranks 10th in school history. Kemp was also Virginia’s main punt returner — he led the team in punt returns and punt return yardage in four straight seasons from 2019-22 and has totaled 2,337 all-purpose yards for his career.

Kemp played in seven of Virginia’s 10 games in 2022, catching 74 passes for 725 yards and six touchdowns. The Cavaliers’ final two games of the regular season were canceled after three players — D’Sean Perry, Lavel Davis Jr. and Devin Chandler — were killed in a shooting.

Kemp declared for the NFL Draft in December but entered the portal after the NCAA granted Virginia seniors an extra year of eligibility in the aftermath of the tragedy.

Kemp enters a Nebraska receivers room that badly needs his playmaking ability and experience as a sixth-year player. The Huskers return just two receivers who contributed last season in Marcus Washington (31 catches for 471 yards and one touchdown) and Alante Brown (16, 191). Fleeks’ addition will help depth also.

The Huskers return a group of inexperienced receivers, including Tommi Hill, Janiran Bonner, Shawn Hardy II and Victor Jones Jr.

Brody Belt and Wyatt Liewer, two receivers who have playing experience, are listed on Nebraska’s online roster.

The 2023 class included three receiver commits in Malachi Coleman, Jaidyn Doss and Brice Turner, as well as one athlete who could start his career at the position in Jaylen Lloyd.



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Nebraska football picks up commitment from CB with offers from Alabama, Georgia, Ohio State and Clemson

Ethan Nation, a 2023 cornerback out of Rosewell (Ga.), has committed to Nebraska. Nation’s decision gives the Huskers another pledge from a recruit with an absolutely loaded offer sheet.

Nation, a three-star prospect, holds approximately 50 offers, most notably from Alabama, Clemson, Georgia, Michigan, Ohio State, Oregon and USC.

His offer list also includes Auburn, Colorado, Florida, LSU, Miami, Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas A&M, Utah and Wisconsin.

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He ultimately picked Nebraska over Auburn, Houston and Ohio State – the other three programs in his final four – because he sees a program on the rise that is being led in the right direction.

“I like how they are coming on the map because of their new coaching staff,” Nation told Rivals’ Ryan Wright. “They will have a lot of buzz on them because they are a professional staff going to the college level. That will be exciting to see how that plays out.”

Nation said that his decision was “really easy” when he compared everything.

“They flew me out, they showed me that they needed me and wanted me, and it was pretty simple for me,” Nation said. “They showed me that they weren’t going to BS me. If I go there and put in the hard work, it’s going to go off.”

Nation is the fourth defensive back commitment in the Huskers’ 2023 class. He joins CBs Syncere Safeeullah and Dwight Bootle II and Philadelphia safety Rahmir Stewart, who held a similarly impressive offer sheet as Nation with offers from Alabama, Clemson and Georgia among over 30 offers.

The 5-foot-11, 165-pound Nation is ranked in the top 70 among Georgia’s 2023 prospects and top 75 nationally among cornerbacks.

Nation’s recruitment has been considered by some to be a bit of a wild card throughout the process in terms of where he would eventually land. No school had emerged in a major way from the pack over the last few months. That opened the door for secondary coach Evan Cooper, head coach Matt Rhule and the Huskers.

>>> RELATED: Meet the Huskers’ 2023 signing class

Nebraska offered Nation on Dec. 16, and he immediately scheduled an official visit for the Dec. 16-18 weekend. Nation trains with Carolina Panthers cornerback Jaycee Horn, who Cooper coached the past two seasons as the Panthers cornerbacks coach.

That’s how Nation initially got on the Huskers’ radar. He made the trip to Lincoln and built on what had become an instant connection with Cooper and the Husker staff. Those relationships became even stronger just before the early signing period.

“I usually ask people who have been coached by them previously,” Nation said. “With Coach Rhule being with the Panthers, I trained with some guys that were with the Panthers. I picked their brains. I talked to JT (Ibe) about their coaching because Coach Rhule was with them and Coach Cooper, and their strength coach (Corey Campbell) was with the Panthers as well. I was just picking the brains of the professional guys to see how they deciphered them from the professional level to college.”

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Nebraska football WR commit flips to Cincinnati on National Signing Day

Barry Jackson has flipped from Nebraska to Cincinnati on National Signing Day.

