Rosemont, Ill. – The Big Ten on Monday announced the 2014 All-Big Ten teams as well as 10 postseason individual award winners. Michigan State, Minnesota and Ohio State each claimed two individual trophies, while one standout each from Iowa, Maryland, Penn State and Wisconsin earned an award.
Michigan State’s Kurtis Drummond was named the Tatum-Woodson Defensive Back of the Year, one year after former Spartan Darqueze Dennard accomplished the feat. Tony Lippett became the first Michigan State player to earn Richter-Howard Receiver of the Year honors. Minnesota’s Peter Mortell was named the Eddleman-Fields Punter of the Year, while teammate Maxx Williams earned Kwalick-Clark Tight End of the Year plaudits. It marks the first such honors for a Golden Gopher player. Ohio State’s J.T. Barrett earned the Griese-Brees Quarterback of the Year honor, marking the third straight season that a Buckeye signal caller has won the award, after Braxton Miller claimed the honor in both 2012 and 2013. The Buckeyes’ Joey Bosa was named the Smith-Brown Defensive Lineman of the Year, becoming the seventh Ohio State player to claim the award, and the first since John Simon was honored in 2012.
Iowa’s Brandon Scherff was named the Rimington-Pace Offensive Lineman of the Year, becoming the seventh Hawkeye to capture the honor and the first since Bryan Bulaga in 2009. Maryland’s Brad Craddock earned Bakken-Andersen Kicker of the Year honors in the Terrapins’ first season in the conference. Penn State’s Mike Hull was tabbed the Butkus-Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year, marking the second time in the past three seasons that a Nittany Lion linebacker has claimed the plaudit after Michael Mauti was honored in 2012. Wisconsin’s Melvin Gordon collected the Ameche-Dayne Running Back of the Year award, the third time in the past four years that a Badger running back has captured the honor, after Montee Ball won the award in 2011 and 2012.
Four Big Ten players were named repeat selections to the All-Big Ten first-team, including Iowa’s Scherff, Michigan State defensive lineman Shilique Calhoun and defensive back Kurtis Drummond and Nebraska defensive lineman Randy Gregory. Maryland’s Craddock and defensive back William Likely were first-team selections by both the coaches and media in the Terrapins’ first season in the Big Ten. Rutgers wide receiver Leonte Carroo also earned first-team plaudits from the media in the Scarlet Knights’ inaugural year as a member of the conference.
The Big Ten also recognized 14 Sportsmanship Award honorees. The student-athletes chosen are individuals who have distinguished themselves through sportsmanship and ethical behavior. These student-athletes must also be in good academic standing and have demonstrated good citizenship outside of the sports-competition setting.
The Big Ten postseason awards process is voted on by conference coaches and a select media panel and honors teams, coaches and student-athletes with individual honors that each bear the names of one or two former standouts. The Dungy-Thompson Humanitarian and Ford-Kinnick Leadership awards were announced last week, 10 individual trophies were announced Monday, and the remaining five trophy winners will be unveiled on Tuesday.
A complete list of the 2014 All-Big Ten teams and select individual award winners, along with this year’s Sportsmanship Award honorees, can be found on the attached PDF. The individual award winners announced tonight and last week also appear below.
2014 Big Ten Individual Award Winners
Griese-Brees Quarterback of the Year: J.T. Barrett, Ohio State
Named for Purdue’s Bob Griese and Drew Brees
Richter-Howard Receiver of the Year: Tony Lippett, Michigan State
Named for Wisconsin’s Pat Richter and Michigan’s Desmond Howard
Ameche-Dayne Running Back of the Year: Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin
Named for Wisconsin’s Alan Ameche and Ron Dayne
Kwalick-Clark Tight End of the Year: Maxx Williams, Minnesota
Named for Penn State’s Ted Kwalick and Iowa’s Dallas Clark
Rimington-Pace Offensive Lineman of the Year: Brandon Scherff, Iowa
Named for Nebraska’s Dave Rimington and Ohio State’s Orlando Pace
Smith-Brown Defensive Lineman of the Year: Joey Bosa, Ohio State
Named for Michigan State’s Bubba Smith and Penn State’s Courtney Brown
Butkus-Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year: Mike Hull, Penn State
Named for Illinois’ Dick Butkus and Northwestern’s Pat Fitzgerald
Tatum-Woodson Defensive Back of the Year: Kurtis Drummond, Michigan State
Named for Ohio State’s Jack Tatum and Purdue’s Rod Woodson
Bakken-Andersen Kicker of the Year: Brad Craddock, Maryland
Named for Wisconsin’s Jim Bakken and Michigan State’s Morten Andersen
Eddleman-Fields Punter of the Year: Peter Mortell, Minnesota
Named for Illinois’ Dike Eddleman and Michigan State’s Brandon Fields
Dungy-Thompson Humanitarian Award: Brian Griese, Michigan*
Named for Minnesota’s Tony Dungy and Indiana’s Anthony Thompson
Ford-Kinnick Leadership Award: Mike Hopkins, Illinois*
Named for Michigan’s Gerald Ford and Iowa’s Nile Kinnick
Eleven Nebraska players were honored by the Big Ten Conference on Monday, being named to 2014 All-Big Ten Conference football teams.
