Book Description
Theres nothing quite like wearing the red and white of Nebraska football, and only the chosen few can comprehend the feelings of pride, loyalty, and honor that define the experience. What It Means to Be a Husker captures that feeling through first-person accounts and recollections from legendary coach Tom Osborne and the greatest players ever to wear the Nebraska uniform.
From the Inside Flap
On November 27, 1890, Dr. Langdon Frothingham, a Harvard graduate, couldnt possibly have known what he was creating when he took a group of University of Nebraska boys to Omaha to play the relatively new game of football. That day his Lincoln boys scored 10 points and those from the Omaha YMCA team scored none. From such simple beginnings, University of Nebraska football was born. Those who played it over the next decade were known by such names as the Rattlesnake Boys, the Antelopes, and the Bugeaters. In 1900 they became known as the Cornhuskers. And for the next century and beyond, they became the state of Nebraskas most enduring passion. Playing in front of college footballs finest fans, otherwise known as the famed Sea of Red, those who became Huskers captured their states attention for the next 100 yearsperhaps more so than any college football team in the country. Is it any wonder that historic Memorial Stadium has been sold out for each and every game since 1962? That amounts to more than 260 games and countingthe nations longest such streak. Coached by legendary men such as Bob Devaney and Tom Osborne, the Cornhuskers have built a rich football tradition highlighted by five national championships, almost 100 All-Americans, and the nations longest consecutive bowl game streak, dating to 1969. What It Means to Be a Husker chronicles the dreams, thoughts, and stories of the young men who have made University of Nebraska football a large part of their lives. They arrived in Lincoln as wide-eyed young men, curious and perhaps doubtful as to whether they would be able to contribute to the rich Husker football tradition. By the time their playing days were finished, through hard work, determination, and unparalleled desire, they accomplished all-conference and All-American honors. Three even won college footballs highest accoladethe coveted Heisman Trophy. Off the field they earned the highest graduation rate and produced more Academic All-Americans than any school in major college football history. And they became heroes to the people of the state of Nebraska. From star running back Glenn Presnell in the twenties to quarterback Eric Crouch more than eight decades later, these are the men who know best what it means to be a Husker. Dr. Tom Osborne is the state of Nebraskas finest ambassador. As head coach at the University of Nebraska from 1973 to 1997, he compiled an incredible 255493 record that included national championships in 1994, 1995, and 1997 before his retirement from the sidelines. Osborne was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1998. A Hastings, Nebraska, native, he serves in the U.S. House of Representatives for the states third district.
About the Author
Jeff Snook is a freelance author who has written about college football for more than 20 years. A native of Ashland, Ohio, he graduated from The Ohio State University School of Journalism in 1982. He resides in West Palm Beach, Florida. This is his fifth book.
What It Means to Be a Husker FROM OUR EDITORS
U.S. congressman Tom Osborne learned the ropes in an arena even more competitive than the House of Representatives: Before he went to Washington, he served 25 years as Nebraska's head football coach, winning 83 percent of his games. Osborne's record was almost incomparable: During every year of his long tenure, the Huskers achieved a bowl game berth. In What It Means to Be a Husker, this former NFL player reflects on Nebraska's greatest gridiron performers, including dozens of all-Americans.