It’s a surprise move from the four-star 2023 receiver. Jackson, who had been committed to the Huskers since July 2, appeared to be firmly in the class. He took an official visit to Nebraska on Dec. 16-18 for his second OV to Lincoln of his recruitment and said that he was fully planning on signing with the Huskers on Wednesday and enroll early at Nebraska in January.

His commitment still appeared to be solid even as he was the final holdover to have not signed throughout Wednesday while 21 members of the Huskers’ class inked their National Letters of Intent to officially join the program.

Jackson, one of the more underrated receivers in the country out of Georgia powerhouse Cedar Grove High School, committed to the Huskers’ previous staff, which included former Husker coaches Mickey Joseph and Sean Beckton. A lot of change has happened with the Husker program, but it still looked as if Matt Rhule and the new staff had done enough to keep Jackson in the fold.

Mississippi State, Pittsburgh, Louisville and Memphis were some of the other programs that had been some of Jackson’s top schools prior to his commitment. Cincinnati, which is going through its own coaching change, was not among that top group but made a strong impression on him down the stretch in December.

Jackson took an official visit to Cincinnati the week prior to his Nebraska OV, and that helped buoy his decision to head to the Bearcats instead of the Big Ten.

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Judge orders slaughterhouse cleaners not to hire minors

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A federal judge ordered a Wisconsin company that cleans hundreds of slaughterhouses nationwide to ensure it is complying with child labor laws after investigators identified at least 50 minors scrubbing and sanitizing dangerous equipment on overnight shifts at five different meatpacking plants in three states.

As part of an agreement with the Labor Department that was announced along with Tuesday’s court ruling in Nebraska, Packers Sanitation Services Inc. also promised to hire an outside consultant to review its hiring policies and provide additional training for its managers.

Investigators with the Labor Department visited three plants owned by JBS and Turkey Valley Farms in Nebraska and Minnesota this fall and found 31 underage workers as young as 13. Since this lawsuit was filed last month, additional underage workers have been identified, including at two additional plants: the Greater Omaha Packing Co. beef plant in Omaha, Nebraska, and a George’s Inc. poultry plant in Springdale, Arkansas.

Investigators also searched a Tyson Foods plant in Sedalia, Missouri, but the Labor Department hasn’t identified any minors working there yet.

Thousands of pages of records from other plants are also being reviewed to determine if any additional minors are working there. At the plants where underage workers have been identified so far, investigators are comparing local school records with Packers Sanitation Services records to identify workers younger than 18. The company employs some 17,000 people working at more than 700 locations nationwide, making it one of the largest firms out there that cleans food processing plants.

“This case should serve as a stark reminder for all employers that the U.S. Department of Labor will not tolerate violations of the law, especially those that put vulnerable children at risk,” said Wage and Hour Regional Administrator Michael Lazzeri who is based in Chicago.

PSSI Vice President of Marketing Gina Swenson said the company already does what the government recommends to verify the age and immigration status of its employees, but it agreed to take additional steps to ensure compliance and address the Labor Department’s concerns.

“We have been crystal clear from the start: PSSI has a zero-tolerance policy against employing anyone under the age of 18 and fully shares DOL’s objective of ensuring it is followed to the letter at all local plants,” Swenson said.

The company also agreed to fire any underage workers the Labor Department identifies and sanction any managers involved in hiring them. PSSI will also work to identify any minors working for it as well and fire them.

Swenson has said that PSSI is cooperating with investigators although the Labor Department said in court documents that some local managers interfered with employee interviews at the plants.

The underage workers that investigators confirmed included one 13-year-old who suffered a serious chemical burn from the caustic chemicals used to clean the JBS plant in Grand Island, Nebraska, every night.

Investigators said in court documents that some of the teens they found working for PSSI told them that “everyone there knew” that they were minors, and in one case, a search of an employment database showed that one employee’s age came up as 129 years old when their Social Security number was checked.

The meat processing companies that own the plants where underage workers were initially identified have said they are monitoring the investigation and will consider taking action against PSSI if necessary. A representative of Greater Omaha Packing didn’t immediately respond to questions Tuesday, and no one answered the phone at the corporate headquarters of George’s Inc.

