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How Nebraska kids fall in love with Husker football


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BRADY — A 6-year-old Monte Kratzenstein plopped in front of the television at his grandparents’ house.

It’s early afternoon with the dial tuned to ABC. Thanksgiving 1971.

“I truly do remember that game,” Kratzenstein said, admitting it sounds cliché in retrospect that, of all games, it’s is his earliest memory of Nebraska football.

Hard to forget The Game of the Century.

Hard to forget Rodgers’ 72-yard punt return touchdown.

Hard to forget Jeff Kinney’s quartet of touchdowns — including the go-ahead score with 1 minute, 38 seconds left to play to preserve No. 1 Nebraska’s perfect season in a thriller against No. 2 Oklahoma.

Because of Kinney’s heroics, little Kratzenstein idolized the I-Back from McCook. Even now, 53 years later, Kratzenstein feels some butterflies when they interact.

Yes, they’re members of the same club — the fraternity of former Nebraska football players. Yes, Kratzenstein organizes a charity golf event that many former players participate in, but sometimes that childhood wonder never really goes away.

“I’ve got to meet people from every single decade, And some of these people were my heroes that I get to invite and play golf with,” Kratzenstein said. “So when Jeff Kinney calls my phone, I’m like, ‘Oh my God. Jeff Kinney is calling me. This is a cool thing.’”

Tales like Kratzenstein’s aren’t unique. Really, they’re woven into the fabric of the Nebraskan DNA of the football program. It’s what Tom Osborne envisioned all those years ago during those countless treks to the state’s hundreds of high schools.

In some manner, on any nondescript Saturday across the state, grade school boys had their lightbulb moment.

I want to play football for Nebraska.

There are more than 2,300 Nebraskans who’ve suited up for the Cornhuskers since the program’s inception at the turn of the 20th century. Their tales are tall and varied. Their inspirations for wanting to play for the home-state school, too, range widely.







Nebraska’s Jeff Kinney (35) gets a block from fullback Maury Damkroger (46) as he scores from the 2-yard-line with 1:38 left in the 1971 “Game of the Century” at Norman, Okla. Kinney scored on the handoff from quarterback Jerry Tagge (left) to cap a 74-yard drive in 12 plays in Nebraska’s 35-31 victory. 




MAURY DAMKROGER, LINCOLN: 1971-73

In Maury Damkroger’s day, the recruiting process looked a whole lot different than it does now.

No star rating was attached to recruits. There was no hubbub around committing to a football program. You didn’t have to know as a junior where you were going to play.

For Damkroger, his conversations with college programs didn’t begin until after his senior year of high school. But he — a Lincoln native and a Nebraska football legacy — was well-aware of the Huskers’ allure, considering his earliest memories of Nebraska football are from the 1950s and 1960s.

“When Bill Jennings was coaching, the ex-football players would play the varsity in the spring game,” Damkroger recalled with a laugh. “These guys would be in their thirties and out of shape and they’d play anyway. I’d go to those games and watch my dad play. The last year — I think it was ’61, that would have been Jennings’ last year — the oldtimers almost beat the varsity.”

Damkroger — a Lincoln Northeast product who was the Lincoln Journal Star’s 1970 Athlete of the Year — had been recruited by Kansas State and Missouri before he decided to play for his hometown team.

He made up his mind the day before National Signing Day after Bob Devaney made the quick trip over to North 63rd Street and Baldwin Avenue for a last-minute pitch.

“It was a relief to get it over with, the decision was made,” Damkroger said of his recruiting process. “And I don’t regret it. Things worked out really good. I got to play on a national championship team, which I never dreamed of — never even thought about, actually until it happened.”







Sun Bowl Nebraska Mississippi

Nebraska split end Todd Brown (29) scampers across the goal line to score after a reverse run in the first period of their game at El Paso’s Sun Bowl with Mississippi State, Dec. 27, 1980. Pursuing at right is Mississippi State’s Rob Fesmire (6). (AP Photo/Ted Powers)




TODD BROWN, HOLDREGE: 1979-82

Todd Brown was a 10-year-old fourth-grader at Lincoln Elementary in Holdrege when the Huskers were on their national championship run in the 1970s.

In those days, as soon as he’d get home from school, he’d change into his football uniform.

Not just the jersey, either.

Full pads. Cleats. The whole ensemble.

“I played a ton of basketball games in full pads. That’s just what I did,” Brown said. “I went home. I didn’t care what we were playing. I pretty much changed into my football uniform. I was a little bit obsessed with the whole thing.

“That’s all I wanted to do was play football in Nebraska. It consumed me. When I do something, I’m all in. I was all in on Nebraska football. I turned down track scholarships to walk on at Nebraska. I was either gonna do that or I wasn’t gonna do college sports.”

Sports columnist Amie Just previews The Cornhusker State, an upcoming project on Lincoln Journal Star and HuskerExtra.



