1968 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team explained

Year:1968
Team:Nebraska Cornhuskers
Sport:football
Conference:Big Eight Conference
Short Conf:Big 8
Record:6–4
Conf Record:3–4
Head Coach:Bob Devaney
Hc Year:7th
Def Coach:George Kelly
Stadium:Memorial Stadium

The 1968 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team represented the University of Nebraska in the 1968 NCAA University Division football season. The team was coached by Bob Devaney and played their home games in Memorial Stadium in Lincoln.

The Huskers were 6–4, but had a losing record in conference at 3–4. They lost three Big 8 games at home and were shut out 47–0 at Oklahoma in the season finale. Nebraska did not play in a bowl game for the second consecutive year; the next season without a bowl was 36 years later in 2004. The home shut out against Kansas State was the last time they have been shut out at home as of 2017 season.

Following 1968, Tom Osborne was promoted to offensive coordinator and installed the I formation offense. This led to a 9–2 record in 1969 and consecutive undefeated national championship seasons in 1970 and 1971.

Schedule

[1]

Roster

[2]

Depth chart

align="right"
- Bob Best - Tom Heller
- Al Larson - David Morock
- Ken Geddes Jerry Murtaugh - Adrian Fiala Dan Kobza
-
- Dana Stephenson - John Decker
- Mike Wynn Bob Liggett Bill Hornbacher Dave Walline Sherwin Jarmon - Dennis Gutzman Tom Linstroth Ed Periard Ron Drakulich Frank Avolio
- James Hawkins - Randy Reeves
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align="left"
- Jim McFarland - Paul Topliff
- Glenn Patterson Mel Brichacek Joe Buda Joe Armstrong Ed Hansen - Dan Delaney Wally Winter Carl Ashman Gale Williams Donnie McGhee
- Tom Penney - Guy Ingels
-
- Ernie Sigler - Frank Patrick
--

Coaching staff

NameTitleFirst year
in this position
Years at Nebraska Alma mater
Bob DevaneyHead Coach19621962–72Alma
Tom OsborneOffensive assistant19641964–97Hastings
George KellyDefensive Coordinator19601960–68Notre Dame
Cletus FischerOffensive line19601960–85Nebraska
Carl SelmerOffensive line19621962–72Wyoming
Jim Ross1962–76
John MeltonTight ends, Wingbacks19731962–88Wyoming
Mike CorganRunning backs19621962–82Notre Dame
Monte KiffinGraduate assistant19661967–76Nebraska
Jack OsbergGraduate assistant19681968Augsburg

Game summaries

Wyoming

At the end of the 1st quarter, Nebraska was trailing 3-10, and struggled to catch up for much of the game. Finally, five minutes into the 4th quarter, with the assistance of the Blackshirts who had held off any further scores from the Cowboys, the Cornhuskers managed to get another touchdown to tie the game. Then, as time was running out and the Nebraska offensive effort was stalling, Nebraska PK Paul Rogers launched a 51-yard field goal through the uprights and into the stands for the win, leading to an exuberant mob of fans rushing the field in celebration.

Utah

The Cornhuskers tallied 518 yards of total offense while holding the Utes to just 138, 46 of which were on the ground, and had little trouble with Utah, holding them scoreless in Memorial Stadium.

Minnesota

It seemed like a repeat of the first game of the year, as once again Nebraska started out behind and wasn't able to catch up again until the 4th quarter, and once again Nebraska PK Paul Rogers booted the game-winning field goal at the end of the 4th quarter with just 1:32 remaining on the clock to secure the win against national co-champion Minnesota.

Kansas

The highly regarded Kansas Jayhawks had been averaging 51 points per game, yet the Blackshirts managed to bottle them up to just 23 points, though Nebraska's 13 points were not enough to get the conference-opening win. Kansas managed to escape Lincoln with a victory only by scrambling to put up two touchdowns in the final 4 minutes. This was the last time Nebraska lost to the Jayhawks until the 2005 season; they won the next 36 meetings. It also is, through the 2022 season, their last home loss to Kansas to date.

Missouri

Nebraska was severely hampered by a day of mistakes, losing four fumbles, an interception, and suffering two punt receptions muffed and recovered by Missouri. Despite the tall odds presented by these burdens, the Cornhuskers dropped the game to the Tigers by only 2 points.

Oklahoma State

The first half was scoreless as both teams struggled unsuccessfully for an edge, but Oklahoma State found a way through and scored the first 14 in the 3rd. Nebraska fought back, and once again Cornhusker PK Paul Rogers scored the game-winner off his foot with PAT in the final minute to put Nebraska ahead by 1.