Two Huskers earned first-team All-Big Ten accolades, with three others being chosen as second-team honorees, while six players were honorable-mention all-conference choices.
Junior defensive end Randy Gregory was a first-team All-Big Ten choice by both the conference coaches and the conference media. Gregory is among the Big Ten leaders with seven sacks despite missing the majority of four games this season.
The 6-6, 245-pound Gregory had 50 total tackles, including 10 tackles for loss, while adding a team-high 16 quarterback hurries. He also blocked two field goals, broke up three passes and had an interception. This marks the second straight season Gregory has been a first-team All-Big Ten pick, making him Nebraska’s first two-time all-conference honoree on the defensive line since Ndamukong Suh in 2008 and 2009.
Gregory is joined on the coaches’ first-team squad by senior wide receiver Kenny Bell. The 6-1, 185-pound Bell led Nebraska with 717 yards on 40 receptions and his 17.9 yards per catch ranked among the conference leaders. Bell also had a team-high five touchdowns receptions, including two touchdown catches in Nebraska’s overtime victory at Iowa in the regular-season finale.
Kenny Bell
Bell became Nebraska’s all-time leader in receptions and receiving yardage earlier this season. Bell was an honorable-mention selection by the conference media. This is the third straight year Bell has been honored by the Big Ten. He was a second-team pick as a sophomore in 2012 and earned honorable-mention accolades in 2013.
Senior I-back Ameer Abdullah was a second-team All-Big Ten choice by both the coaches and the media. Abdullah ranks among the top 10 nationally in rushing yards, scoring and all-purpose yards. He finished the regular season with 1,523 rushing yards and 18 total touchdowns. He also became Nebraska’s career leader in all-purpose yards, while ranking second in Big Ten history in that category.
The Doak Walker Award finalist was joined on the second team by Minnesota running back David Cobb, while fellow Doak Walker finalists Melvin Gordon and Tevin Coleman occupied the two first-team spots.
Like Bell, Abdullah was honored for the third straight year. Abdullah was a first-team choice on both teams in 2013, after being a second-team All-Big Ten pick by the coaches in 2012.
Abdullah was also honored as Nebraska’s Sportsmanship Award Honoree.
Joining Abdullah in earning second-team honors were a pair of sophomore defenders. Defensive tackle Maliek Collins was named to the second team on the coaches’ listing, while safety Nate Gerry was a second-team choice by the media.
Collins is tied for the team lead with 12 tackles for loss, including 3.5 sacks. The Kansas City native also ranks second on the team with 14 quarterback hurries and made 40 total tackles. Gerry led the Big Ten in interceptions in conference games with five picks in eight league games. He ranked second overall on the team with 85 tackles, including 47 solo stops and seven tackles for loss. Gerry also forced a pair of fumbles, had a fumble recovery and returned a blocked field goal for a touchdown.
Six additional Huskers earned honorable-mention all-conference accolades. Players named to the coaches’ honorable-mention list include Gerry, senior linebacker Zaire Anderson, senior guard Jake Cotton, sophomore punter Sam Foltz, junior tackle Alex Lewis and senior cornerback Josh Mitchell.
The media honorable-mention list includes Anderson, Bell, Collins, Cotton, Lewis, Mitchell and senior safety Corey Cooper. Cooper was a repeat honorable-mention choice.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the NFL Players Association says the union is establishing an eight-member commission to advise it about domestic violence prevention and discipline.