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Nebraska safety among three more Huskers who enter transfer portal Friday

Following a Thursday that saw a handful of Huskers enter their name in the transfer portal, three more Nebraska football players — true freshman safety Jaeden Gould, redshirt freshman receiver Kamonte Grimes and junior kicker Chase Contreraz — did the same on Friday.

Gould and Grimes have publicly announced that they are in the portal, and Inside Nebraska has confirmed that Contreraz has entered the portal.

Gould, a 6-foot-2, 200-pound safety from New Jersey, played in one game while at Nebraska, against Oklahoma, and recorded five snaps. He was a four-star recruit in the 2022 class.

Grimes, a 6-3, 200-pounder from Naples, Florida, spent the past two seasons at Nebraska, but never appeared in a game. Grimes was a three-star prospect in the 2021 class.

Contreraz came to Nebraska as a walk-on following the 2019 season, which he spent kicking for Iowa Western Community College. Contreraz appeared in a game in just one of his three seasons at Nebraska.

Contreraz was the starting place kicker for the final four games of the 2021 season. He went 2-of-4 on field goal attempts and a perfect 11-of-11 on extra points.

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Three Huskers — including Ernest Hausmann — enter the transfer portal

Three Nebraska football players are entering the transfer portal, a source confirmed to The World-Herald on Thursday afternoon.

Huskers moving on from the program are inside linebacker Ernest Hausmann, receiver Decoldest Crawford and offensive lineman Brant Banks.

So begins what will be a frenetic stretch for new Nebraska coach Matt Rhule — officially hired Saturday — and his still-assembling staff as they navigate the comings and goings of players from a national portal pool already into the hundreds.

The biggest blow is Hausmann, the freshman from Columbus who became a starter down the stretch and finished with 54 tackles (sixth most on the team). His closing ability on quarterbacks and hard hits on rushers set him apart on a unit with other bright-future defenders like Malcolm Hartzog.

Hausmann thanked Nebraska coaches, trainers and teammates in a social-media post for helping him develop this season as well as fans for their support. He called the move “a very difficult decision.”

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A knee injury in August shelved Crawford for the entire season after he arrived as a three-star prospect out of Louisiana. Known most for his unique name and a high-profile name-image-likeness deal with an Omaha-based HVAC company, he flipped from LSU late last offseason when he followed Mickey Joseph from Baton Rouge to Lincoln. He leaves having not seen a snap at NU.

Banks just completed his fourth season at Nebraska, playing in every game on special teams and occasionally as an O-line reserve in what was technically his redshirt sophomore year. The Houston native converted from defensive line in 2019 and appeared in 26 total games. Perhaps his most memorable moment came when he joined the men’s basketball team prior to the 2020 Big Ten tournament and played three minutes as a reserve.

Players who enter the portal can still emerge from it with their same school or find a new home. Nebraska in the last cycle saw 15 players transfer after the 2021 season ended and will surely see more depart in the coming days amid a regime change.

Rhule said on a national podcast this week to expect personnel churn.

“They’re coming off 3-9 and 4-8 so the only way to fix that is to make sure the players you have you’re coaching up and developing and getting big and strong,” Rhule said. “But you have to go recruit and you have to get guys in the transfer portal. You have to upgrade the roster.”

Sam McKewon, Tom Shatel and Dirk Chatelain unwrap everything with the hire of Matt Rhule, including the biggest problem he faces at Nebraska.


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Mickey Joseph punched and choked his wife during argument over infidelity

Former Nebraska interim football coach Mickey Joseph pushed, punched and choked his wife and pulled her hair during an argument the couple had over infidelity, Lincoln police allege in a court document filed Thursday.

Lancaster County prosecutors charged Joseph, 54, with one felony count of assault by strangulation or suffocation, which is punishable by up to five years of probation or three years of prison. Joseph denied the allegations to police, according to the affidavit. The charge was an upgrade to the two misdemeanors that Lincoln police originally cited when they booked him into jail Wednesday night.

A judge set bail Thursday at 10% of $20,000, meaning Joseph must pay $2,000 to be released. He posted bail and was released. He was ordered to have no contact with his wife.

