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The Nebraska cities yet to produce a Husker football player


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HOWELLS — Mike Speirs couldn’t miss this.

It’s Aug. 18, 2018, and the legendary Howells and Howells-Dodge football coach had to make the quick trip to Nashville, Tennessee, to watch Howells’ own Nathan Bazata suit up for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in an NFL preseason game against the Tennessee Titans.

But while Speirs’ eyes were keyed in on No. 73 at Nissan Stadium, his brain transported him elsewhere. Bazata may have stood 6-foot-2 that day and recorded one tackle on his 19 snaps at defensive tackle, but Speirs couldn’t help but think of Bazata as the elementary schooler who helped the Bobcats as their student manager.

“It was very satisfying because he’d been a student manager in our program since second grade,” Speirs said. “He’d been a part of our program through all our great years. He was always part of our program. He’s just a tremendous person and to see him get that shot was so cool.”

Bazata, though, didn’t get that opportunity in the pros because of the University of Nebraska.

No. Nebraska didn’t look at him. Didn’t talk to him, really. The only scholarship offers Bazata had coming out of high school were South Dakota State and Iowa. Bazata — the undefeated state champion at heavyweight in 2013 and two-time state football champion — opted to become a Hawkeye.

He blossomed into an All-Big Ten honorable mention candidate for both 2016 and 2017. He recorded 51 takedowns in his senior season, and three of those tackles came in Memorial Stadium in his final regular season game as a college athlete when Iowa punked Nebraska, 56-14, in the game that led to Mike Riley’s ouster.

But in even more of a headscratcher, Bazata — more than likely — is the first Howells native to play a college football game inside Nebraska’s Memorial Stadium, as no one from Howells has ever played football for Nebraska’s varsity team, based on records from NU’s athletic department and local newspaper archives.

No player from the 2000 or 2001 or 2002 or 2003 or 2004 or 2005 or 2008 or 2009 or 2010 state championship teams was good enough to even walk on at Nebraska?

“I don’t know if we’ve ever had a great fit,” Speirs said, who has helmed Howells’ program for 29 seasons with nine state titles as Howells and another as consolidated Howells-Dodge.

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



Speirs believes he’s had at least two more that could have cracked a Division I roster: Mat Eikmeier and Michael Bayer, who were both on those 2000-03 championship teams. But Eikmeier chose to play collegiate baseball for Omaha and Bayer ended up playing football at Midland.

But historically? Back in the old days?

Nope. No one from the Howells basketball dynasty teams of the 1970s either, or their runner-up team from 1922 for that matter.

Of the thousands of men who’ve played varsity football for Nebraska since 1890, there are 120 of them with unknown hometowns. Of those 120, all of them were from before 1926. Many of those men have only last names listed.

Either way, it’s a headscratcher that Howells hasn’t had at least a walk-on. Even Dodge gets to claim Jared Franzluebbers, who was listed as a weakside linebacker on the roster from 2002-03.

But Howells isn’t the only one.

Of the census-recognized places in Nebraska, 233 cities and villages have yet to produce a Nebraska football player.

Some of those places make plenty of sense. Internationally famous Monowi, population one, has never had a Nebraska football player. Neither has Gross, also in Boyd County, which boasted a population of two at the most recent census.

But, like Howells, there are ample other confounding absences.

Louisville, for one. The riverfront Cass County community of 1,361 is the largest city to not show up on Nebraska’s rosters.

Bennet, which is only 17½ miles from the university’s campus, comes just behind Louisville in size with 1,083. And yet, no Huskers have listed Bennet as their hometown. A possible theory there would be, since there is no high school in Bennet, maybe those athletes would list Palmyra as their hometown. But Palmyra, just over the Otoe County line with a population of 563, hasn’t been claimed by a Husker football player either.

The third town with a population greater than 1,000 that has yet to produce a Nebraska football player is Terrytown, out in Scotts Bluff County.

Not only are there sizeable towns without homegrown Huskers, but 10 of Nebraska’s 93 counties have never had one of their own on the roster.

Those 10 counties are: Thomas County (population 669), Hayes County (population 849), Sioux County (population 1,135), Keya Paha County (population 769), Logan County (population 716), Loup County (population 607), Arthur County (population 434), Hooker County (population 711), Banner County (population 674), and McPherson County (population 399).

Not only are McPherson, Arthur and Loup Counties the three least-most populous counties in the state, but they’re all in the top 10 nationwide in that metric.

But one day, hopefully, the drought will end for those towns and those counties.

Amherst had never had a Husker football player to claim until Faron Klingelhoefer walked on in 2008. The same goes for Bennington’s Andy Christensen in 2004, Bertrand’s Joey Robison in 2002, Brule’s Jeff McBride in 2000, Funk’s Kyle Larson in 1999 and Giltner’s Logan Rath in 2013.

There’s always a first time for everything.

What a legacy that would be.

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