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Nebraska’s Matt Rhule ‘really pleased’ with freshman quarterbacks Raiola, Kaelin


Days start early in the high-stakes world of college football.

Coaches often arrive at the facility in the early hours of the morning before the sun rises, with players trickling in soon after.

When Nebraska head coach Matt Rhule observed the players who’ve regularly been in the Huskers’ athletic facility during those morning hours, he was impressed to see freshman quarterbacks Dylan Raiola and Daniel Kaelin among them.

“They’ve done a great job,” Rhule said Monday. “You can see a fire and competitiveness in Dylan; he wants to be at the top and he’s chomping at the bit. He’s in there at six o’clock in the morning throwing balls before his lift at 10:30. You can see it in Danny, he comes in and is working on football and they’re both winners, they’re both competitive guys.”

Since Raiola, Kaelin and Nebraska’s other early enrollees arrived on campus in January, it’s been a two-month grind of offseason workouts. Rhule is happy with what he’s seen from his young Huskers so far  but he knows it’s only a taste of what’s to come.

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“I’ve been really pleased with their effort, now they’ve got to get to football,” he said.

That starts next week when Nebraska officially begins spring practice. The Huskers will do so with only three scholarship quarterbacks on the roster, with junior Heinrich Haarberg standing as the veteran of the room.

Rhule said Haarberg has spent the offseason months working on his mechanics, particularly on “his elbow getting up” while throwing passes. As for the freshmen, Rhule said they will need “a ton of reps” this spring to get them up to speed.

That will also be true of the many other newcomers taking part in spring ball, though Rhule feels the talent distribution of this Nebraska team is more even than it was a year ago. Nebraska was “top-heavy” in 2023 due to its veteran talent compared to a large influx of young players, but Rhule said there’s more parity among the NU roster this time around.

As a result, a competitive spring is now on the horizon.

“We’ll have to just do a lot more competitions because what I want to see is a team that in the fourth quarter makes just one more play than we made last year,” Rhule said. “It’s not this huge overhaul, it’s just (about) making one more play on offense and one more play on defense.”

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