In a letter sent Monday to Sen. Jay Rockefeller, the West Virginia Democrat who chairs the Senate Commerce Committee, NFLPA Executive Director DeMaurice Smith writes that “when these matters are left solely to the NFL, the process is mismanaged and often the end result has not been able to withstand outside review.”
Rockefeller’s committee is holding a hearing Tuesday about domestic violence in professional sports, with representatives of the NFL, NBA, NHL and Major League Baseball scheduled to testify. Officials from the basketball, hockey and baseball unions are also scheduled to appear.
Smith says “long-scheduled overseas travel prevented” the NFLPA from participating Tuesday.
Rosemont, Ill. – The Big Ten Conference set a new single-season record for total attendance during the 2014 football season with 6,359,218 fans attending home games. In addition, nine Big Ten schools produced increases in average attendance, including a boost of more than eight percent for Maryland and Rutgers in their first seasons as members of the conference.
The Big Ten surpassed the six-million mark in total attendance for just the third time in conference history and the third time in the last four seasons, breaking the single-season record of 6,061,514 set last season. While average attendance decreased following the addition of two 50,000-seat stadiums, Maryland and Rutgers combined to fill their stadiums to 95 percent capacity in conference matchups. The two teams combined for five sellouts in conference games this season, compared to only two sellouts in conference competition the previous four seasons.
The Terrapins saw the biggest increase in average attendance among Big Ten schools, with a 13.8 percent jump from the 2013 season for all games, including two sellouts. In Big Ten home games, Maryland filled Capital One Field at Byrd Stadium to 91 percent capacity this season. Two of the Terrapins’ four Big Ten home games drew crowds of 50,000 or more patrons, after eclipsing 50,000 people in a conference home game just once over the previous four years. In addition, Maryland’s average attendance in Big Ten road games was more than 82,000, after facing an average attendance of just over 50,000 in conference action the season before.
The Scarlet Knights ranked second in the Big Ten with an 8.8 percent increase in average attendance for all games with three sellouts. Rutgers’ conference home games were filled to 99 percent capacity at High Point Solutions Stadium. The Scarlet Knights drew crowds of more than 50,000 people three times during conference play this season, after seeing that mark achieved on only three occasions in conference home games the previous four seasons. Rutgers also played in front of an average crowd of more than 76,000 in Big Ten away games, compared to road conference attendance of less than 40,000 the previous year.
Iowa, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio State, Penn State and Wisconsin each saw average attendance increase by as much as 5.2 percent from the 2013 Big Ten football season.
The Big Ten is one of two conferences with more than two teams ranked among the top 22 in the nation in average attendance, with seven schools comprising that group. Ohio State leads the nation in average attendance at 106,296, followed by No. 3 Michigan (104,909), No. 5 Penn State (101,623), No. 10 Nebraska (91,249), No. 18 Wisconsin (79,520), No. 20 Michigan State (74,681) and No. 22 Iowa (67,512).
Earlier this season, Big Ten school attendance records fell in four consecutive weekends as Nebraska, Ohio State (twice) and Rutgers saw record crowds. In all, four Big Ten schools broke or matched single-game attendance records this season: Iowa, Nebraska, Ohio State and Rutgers.
The 2014 Big Ten Football Championship Game will feature Ohio State facing Wisconsin on Saturday, Dec. 6, at Indianapolis’ Lucas Oil Stadium and will be broadcast nationally on FOX with kickoff set for 8:17 p.m. ET. The winner will earn the Amos Alonzo Stagg Championship Trophy and a chance to play in one of the six bowls that comprise the College Football Playoff, including the Rose Bowl Game.
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The firing of Nebraska coach Bo Pelini has created an uncertain future for @FauxPelini.
Asked whether the popular parody Twitter account would live on, the man behind it tweeted to The Associated Press on Monday that “the short/honest answer right now is ‘not sure.'”
@FauxPelini has amassed 161,000 followers since being created in December 2010. The account spoofs and exaggerates the real Pelini’s no-nonsense personality and is famous for its profile picture of a sweater-wearing Pelini holding a cat.
In a nod to @FauxPelini, the coach walked out of the tunnel for the 2014 spring game hoisting a cat over his head.
The identity of the actual tweeter has not been revealed. He is known only as a Cornhuskers fan who lives in the Chicago area.
