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Omaha, Omaha

Peyton-Manning-OmahaOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Peyton Manning can’t quit shouting about Nebraska’s largest city.

The Denver Broncos quarterback used the word “Omaha” loudly and often during Sunday’s NFL playoff win over the San Diego Chargers. Its meaning, if there is one, is known only to the Broncos.

It provided unexpected publicity for the city of 427,000, which is perhaps best known as the home of billionaire Warren Buffett. Omaha was a trending topic on Twitter during the game. By one count, Manning uttered “Omaha” 44 times.

Greater Omaha Chamber of Commerce president and CEO David Brown says he wants to explore the possibility of hiring Manning to shoot a promotional ad for Omaha, though the quarterback’s fee might be prohibitive.

NFL: 2 Players Violated Concussion Protocol

nfl_logo2011-medBOSTON (AP) — Two players violated league concussion protocol during last weekend’s wild-card games, according to a letter sent by the NFL’s head, neck and spine committee chairmen to all team doctors and trainers.

In a document obtained by The Associated Press, Drs. Hunt Batjer and Richard Ellenbogen said one player re-entered the game and another refused to leave the sideline.

The doctors did not identify the players, but one was Green Bay tackle David Bakhtiari, who went into the game for an extra-point try despite being examined for a concussion and not cleared. The other player was Saints cornerback Keenan Lewis, who remained on the sideline but did not get back on the field.

“On two occasions last weekend, and contrary to the advice of the team medical staffs, players who had been diagnosed with a concussion and therefore declared ineligible for play nonetheless refused to leave the sidelines as required by league concussion protocols,” the letter said. “In one case, the player went back onto the field for one play before being removed from the game.”

ConcussionThe doctors found “no fault” in how the team medical staffs conducted themselves.

“If a player refuses to follow your advice and leave the sidelines after being diagnosed with a concussion, we recommend that the head athletic trainer seek assistance from the player’s position coach (or another member of the coaching staff) or from another team official to remove the player from the sidelines as soon as possible,” the letter said.

The NFL’s Madden Rule requires a player diagnosed with a concussion to be taken to the locker room or another quiet location.

The Saints and Packers declined comment. The NFL Players Association did not immediately respond to a message from the AP seeking comment.

No fines will be imposed for the violations.

Bakhtiari’s season is over because Green Bay lost to San Francisco. But Lewis’ Saints are playing Saturday at Seattle and he has been practicing.

Batjer and Ellenbogen noted in the letter how players may resist being kept out of the game, particularly during the postseason.

“But (the rule) is an important element of the league’s protocol and intended to safeguard the player’s well-being and enhance his ability to recover from his injury,” they wrote.

Abdullah to Come Back for Senior Season

Ameer-Abdullah-Nebraska-Huskers-FootballNebraska junior running back Ameer Abdullah has decided to come back to Lincoln for his senior season with the Huskers football team.

Abdullah just finished a season where he was named third-team All-American by the Associated Press and racked up 1,690 yards rushing, 232 yards receiving and scored a total of  11 touchdowns.

Abdullah said in a statement that he took into account a lot of factors to make his decision, including his family’s economic status, the fact that his older siblings have degrees, his possible draft position and how long an NFL career typically lasts.

Statements from both Abdullah and Nebraska head coach Bo Pelini can be seen below.

Statement from Nebraska Junior I-Back Ameer Abdullah:

I would like to start off by thanking everyone for their patience as I reached this decision. I cannot begin to tell you how truly thankful I am for the Husker coaching staff, my teammates, and the Nebraska fans. My time here at Nebraska has been memorable and more than I could have ever hoped. It is truly an honor to play for this program.

As you know, since the midway point the season I have been asked, repeatedly, whether I would return for my senior season. In reaching my decision I have had to consider a number of factors such as my family’s economic condition, my projected draft position, and my long term success, not just in football, but in life in general. In order to fully understand my decision one must know who I am and where I come from.

I come from a very modest upbringing. As the youngest of my parents’ nine children, I have had to fight for just about everything I have gotten. Despite these apparent obstacles, my parents were able to instill in their children the importance of family, education, and taking advantage of life’s many opportunities.

In holding true to these values, all of my siblings have completed their college education with many of them even going on to obtain advanced degrees. Despite my family’s tradition of completing its college education, I find myself in a very unique situation of having to decide between pursing my dream of playing in the National Football League and breaking from my family’s tradition of completing our education.

While it may be true that none of my siblings were presented with the possibility of playing professional sports, it is equally true that the average NFL career, because of the violent nature of the sport, is less than five years. In analyzing these truths, I have come to realize that life is bigger than football, and that my chances of long-term success in life will be greatly enhanced by completing my college education. Although I have always wanted to play in the NFL, at this time I would like to formally announce my intentions of returning to Nebraska for my senior season.

If playing in the NFL is truly in God’s plans for me, then God will again present this opportunity to me after I complete my college education.

Statement from Head Coach Bo Pelini:

I know Ameer was very thoughtful about his decision and, as you would expect with Ameer, he has handled this the right way. As I have told Ameer and other players who have had to make this same choice, I fully support whatever decision they make, and am willing to help in any way I possibly can.

Ameer comes from a great family, has great character and is a great leader in our program. He stands for all the right things as a student-athlete, and I know it is important for him to leave the University of Nebraska with a degree.