According to the two-page sworn affidavit of Lincoln Police Officer Steve Redlin:

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Priscilla Joseph, 34, told arriving Lincoln police officers that she and Mickey Joseph have been married for six years. Just before 2 p.m. Wednesday, the two “began arguing about infidelity in the marriage” in their home near 34th Street and Tree Line Drive in south Lincoln.

“Priscilla reported (Mickey) pushed her from the front, causing her to fall onto the couch,” Redlin wrote. “Priscilla advised (Mickey) got on top of her on the couch and placed his hands around her throat. She specifically stated, ‘He pushed me on the couch and strangled me.’”

When officers asked her if she could breathe, she told them: “No, until I pushed him off.”

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She then walked to the adjoining kitchen area. She alleged that her husband “grabbed her hair from behind and pulled her backward, causing her to fall to the ground,” according to the court document.

“In the process of falling, Priscilla reported (Mickey) struck her in the left temple with a closed fist,” Redlin wrote. “She specifically stated that (Mickey) ‘grabbed me by the hair and punched me in the eye.’ “

Redlin wrote that officers observed “visible redness and swelling around her left eye which was consistent with being struck.”

“Priscilla was observed to have several long strands of hair clinging to her right upper pant leg,” Redlin wrote. “Priscilla reported these hairs were pulled from her head when she was grabbed” by her husband.

Priscilla told officers that her husband grabbed her cellphone and tried to flush it down the toilet. Officers saw it sitting in a tub of rice — one method used to try to dry out a cellphone.

Priscilla Joseph’s 35-year-old brother is quoted in the affidavit saying he was in an upstairs bedroom when he heard the couple arguing. He walked out to the balcony overlooking the living room and saw Mickey Joseph’s “hand around Priscilla’s throat.”

Joseph was arrested about 3:10 p.m. at the home of former Nebraska quarterback Steve Taylor, a real estate agent in Lincoln. Taylor posted a statement to Facebook after rampant internet rumors falsely suggested he was involved in the altercation.

“Dear Husker Nation … my wife and (I) are friends with the Joseph family. Please disregard all rumors & innuendos because they are all totally false + terribly inaccurate! We are here to help & support Mickey’s family through this ordeal. My bond to my family & fellow Huskers is the most precious thing in my life!”

A source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Taylor had simply been trying to get Joseph to focus on an interview he was scheduled to have Wednesday for the coaching spot at Tulsa. The interview was conducted using computer software. The interview with Tulsa had not been conducted at Taylor’s house, a source said.

Lincoln police said Mickey Joseph waived his right to remain silent and “provided a statement.”

Joseph “denied striking Priscilla in the face or grabbing her hair,” the affidavit said. “(Mickey) did not have any visible injury.”

Nebraska Athletic Director Trev Alberts issued a statement saying Joseph had been placed on administrative leave.

“I was made aware of the charges against Coach Joseph and given the nature of the allegations and based on university policy he has been placed on administrative leave,” Alberts said.

Joseph’s status with Nebraska has been in question since Nebraska hired Matt Rhule this week to be the Huskers’ head football coach.

Alberts said Monday that any decision regarding Joseph’s status at NU would be up to Rhule. Both Alberts and the new coach commended Joseph at the time for how he had led the program for the past 11 weeks.

Joseph, a former quarterback at Nebraska, was hired by former head coach Scott Frost in December 2021 to be Nebraska’s associate head coach, receivers coach and passing game coordinator. After Frost was fired on Sept. 11, Alberts promoted Joseph to be Nebraska’s interim coach for the final nine games of the season.

Joseph’s contract with Nebraska runs through Dec. 31, 2023, but he can be fired for cause if he is found to have been in “violation or breach of any applicable federal, state or municipal laws,” or “violation of any felony or misdemeanor criminal statute resulting in a conviction that relates to, impacts or impairs (his) ability to perform duties on behalf of the university,” according to his contract.

This report includes material from the Lincoln Journal Star.

Reach the writer at 402-473-7223 or awegley@journalstar.com.

On Twitter @andrewwegley

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Matt Rhule’s first Nebraska staff could include pair of SEC offensive coordinators

While Matt Rhule begins his transition from NFL head coach back to ranks of college football program rebuilder, some potential elements of Rhule’s inaugural Nebraska staff are coming into focus.