A pair of Nebraska standouts were honored by the Big Ten Conference on Monday for their performance in the Huskers’ win over Iowa.
Sophomore safety Nate Gerry was honored as the conference’s Defensive Player of the Week, while freshman punt returner De’Mornay Pierson-El was the co-Special Teams Player of the Week.
Gerry led Nebraska with a career-high 15 tackles, including 10 solo stops and 2.5 tackles for loss. Gerry also had a first-quarter interception for his fifth pick in Big Ten Conference games. Gerry’s play led a Nebraska defense that held Iowa to punts on five consecutive second-half possessions to fuel NU’s comeback.
Pierson-El was a game-changer in the punt return department. Pierson-El had three punt returns for 134 yards, all in the second half. His 42-yard punt return set up a Nebraska touchdown to cut the deficit to 24-21. Pierson-El followed with an 80-yard punt return for a score to give Nebraska a 28-24 advantage early in the fourth quarter. Pierson-El has a nation-leading 589 punt return yards this season, the most by any player in the FBS ranks since 2008.
Pierson-El’s honor was his second of the season. He was also named Special Teams Player of the Week following his performance at Fresno State, which included an 86-yard punt return for a touchdown.
The Big Ten Conference will announce its all-conference teams and individual award winners this evening, with BTN providing coverage of the announcement beginning at5 p.m. CT.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Peyton Manning threw two touchdown passes, Connor Barth was perfect on five field-goal attempts and the Denver Broncos beat the Kansas City Chiefs 29-16 on Sunday night to remain alone in first place in the AFC West.
C.J. Anderson added 168 yards rushing and caught a 15-yard touchdown pass, and Demaryius Thomas also had a TD grab to help the Broncos (9-3) beat Kansas City for the sixth straight time.
Alex Smith threw for 153 yards and two touchdowns for the Chiefs (7-5), the second of them to Jamaal Charles to make it 26-16 early in the fourth quarter. But Smith’s pass on the 2-point try fell incomplete, and the Broncos added another field goal to put the game away.
The victory kept Denver a game up on San Diego in the division race.
Opening Statement
“Thank you all for being here today. Last night after consulting with Chancellor (Harvey) Perlman, I made the decision that our university needs new leadership in our football program, and I informed Coach (Bo) Pelini of my decision this morning. Careful consideration and contemplation went into the decision process, and I’m well aware of the short-term impact on our student-athletes. But in the end, this is what’s best for the university. Certainly the results of our games this season and in previous seasons played a significant role in my decision. But whenever I evaluate a head coach, I consider a number of factors both on and off the field beyond the outcomes of games. Let me say this. The people of Nebraska deserve not only high standards and expectations, but they deserve seeing our people and our teams reach them. I indicated during my introductory press conference that we will compete for Big Ten and national championships, and we will do so with class, integrity, sportsmanship and with a commitment to our student-athletes. I believe the action taken today is in line with that vision. Our football student-athletes had the weekend off as many of you know, and left campus to return home. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to inform them in person, so I did so by a written communication this morning, and will be following up with them tonight. Nebraska has some of the finest young men and women of character in all of college sports, and I’m confident they will continue to work hard in the classroom, compete with class and make us all proud. Barney Cotton is a Husker through-and-through, and serves as our associate head coach. Barney and I spoke this morning, and he has agreed to serve as our interim head coach and will work with our other assistant coaching staff members to prepare our wonderful team for a bowl game. Coach Cotton is a man of integrity and a great teacher of the game of football, and I know he will do great things moving forward to put us in a positive situation before we get a new leader in place. I will work diligently in the coming days to find the absolute best fit for the University of Nebraska. But I will not comment on or speculate about the process or the people. We have the best fan base in all of college sports. A legion of generous supporters, abundant resources and first-class facilities. We compete in the premier athletic conference, the Big Ten. We have tremendous student-athletes and we have a world-class education to offer them. Therefore I am confident we will find a great coach to lead our storied program. Until then, our focus, my focus will be on the young men in our football program and providing them with a positive support and attention they deserve as they prepare for a bowl game.”
On the buyout of Pelini’s contract
“The approximate liquidated damages of Coach Pelini’s contract is about $7.9 (million). Certainly there’s mitigation in there should he find other employment. Our assistant coaches are about in the four (million dollar) range. They have another year on their deals. They have mitigation as well. I imagine they will either find employment here or elsewhere in short term. The funds will come from operational reserves in the department. We pay those liquated damages on a month-to-month basis.”