Iowa State

Iowa State helped to spot Nebraska with an early 14-0 lead by losing an early fumble and never recovered from the setback. The Cyclones made a feeble late attempt, coming within 8 points before the Cornhuskers put up another field goal to finish them off.

Kansas State

Nebraska was stunned at home, at their homecoming game, when Kansas State held the Cornhuskers to just 146 total yards, 78 on the ground, and slapped Nebraska with only their second shutout under Head Coach Bob Devaney. This was the Cornhuskers last loss to the Wildcats until 1998 and their last home loss to them until 2003.

Colorado

Nebraska flashed with some vengeance in response to the previous week's shutout, running out ahead of Colorado in Boulder 22-0 with help from a 62-yard punt return touchdown, finally letting the Buffaloes on the board with just 2 minutes remaining to play.

Oklahoma

Oklahoma denied Nebraska's bid for a post-season bowl game, as the Sooners scored five touchdowns to set a new Big 8 record and handed NU its worst defeat of the Devaney era with a painful 47-0 shutout in Norman.

Rankings

See also: 1968 NCAA University Division football rankings.

Awards

[3]

AwardName(s)
All America
1st team
Joe Armstrong
All-America
honorable mention
Mel Brichacek, Ken Geddes,
Dana Stephenson
All-Big Eight
1st team
Joe Armstrong, Ken Geddes,
Dana Stephenson
All-Big Eight
2nd team
Bob Best, Joe Orduna
All-Big Eight
honorable mention
Bob Best, Mel Brichacek, Dick Davis,
Adrian Fiala, Ed Hansen, Jim Hawkins,
Al Larson, Bob Liggett, Jerry Murtaugh,
Tom Penney, Paul Rogers, Mike Wynn

1968 Team Players in the NFL (& AFL)

The 1968 Nebraska Cornhuskers seniors selected in the 1969 Common draft (NFL-AFL):[4]

Player Position Round Pick Franchise
James Hawkins 7 177 Los Angeles Rams
Dick Davis 12 306 Cleveland Browns

The 1968 Nebraska Cornhuskers juniors selected in the following year's 1970 NFL draft:[5]

Player Position Round Pick Franchise
Jim McFarland 7 164 St. Louis Cardinals
7 175 Detroit Lions
Dana Stephenson 8 183 Chicago Bears
Mike Wynn 8 206 Oakland Raiders
10 251 Green Bay Packers
Bob Liggett 15 390 Kansas City Chiefs
Mike Green 16 406 San Diego Chargers
Glenn Patterson 17 439 Dallas Cowboys

The 1968 Nebraska Cornhuskers sophomores selected in the 1971 NFL draft:[6]

Player Position Round Pick Franchise
Joe Orduna 2 49 San Francisco 49ers
3 71 Chicago Bears
Paul Rogers 8 190 Pittsburgh Steelers
Dan Schneiss 11 261 Boston Patriots

Members of the 1968 Nebraska freshman team selected in the 1972 NFL draft:[7]

Player Position Round Pick Franchise
1 11 Green Bay Packers
Jeff Kinney1 23 Kansas City Chiefs
1 24 New York Giants
5 112 New Orleans Saints
Van Brownson 8 204 Baltimore Colts
10 242 Green Bay Packers

NFL and pro players

The following 1968 Nebraska players joined a professional team as draftees or free agents.[8]

NameTeam
Dick DavisCleveland Browns
Ken GeddesLos Angeles Rams
Sherwin JarmonChicago Fire
Bob LiggettKansas City Chiefs
Jim McFarlandSt. Louis Cardinals
Joe OrdunaNew York Giants
Frank PatrickGreen Bay Packers
Frank VactorWashington Redskins

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Football - 1968 Schedule/Results . 2009-06-19 . University of Nebraska–Lincoln Athletics Department.
  2. http://www.huskers.com/SportSelect.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=100&KEY=&SPID=22&SPSID=4 Nebraska 1968 Roster
  3. http://www.huskermax.com/honors/honors_1968.html 1968 Husker Honors
  4. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/draft/1969.htm Pro Football Reference.com
  5. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/draft/1970.htm Pro Football Reference.com
  6. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/draft/1971.htm Pro Football Reference.com
  7. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/draft/1972.htm Pro Football Reference.com
  8. Web site: All Time NFL Huskers . https://web.archive.org/web/20090815013540/http://nflhuskers.com/alltime.html . 2009-08-15 . live . 2009-06-16 .