GEORGE ACHOLA, OMAHA: 1988-91

It’s 1981. A young Achola, in fourth or fifth grade, made the trip to Kinnick Stadium for No. 7 Nebraska’s season opener. The result? Not a happy one for the Huskers, as they lost 10-7 to the unranked Hawkeyes.

Iowa fans stormed the field. Achola ended up on the field with them, looking for his Huskers.

Even though Nebraska lost, he wanted to be like them. He wanted to be them.

“I wanted to shake the hands of the Nebraska players,” Achola said. “I will never forget how big these human beings were. I’m 9 or 10 maybe and I’m looking at these human beings that are just monsters to me. And at that point, it clicked in my head.”

DAVID SEIZYS, SEWARD: 1991-93

It’s 1983, the scoring explosion year with Turner Gill, Irving Fryar, Mike Rozier, Mark Schellen, Tom Rathman and the like.

A fourth-grade David Seizys had just moved to Omaha from Pennsylvania and made his first trek to Memorial Stadium. He isn’t confident about which game, but he believes it could have been the UCLA game — Osborne’s 100th career victory.

Either way, little Seizys was inspired.

“I got home from the game with my dad and my brother-in-law and I told my parents I was gonna play for Nebraska,” said Seizys, who listed Seward as his hometown when he suited up for Nebraska from 1991-93 after attending Fort Calhoun. “My mom’s first reaction? She laughed at me. Because I was this tiny, tiny, tiny kid.”







Steve Kriewald

Steve Kriewald, of Scotia, remembers being struck by the excitement of a Nebraska football game when he attended his first game at Memorial Stadium in the late 1980s.




STEVE KRIEWALD, SCOTIA: 2000-04

Steve Kriewald can’t remember the opponent. He doesn’t remember the result of the game. He can’t remember how old he was either, but guesses he was 7 or 8 years old in the late 1980s.

One thing he does remember: looking at the crowd in Memorial Stadium with childhood wonderment when he was an elementary schooler.

“We sat way in the north end,” Kriewald remembered. “We were way up on the top in the north end, and of course, there were no videoboards or anything at that time, no ribbon boards, no nothing. Just the stadium. But just the people, the excitement of it, just seeing it for the first time.”

It was a last-minute thing. They weren’t in town for the game, but rather for Nebraska State Fair festivities across campus. So when they found a pair of tickets after kickoff for dirt cheap, they made the most of their situation.

Kriewald didn’t set foot in Memorial Stadium again until Nebraska began recruiting him in high school.







Jared Crick

Jared Crick, of Cozad, got his first sense of Nebraska football’s impact when he watched the 1994 and 1995 national championship games with his family.




JARED CRICK, COZAD: 2007-11

It’s the same story as Kratzenstein’s playing out, just in a different living room 20 years later.

A young Jared Crick is glued to the living room television with his family, watching either the 1994 or 1995 national championship game.

​​He remembers the “old school” floor model TV with the dial and the antenna coming out of the top. He doesn’t remember the specific plays, but he remembers how excited his family was.

“My dad had it videotaped,” said Crick, a second-team All-American defensive end out of Cozad under Pelini. “I never really understood why we did that but it makes sense now. It’s not an everyday deal. As a kid, you think it’s going to be an every-year deal where you watch a team that’s gonna win or at least play for a national championship.

“That’s probably about the time I started understanding what football was. Probably no different than any other kid from the state.”







IOWA12FG05.jpg

Nebraska’s Brett Maher (96) watches his field goal sail through the area during a game in 2012 against Iowa at Memorial Stadium.




BRETT MAHER, KEARNEY: 2008-12

Former Big Ten kicker of the year Brett Maher doesn’t remember the specific details of Nebraska’s Orange Bowl win over Tennessee to capture the 1997 national title. But a treasured family photo takes him back to that moment.

Maher, 8 years old at the time, is frozen in time up on his dad’s shoulders. The game can be seen on the TV in the background.

“That was a great time to be a Husker fan,” Maher said. “Being a kid from Nebraska, getting a taste of what everyone was so excited about.”







Phalen Sanford

Phalen Sanford, of Benkelman, wore a Texas hat during the Big 12 championship game in 2009. But, his tune changed after the Huskers’ lost. “I got rid of that Texas hat really fast and I’ve been a diehard ever since.”




PHALEN SANFORD, BENKELMAN: 2019-13

A nine- or 10-year-old Phalen Sanford is at his grandparents’ house for a Big 12 Championship watch party.

He had his Nebraska jersey on. And on his head?

“I was going through a phase where I thought I might want to be a Texas fan, which is absolutely gross. I’m ashamed of it,” said Sanford, a walk-on out of Benkelman who turned into a four-time letterman at Nebraska. “But I think I was just wanting to rebel against my whole family and the Nebraska thing.”

But then, the play happened. You know the one.

As the ball sailed through the uprights to give Texas the last-second victory, Sanford knew he wasn’t actually a Texas fan.

“I was furious,” Sanford said. “I got rid of that Texas hat really fast and I’ve been a diehard ever since.”

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