On off the field issues that led to the decision
“It’s not so much the decision. It’s the consequence of the decision and our wonderful student-athletes and the impact on them and our great coaches and their families. Relative to what went into the decision I would say is totality of my review in the two years I have been here. There’s a lot of things that I look at. Outside of wins and losses, academics, leadership, the way in which we are teaching and our student-athletes are improving. During my review this past year, and at the beginning of the year when I set expectations, and I set standards, I had that in mind. At the end of the day, I didn’t see enough improvement in areas that were important for us to move forward to play championship-caliber football. We just for whatever reason weren’t good enough in the games that mattered against championship-quality caliber opponents. I didn’t see that changing at the end of the day. Coach Pelini, I have great respect for him. He’s a good football coach and a good man. It wasn’t a lack of effort by him or his staff or our wonderful players. I think new leadership was in order. We look forward to heading in that direction.”
On the standards he set going into the season
“I’m not going to go into a public review, a personnel review. I have too much respect for our coaches and the difficult jobs they do. As I just said, there are standards and expectations at Nebraska that are high both on and off the field. And although we did win a bunch of games, we didn’t win the games that mattered the most. I think we gave Coach ample time, ample resources and ample support to get that done. Now we are headed in a different direction.”
On Nebraska’s national reputation
“We have wonderful, committed, high character young men in our program, staff, coaches. Those are core values for us. I think everybody knows our five core values. At the end of the day, that’s what Nebraska is all about. We’re humble, hard-working, hungry people, and we are prideful. And we are going to move in that direction.”
On if he asked Pelini to make changes in his staff in order to stay on
“No, I would not do that. I have great confidence in our coaches and you guys know me full well relative to that, I give them great latitude to do their jobs as they see fit, give them the resources that they need and get out of the way and provide support when it’s needed. I think we’ve done that. I think Coach understood that as well.”
On how he communicated with Pelini
“I met with Coach Pelini this morning in my office for about 20 minutes. It was a cordial, professional conversation. I like Bo. Bo is a good guy and again a good coach. At the end of the day, I think we both agreed it was best to go in different directions.”
On if Pelini agreed also
“You’d have to ask him that.”
On if Pelini gave him a reason to believe he agreed with it
“After I told him we were going a different direction, I think there was agreement that that was probably a good idea.”
On if previous head coaching experience is part of the expectations for the job
“As I said, I’m not going to speculate about the search process moving forward, the characteristics or the people. Up to this point, my total focus has been on this program and our young men. I don’t want to do a disservice to them by thinking about what’s coming next already. I want to do the right thing by this staff, by these players and their families. There will be a time in earnest later tonight for me to start thinking about the next leader of our program. I don’t want to get into that right now.”
On off the field concerns
“I think in the totality of the circumstances the best I would say is we didn’t meet expectations both on and off the field. Getting into any specifics wouldn’t be something that I’m about. Again, I think there was great effort by everyone in this program to do the right thing and well-intended. In my opinion, we didn’t get to where we needed to be. We’re going to go a different direction.”
On when he made the decision
“Last night it crystalized for me and I contacted Chancellor (Harvey) Perlman to discuss it with him. He was supportive of my decision to go a different direction. I notified coach this morning.”
On if the Board of Regents was included on the decision
“I did not. That was Chancellor Perlman who handled that on his end.”
On his win-loss standards
“What I would verbalize is what I already said. We have high standards and expectations, and that’s to play championship football. Whatever record puts us in position to win a championship, I’m good with.”
On if the way the team lost was a factor
“It certainly was a factor.”
On if the assistants will be on for the bowl game
“We asked them. After I met with Coach Pelini, we notified the coaches to come in and I had the opportunity to meet with all of them. As we had communicated with the coaches, I sent out a note to our student-athletes. We wanted them to hear it from us. We have asked our coaches to stay on and serve us either through the bowl game or until the new leadership gets in place and makes decisions that way. As I told them this morning, I have great admiration and respect for them and their families. Nebraska does things the right way. We are going to do it right with them and we are going to be supportive of them, and I think they will do a terrific job preparing our young men for the bowl game.”
On if the assistants will recruit in December
“On campus.”
