Connect with us

Football

Nebraska football benefitting from competitive winter


Long before the college football season begins in August, winning habits are formed in January and February.

Nebraska head coach Matt Rhule has overseen that process over the last two months, watching and waiting as spring ball drew closer and closer.

Rhule, who spent the first 11-plus minutes of his pre-spring practice press conference on Monday addressing athletic director Trev Alberts’ departure, Nebraska’s NCAA Tournament runs and the future of Husker athletics, finally got to football.

“This team has come so far in these eight weeks,” Rhule said. “The problems that existed last year aren’t the problems now.”

Thus far, Nebraska’s offseason has been defined by competition. Rhule said that competitiveness comes easy for his Huskers in activities they enjoy such as tug-of-war, 40-yard dash races or Madden tournaments  but the real test has been how the Nebraska players have responded when they don’t want to be competitive.

People are also reading…

Strength and conditioning coaches ran players through high-intensity mat drills throughout the winter, with competitions often following when tiredness and exhaustion had begun setting in. Rhule said the goal was to see how players could handle the frustration of a tough workout followed by competition and pushing from loud, energetic coaches.

Overwhelmingly, their response to adversity has impressed Rhule.

“We’re pushing them and driving them, and what I love is they’re accepting it, and they’re running and working. This is going to be an unbelievably competitive spring ball,” Rhule said. “… I’m really, really proud of them, and I don’t tell them that very often. I’m not a fuzzy, feely type of coach, so it’s important that they hear I’m proud of them.”

For the Nebraska players, their coach’s pride won’t lessen the strenuousness of the workouts they continue to go through. Alongside efforts in the weight room, improvements in nutrition and working on mobility have been key goals for returning Huskers such as junior defensive lineman Jimari Butler.

Because Nebraska coaches had implemented a similar offseason program last year, Butler said he knew what was coming in the offseason and had no option other than embracing the process head-on.

“The brotherhood is still getting built, we’re still trying to find the foundation for it, but you can see guys doing it for each other and not just trying to make it through a workout,” Butler said.

Just as physical strength is built during the offseason, so is the mental togetherness of the Nebraska football team. An influx of talent from transfers and incoming freshmen is one reason why NU coaches anticipate a highly competitive spring, while those newcomers have quickly had to adapt to doing things “the Husker way” as Rhule puts it.







Nebraska’s Jahmal Banks speaks during a news conference on Monday, March 18, 2024, at Hawks Championship Center.




After going through workouts with his new teammates, transfer wide receiver Jahmal Banks has seen that mentality taking root in him and others.

“It’s about brotherhood, and there’s some key factors in that: it’s sacrifice, unconditional love and accountability,” Banks said. “We’re here to build a strong brotherhood, but that commitment runs deep, and it’s about toughness, and it’s about being willing to do anything not to let your teammate down or your coaches.”

So far, Nebraska’s offseason has been going to plan. The Red-White Spring Game was intentionally scheduled for late April in order to give the team additional weeks of offseason lifting and conditioning, and several Huskers are feeling the effects of their hard work.

Junior defensive back Marques Buford said players have gained confidence and gotten stronger this winter, while Rhule mentioned freshman offensive lineman Grant Brix as another player who has taken strides. Brix, listed at 285 pounds on the Nebraska roster, now weighs roughly 300 pounds according to Rhule.

“If you looked at our team right now, I think you’d be really impressed with how they look. We look big, strong and physical,” Rhule said.

For all the progress Nebraska players have made in the last two months, they know their work isn’t done yet  and far from it. Mat drills might be in the past, but padded practices, scrimmages and long days still await them this spring.

Competition has gotten Nebraska this far, and more is on the horizon.

“We’re going to push them like crazy in spring ball and see where we end up,” Rhule said.

  • • Texts from columnists
  • • The most breaking Husker news
  • • Cutting-edge commentary
  • • Husker history photo galleries

Get started





Source link

Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Advertisement

Must See

Advertisement Enter ad code here
Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement

More in Football