Rhule formally was announced as Nebraska’s head coach Saturday morning, after Huskers’ officials – led by athletics director and former football star Trev Alberts – neared a deal with Rhule, saw some elements cause a delay and then circled back around to cement Rhule with a long-term contract.

It was reported earlier Sunday by The Athletic’s Joe Person that both Carolina Panthers’ assistant defensive line coach Terrance Knighton and assistant strength coach Corey Campbell had immediately exited the Charlotte-based NFL franchise in order to join Rhule’s Cornhuskers’ staff.

It has also been reported that Evan Cooper, a long-time Rhule assistant, will join the staff as well. Cooper has worked in personnel as well as with the defensive backs at multiple stops with Rhule. 

Where else might Rhule turn for some of the key additions to his Nebraska staff?

Aside from there being a groundswell movement for Nebraska to retain favored son Mickey Joseph, who are some other candidates to join the Cornhuskers’ first group under Rhule?

Multiple sources since Rhule’s hiring atop the Nebraska program have told FootballScoop that a pair of top targets have emerged for the Cornhuskers’ offensive staff.

Marcus Satterfield, the current offensive coordinator for Shane Beamer’s South Carolina Gamecocks program, is as close to Rhule as anyone and is seen as an addition Rhule would greatly value.

A longtime Rhule assistant, Satterfield has worked alongside Rhule at Temple, Baylor and with the NFL’s Panthers before Satterfield agreed to become Beamer’s first-ever offensive coordinator at South Carolina.

Multiple sources told FootballScoop that Satterfield had agreed to an initial two-year term to helm the Gamecocks’ offense and that Satterfield’s pact is set to expire at year’s end. 

Also, Jake Peetz – presently an offensive assistant with the defending Super Bowl champion Los Angeles Rams – has history with Rhule and Nebraska.

Peetz is a Nebraska native who played his high school ball in the state and also graduated from Nebraska. He worked with Rhule at Carolina before Ed Orgeron hired Peetz to run the LSU offense in Orgeron’s final season, 2021, at LSU.

We will keep you posted as this plays out. As always, head to The Scoop for the latest coaching news from around the country. 

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Nebraska offers Matt Rhule head coaching job: Sources

Nebraska has offered former Carolina Panthers coach Matt Rhule its open head football coaching job, according to sources with knowledge of the negotiations. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Rhule, 47, was at or near the top of the Cornhuskers’ list of targets in recent weeks after he was fired by the Panthers on Oct. 10. Nebraska fired former coach Scott Frost on Sept. 11.
  • Rhule was offered the job earlier this month, sources said, and then Nebraska came back to him this week with a stronger package.
  • The parties are working to sort out details; Nebraska is optimistic a deal can be worked out to name him its head coach this weekend.
  • Mickey Joseph, a former associate head coach for the Huskers, served as Nebraska’s interim coach and led the Huskers to a 24-17 win Friday at Iowa in their season finale.

Backstory

Conversations between Nebraska athletic director Trev Alberts and Rhule intensified this month, with transfer portal activity restarting in early December. The early signing period opens two weeks later.

Rhule resurrected programs at Temple and Baylor from 2013 to 2019, winning 10 games or more in three of his seven seasons, and he’s seen as a home-run hire by outsiders. He’s from New York and coached on the East Coast aside from one season at UCLA as an assistant and his tenure at Baylor, but he’s familiar with the Big Ten as a former Penn State linebacker.

Rhule also thrived in an unfamiliar environment in Texas, helping the Bears rebuild after a sexual assault scandal threatened to destroy the program.

His Carolina contract also increased his level of attractiveness to Alberts. Rhule signed a seven-year, $62 million deal in 2020 and is owed more than $40 million through the end of the deal. Any salary paid to Rhule by his next employer is subtracted from the amount owed by the Panthers, so the program could get a relative bargain in Rhule — for the first four seasons of his deal.

Nebraska finished the season 4-8 after its upset of Iowa. Alberts was in attendance at Iowa City. The second-year Nebraska AD, originally from Eastern Iowa, traveled separately from the Huskers to attend the final game of the season. An introductory news conference in Lincoln for Rhule could come as early as Sunday. Nebraska officials, without direct instruction from Alberts on the timing, have reserved the Hawks Championship Center for use to stage a hiring event.

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(Photo: Jim Dedmon / USA Today)



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