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Former Husker became steward of $60M Texas football palace


ALLEN, Texas — The mini inflatable football with a Nebraska logo rests on the corner of Jeff Chaney’s desk. A subtle but regular reminder that the five years he invested away from home were worth the grind.







Former Nebraska offensive lineman Jeff Chaney has been the coordinator of athletic facilities for Allen High School’s $60 million, 18,000-seat football stadium since it opened in 2012.




The office of the former Husker offensive lineman overlooks an indoor practice field within Allen High School’s sprawling 177-acre campus. Thirteen banners hanging on one wall honor every NFL player the place has produced including quarterback Kyler Murray, the No. 1 overall draft pick in 2019.

Step across the hallway for an end-zone view of Eagle Stadium, the facility that captured national headlines 15 years earlier for its $60 million price tag and 18,000 seats. Under the west concourse is a 5,000-plus square-foot wrestling room where a 14-year run of state titles ended this winter. A state-of-the-art golf simulator sits a few doors down.

All of it is a testament to Texas bigness. And the guy in charge is a Lone Star lifer with a Nebraska twist.

Chaney laughs that many Husker fans probably don’t remember him.

He wasn’t a big-name recruit when he signed out of the small west-Texas town of Friona in 1987 and spent most of his career No. 2 on the depth chart at either guard spot. He always graded out well in practice but — at 6-foot-2 and 250 pounds as an upperclassman — didn’t have the proportions to hang with NU’s bigger linemen.

“I’m the reason they got good,” Chaney said. “Nebraska got me up there and figured out they couldn’t win with guys like me.”

The late Milt Tenopir — Chaney’s position coach — used to say he shifted his recruiting philosophy toward bigger and more athletic blockers as the Big Red machine went full speed into the ‘90s. Chaney backed up the younger Will Shields (6-1, 305). He was a player host for Aaron Graham (6-4, 285). Younger linemen like Zach Wiegert, Rob Zatechka, Brenden Stai and Christian Peter didn’t look like him, either. That was good.

Chaney didn’t play much but grins recalling “49 pitch,” when he was the pulling guard for I-back Derek Brown’s first touchdown run in 1990. He hasn’t been back to Lincoln since the team left for the Orange Bowl following the 1991 campaign.

“I was blessed to be a part of it,” Chaney said. “Where else would you go back then if they offered? Back then it was O-line U.”

Chaney bounced around a few small Texas high schools as an assistant coach. Four years at a program in El Paso. Two at Odessa of “Friday Night Lights” fame. He caught on at Allen in the early 2000s as the suburb north of Dallas — spurred by the late-‘90s telecommunications boom — exploded in population and, later, football success with five state titles between 2008 and 2017.







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The view from Jeff Chaney’s office looks down on an indoor practice field, with banners above honoring the 13 former Allen players to reach the NFL.




Coaching was wearing on Chaney during his final season working with linemen in 2011. With more team success had come more pressure to win. So when the palatial home of the Eagles opened the following year, he jumped at the chance to be the coordinator of athletic facilities.

Incredibly, at least to Chaney, the man for whom the field is named — now-retired Allen Athletic Director Steve Williams — tabbed him for the newly created job.

“It’s cool,” Chaney said. “I always feel like coach Williams gave a kid who really didn’t even have his license the key to a $60 million Ferrari.”

The daily charge isn’t altogether unlike that of a lineman: Protect the asset by whatever means. On event days his phone is buzzing and the radio in his ear is chattering. He deals with crowd control. Last year’s graduation on the field hosted nearly 1,800 outgoing seniors and their families. Soccer and football practices are as routine as parking-lot congestion.

“This place gets used all day long,” Chaney said. “There’s about an hour and a half it doesn’t get used.”

Once when the stadium served as a neutral site for a football playoff game, local police busted the arriving chain gang for drinking beer in the parking lot. Chaney had to tell the coach they would need new volunteers for that night.

Chaney handles season tickets for Allen, which routinely sold out home games before the pandemic. He’s the go-between with coaches and maintenance for any needed repairs, not just in the football complex but also for the basketball gymnasiums and a combined four baseball and softball fields.







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A sprawling wrestling room of more than 5,000 square feet under the west concourse of Eagle Stadium is among the cluster of athletic facilities for which Jeff Chaney is responsible.




Actual football X’s and O’s details left his mental space years ago — “I don’t even know what they’re talking about anymore,” he said. He’s too busy during actual games making sure operations are running smoothly to think about blocking schemes.

His office is close enough to the head coach’s that he still gets glimpses of the college football recruiting machine at work. He’s seen Nebraska coaches pass through Allen, from Kevin Steele and Frank Solich to Barney Cotton — who was Chaney’s freshman coach in Lincoln — and Bill Busch. Husker reps may one day be by to see 2026 receiver/athlete Caleb Smith, who already holds double-digit scholarship offers including NU.

Chaney’s favorite story was on a spring day years ago when Alabama coach Nick Saban stopped by. The former Husker walked past the door of Allen coach Tom Westerberg, who was standing behind his desk talking with his famous guest. When Chaney went by a few minutes later, it was Saban standing behind the desk.

Chaney later warned another Allen coach before a Saban visit: Protect the power side of your desk.

Timing is everything in football, and Chaney figures he had it in witnessing high-end excellence firsthand at Nebraska and later at Allen. He’s seen challenges, too — a longtime colleague who was a former Northwestern player has given him plenty of grief from recent meetings of Wildcats and Huskers.

A surprise came in 2014, when Allen’s opulent confines were forced to close for the entire season after cracks appeared in the concrete concourse. The Eagles played every game on the road as construction crews took up residence.

“That wasn’t my fault,” Chaney deadpanned.

Chaney figures this job — steward of one of the biggest and best Texas prep football facilities dedicated to a single school — will be his last. He’s married with two daughters, the youngest a high school sophomore. His career has gone a different direction than he once thought, with football now only an ancillary part.

Nebraska coach Matt Rhule might force him to lock back in a little harder on fall Saturdays, he said. Rhule’s chief of staff, Susan Elza, once occupied an office a few doors down from Chaney as Allen’s softball coach and later assistant athletic director.

“I need Elza to send me some stuff,” Chaney chuckled. “Not sure if that’s an NCAA violation or not.”

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