On if he has contracted a public relations firm on search team for the process
“I have not.”
On if he intends to
“No.”
On if he will do this search by himself
“Yes.”
On what mistakes of the previous athletic director’s decisions in this situation he would like to avoid
“I’m not going to sit in judgment of what someone before me has done. I’m looking forward. I’ve been doing this awhile and I have great faith and confidence in my approach. We will continue to analyze as we are moving forward. To make any sort of judgments about what anyone has done in the past is not my style and quite frankly isn’t the right thing to talk about.”
On if he is aware of Steve Pederson’s search in 2003
“What I would say is what I just said. I’m looking forward. These are difficult jobs that we have and difficult decisions that we make with a lot of different factors involved with them. I’ll leave it at that.”
On how important it is to hire someone with ties to the Nebraska program
“Good question. I’m going to respectfully decline to respond to that question for obvious reasons.”
On selling the program to fans
“We have great fans. I know that everyone wants to win every game and be competitive in those games that matter and win championships. I felt great support. I felt great support in the building. I lead with that. I lead with a positive manner. I lead with core values. The language of our people in this building is good and they are supportive of the folks on the second floor and our student-athletes. Are there folks out there that are disappointed from time to time? Absolutely. You guys write about it every day. Am I concerned about our brand and pleasing our fans and especially those ones that want to do it the right way and in a positive way and keeping the stands full? Yeah, those are all things you need to keep in consideration. But there wasn’t one factor for me. It was the totality of my review over the last couple years. As I’ve described to you guys, my process is pretty strategic. It’s pretty disciplined. It’s pretty measured. It’s very inclusive. It’s very thorough. I do these reviews and when I sit down with our coaches and talk to them about what the vision is and what we expect. And I do that so we can get on the same page and agree that the resources are appropriate, and that I’m here and we’re here to help. But at the end of the day, they are going to run the program the way they want to run it and we are going to sit down and hold each other accountable for it. Hopefully that answers your question.”
On how aware coaches were made of the expectations
“I think all of our coaches and staff members for that matter including our student-athletes understand the core of our expectations and our vision. Relative to our head football coach and what he was communicating to our assistants and that sort of thing – I think that’s best to ask them. I think we were pretty clear about what it was we were looking for. And that’s to recruit high character kids, who are seeking an education at a world-class institution. We want to do things the right way. At the end of the day, our coaches understand that pursuing championships is what we do, and being competitive in those games that matter is important. You guys have talked about it a bunch and you’ve written after games about their feelings. Every time you come away from those interviews, they are well-intended people who are trying to put our young people in a position to be successful. For whatever reason, we weren’t able to win enough games that mattered.”
On how he unites the fan base after a firing
“Communicate. I am compassionate about that. This isn’t a day of celebration for me. We have a lot of really good young people that are in our program that are hurting—and I get that. My focus needs to be on that at this point and to be upfront with them, and to be there for them. At the end of the day—hopefully they understand and appreciate what they have here at Nebraska and the education they are getting here at Nebraska. I am fully aware of that, I played this game and I played championship-level-caliber football and I understand how much we love our coaches.”
On what his message is to fans that feel uncertain of him
“What I would say is—is we had a lot of uncertainty where we were a couple days ago. So there was as much uncertainty in our program and where we were going as there probably is now, what is next? So hopefully folks have faith in me to do the right thing.”
On if he worries about losing 2015 recruiting class, if so, does it impact timetable of decision
“First and foremost my concern is with our kids in our program and making sure they are mentored and led and pursue their degree; that is the most important thing we do here. Recruiting is important, and we will honor any commitments we have made, and we would hope those young people have looked at Nebraska as a place to get an education and play football at the highest level. Those things will take care of itself, in time, but we will be very nurturing and supporting in that environment. Our assistant coaches along with Barney Cotton will manage that (recruiting) from campus.”
On why his evaluation is different than 365 days ago
“I think for me it was time to get a sense of what we were doing and where we were going—and to be patient. There were resources that our football program wanted that they didn’t have—so I wanted to provide those. I think you guys are fully aware of what we have done from a resource perspective. I owed it to coach, again, he is a good man who has always wanted to do the right thing and so I wanted to listen and provide the support—and I was hopeful we could turn this thing around the corner. I think the easiest thing to do would have been to go in a different direction. Sometimes I don’t take the easy road and that is ok.”
On how financially competitive he will be for the upcoming coaching staff
“I am very blessed to be here at the University of Nebraska. We will do what is necessary to compete at the highest level. I have said this before, resources are not the question here at Nebraska. That does not mean we are not going to be responsible. I have seen people spend a lot of money and not do very much winning. We are going to get it right at the end of the day.”
On if there is a willingness to pay whatever is necessary for whatever coach he thinks is best
“Number one, I think we are doing that right now, and number two, yes. We do what is necessary and reasonable, and I think the evidence is proof of that.”
On what he says to college football changing from the 1980’s-90’s and how that relates to his decision
“My response to that is Nebraska has everything it needs to be successful at the highest level. We can go back and analyze the 80’s and 90’s and all that other sort of stuff but that is not going to help us out today. I think we are positioned to play championship-caliber football here at the University of Nebraska. Like I said, we have a world-class institution with an incredible education to offer for perspective students and current. Facilities are not the question, you guys get around a lot of different places and the way we treat our kids, Is unbelievable. If anyone has taken the time to review the end report that I just sent out, where we went chapter and verse on what we do, here at Nebraska and the economic impact that associates with that. I would hope that will open people’s eyes up to what the possibilities are. I am not going to lower our standards, and I don’t think Nebraskan’s want that. Is it a different day? Absolutely. It is a different day for everybody. At the end of the day, what are you going to do? How are you going to manage going forward, and I feel comfortable that we are positioned with the right leader to go where we want to go.”
On if Coach Pelini ever voiced frustration this year because of a lack of support
“No, and I think Bo has been pretty public in the last couple months on how supportive we have been. I am appreciative of that, we will continue to do that. At the end of the day, the support comes down to the level that matters—and that is our student-athletes. We are bringing them here to shape their lives and get them an education and make them better people as they move along. To me, putting resources that way is a good thing and we are fortunate to have resources to do it.”
On if is view drastically change in the last month
“No, I have been optimistic and supportive all the way through, and I have been pretty disciplined about waiting until the last regular season game. Generally I like to wait until after the bowl game to make any sort of observations. I have always felt that we had an opportunity to compete and we have provided what is necessary to do that.”
On if the team has the talent level to compete at a championship level
“That is not my expertise, I would hope we do. I see it from a far. I think our coaches have obviously have seen that and that Is why they brought these young men into our program. At the end of the day, I think we have kids in our program that are capable of winning championships.”
On if he notified Tom Osborne
“After I spoke with Coach Pelini I had one of my assistants give him a heads up, because I had some other people I needed to talk to within the staff. But followed up and left two messages to coach so hopefully I do have a chance to catch up with him in the next day or so. I know he is heading to Dallas for the college football selection show deal, but I do hope to follow up with him soon. I did not talk to him before I made the decision.”
On why last night he decided it was time, why not after the Minnesota game
“The test had been taken, so it was time for me to sit down and reflect and be comprehensive and inclusive in my review. So I want to continue to be disciplined that way.”
On why he did not wait until after the bowl game
“To be fair to our coaches and staff members and give them as much notice as possible so they could possibly either find other employment, or with our new leader catch on here. I am very sensitive to them and their families and trying to do right that way.”
On if championship caliber football is his number one priority
“It is not my number one priority, I have a lot of priorities. Our number one priority is to educate our young people. Along the way, we want to compete for championships. We want to do it the right way, according to our core values in the way the Nebraska faithful would want us too. There is not one priority, there are a bunch of them. But the key one, is to educate—that is what we do.”
On how close he came to making a change last season
“Not really close.”
On how much concern was over sellout streak and boosters
“I didn’t have a lot of concern there, I just continued to be optimistic, as I said earlier, our people are really positive and want to support what it is we do. Hopefully they are in it for the right reasons and that is to provide unconditional support for our student-athletes. I felt good all along the support we are getting. Certainly the uncertainty has lingered, on both sides of the fence. Hopefully we can all come together when the dust settles and continue to strive forward in the same direction for the same thing.”
On if there was an energy that did not fall in line with the overall vision
“I really haven’t been overly judgmental of that. My vibe is you, our fans, our coaches and students and want to do the right thing and head in the right direction. Often times we stray away from that a little bit. My focus is on trying to lead in a positive manner with great values and not be overly judgmental of those sort of things. I am real excited to look towards the future.”
On how much fan input mattered
“It is important, it is certainly a factor that you need to consider. I try to separate myself from all that and be disciplined and give equal weight along the way. I am not overly persuaded by the negativity.”
On what he wants people to know about Bo Pelini
“I think we need to thank Coach Pelini for the service has provided to the University of Nebraska and the sacrifices that he has made.”
On if the win over Iowa play any factor in his decision
“Sure it did, our kids showed great character and resiliency in a tough environment. So it certainly did play a factor but in the final analysis, I had to evaluate where Iowa was.”
On if he talked to Pelini afterwards
“I told him we have great kids in our program and that I appreciate the way they handled their business.”
On the final analysis, why was where Iowa was a factor
“As I said earlier, as I looked back at the outcomes, I am trying to look at who are championship level football teams in that moment. How competitive were we in those games. We were not playing for a conference championship and neither was Iowa. And I have great respect to Iowa, it is a wonderful institution, and a great football program. But in the final analysis, there record was where it was and our record was where it was.”
Alabama is No. 1 in The Associated Press college football poll for the first time this season, replacing undefeated Florida State in a vote that was about as close as it could get.
The Crimson Tide (11-1) received 25 of a possible 59 first-place votes from the media panel and 1,426 points. The Seminoles (12-0) have 29 first-place votes and 1,423 points.
The last time the No. 2 team had more first-place votes than the No. 1 team this late in the season was Nov. 25, 1968, when No. 1 Ohio State had 21 1/2 first-places votes to Southern California’s 24 1/2.
Alabama is No. 1 for the 72nd time overall and first since it lost last year’s Iron Bowl. The Tide beat Auburn 55-44 on Saturday.
It is also the seventh straight season the Crimson Tide has been No. 1 at some point, the longest such streak since Miami from 1986-92.
The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 29, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
Record
Pts
Pv
1. Alabama (25)
11-1
1,426
2
2. Florida St. (29)
12-0
1,423
1
3. Oregon (5)
11-1
1,391
3
4. TCU
10-1
1,274
6
5. Baylor
10-1
1,243
5
6. Ohio St.
11-1
1,192
7
7. Michigan St.
10-2
1,048
10
8. Arizona
10-2
1,027
12
9. Kansas St.
9-2
995
11
10. Mississippi St.
10-2
944
4
11. Wisconsin
10-2
910
14
12. Georgia Tech
10-2
823
16
13. Mississippi
9-3
753
18
14. Missouri
10-2
740
17
15. Georgia
9-3
606
8
16. UCLA
9-3
512
9
17. Arizona St.
9-3
495
13
18. Oklahoma
8-3
485
20
19. Clemson
9-3
418
23
20. Auburn
8-4
358
15
21. Louisville
9-3
346
24
22. Boise St.
10-2
265
25
23. LSU
8-4
145
NR
24. Utah
8-4
79
NR
25. Nebraska
9-3
64
NR
Others receiving votes: Southern Cal 61, Minnesota 47, Duke 22, Marshall 22, Memphis 21, Colorado St. 18, Air Force 7, Stanford 4, West Virginia 4, N. Illinois 3, UCF 3, Cincinnati 1.
University of Nebraska Director of Athletics Shawn Eichorst has dismissed Head Football Coach Bo Pelini effective immediately.
Eichorst will be available to the media today at 1:00 p.m. in the West Memorial Stadium 6th floor media area.
Statement from Director of Athletics Shawn Eichorst:
“Earlier this morning, I informed Coach Bo Pelini of our decision to move forward in a new direction. Coach Pelini served our University admirably for seven years and led our football program’s transition to the Big Ten Conference. We wish Coach Pelini and his wonderful family all the best and thank him for his dedicated service to the University.”
Statement from Chancellor Harvey Perlman:
“I fully support Shawn’s decision to make a change in the leadership of our football program, and wish Bo and his family all of the best. I am confident that Shawn will find the best coach, teacher and fit for this University and for our football program.”
Hired as Nebraska’s 28th coach on December 2, 2007, Bo Pelini has posted a 67-27 record in his seven years at the helm of the Husker Football Program. The University of Nebraska supports 24 varsity athletics sports, including its football program which has enjoyed success at the highest level winning five national championships, 43 conference championships and 874 victories since 1890 to rank fourth all-time in victories.