We look forward to having Ameer represent the Nebraska football program for another season. Ameer has the opportunity to leave a legacy at Nebraska that will put him among the all-time greats to play here. He is a young man that is deserving of being a leading candidate for the Heisman Trophy and other national awards in 2014.

Suh, David Named First-Team AP All-Pro

Ndamukong Suh
Ndamukong Suh

Nebraska greats Lavonte David and Ndamukong Suh were each chosen by the Associated Press as All-Pro first-team selections on Friday.

The former Blackshirts were among a group of 25 players to earn first-team All-Pro honors on Friday. Nebraska was one of only four schools with two or more first-team selections, including Texas and Tennessee with three each and Wisconsin who also had two selections. Nebraska was the only school with a pair of first-team defensive players.

In his fourth season with the Detroit Lions, Suh earned All-Pro honors for the third time. He was also a first-team selection in 2010, while earning second-team accolades in 2012. This season, Suh made 49 tackles including 5.5 sacks for the Lions.

In his second season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, David has emerged as one of the league’s most complete defenders. David ranked sixth in the NFL in tackles with 144, including 106 solo tackles and six sacks. David also had five interceptions, the second-most among all linebackers in the NFL and his 15 passes defended ranked fourth among linebackers.

David and Suh were both standout defensive performers for Nebraska under Head Coach Bo Pelini. Suh was the Associated Press Player of the Year in 2009 and won the Lombardi, Outland, Nagurski and Bednarik awards while finishing fourth in the Heisman voting. David was the Big Ten Linebacker of the Year and a first-team All-American in 2011, while finishing his career with 285 tackles to rank fourth in school history.

ESPN Radio 1410’s College Football Bowl Schedule

fox-footballThe following is the schedule for ESPN Radio 1410’s 2013-14 College Football Bowl Schedule for games that will be broadcast live.

Monday, December 23- Beef O’Brady’s St. Petersburg Bowl- East Carolina 37 Ohio 20

Tuesday, December 24- Sheraton Hawaii Bowl- Oregon State 38 Boise State 23

Thursday, December 26- San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl- Utah State 21 Northern Illinois 14

Friday, December 27- Texas Bowl- Syracuse 21 Minnesota 17

Friday, December 27- Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl- Washington 31 BYU 16

Saturday, December 28- New Era Pinstripe Bowl- Notre Dame 29 Rutgers 16

Saturday, December 28- Belk Bowl- North Carolina 39 Cincinnati 17

Saturday, December 28- Russell Athletic Bowl- Louisville 36 Miami 9

Saturday, December 28- Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl- Kansas State 31 Michigan 14

Monday, December 30- Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl- Navy 24 Middle Tennessee 6

Monday, December 30- National University Holiday Bowl- Texas Tech 37 Arizona State 23

Tuesday, December 31- AutoZone Liberty Bowl- Mississippi State 44 Rice 7

Tuesday, December 31- Chick-fil-A Bowl- Texas A&M 52 Duke 48

Wednesday, January 1- Capital One Bowl- South Carolina 34 Wisconsin 24

Wednesday, January 1- Rose Bowl- Michigan State 24 Stanford 20

Wednesday, January 1- Tostitos Fiesta Bowl- Central Florida 52 Baylor 42

Thursday, January 2- Allstate Sugar Bowl- Oklahoma 45 Alabama 31

Monday, January 6- BCS National Championship Game- Florida State vs. Auburn- 6:00 PM

Nebraska Beats No. 23 Georgia 24-19 in Gator Bowl

nebraska_helmetJACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Tommy Armstrong Jr. connected with Quincy Enunwa for two touchdowns, including a 99-yarder in the third quarter, and Nebraska held on to beat No. 23 Georgia 24-19 in the rain-soaked Gator Bowl on Wednesday.

Playing in their 50th bowl, the Cornhuskers (9-4) ended a four-game losing streak against teams from the Southeastern Conference. The streak included a 45-31 loss to Georgia in the Capital One Bowl last season.

The rematch was much different.

Nebraska did a solid job against running back Todd Gurley, who ran for 125 yards and a touchdown last year. Gurley finished with 86 yards on the ground.

Gurley was more effective in the passing game, catching seven passes for 97 yards and a score. His 25-yard score on the first play of the fourth quarter cut Nebraska’s lead to 24-19.

But the Huskers stopped Georgia (8-5) twice on fourth down in the closing minutes.

Huskers Visit Jacksonville Hospital

nebraska_helmetJacksonville, Fla. – Following the Nebraska football team’s final practice in preparation of Wednesday’s Gator Bowl with the No. 23 Georgia Bulldogs, members of the team visited the Wolfson Children’s Hospital in downtown Jacksonville.

The visit provided an opportunity for the children in the hospital to meet role models and was an ideal way for the players from both Nebraska and Georgia to lift the spirits of local hospitalized children.

Wolfson Children’s Hospital is also the beneficiary of the Gator Bowl VyStar 5K Run that is scheduled at 1:00 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 31, at the Jacksonville Landing.

The Huskers will go through a final walkthrough tomorrow before meeting the Bulldogs at 11 a.m. (CT) on Wednesday, Jan. 1, at EverBank Field. The game is scheduled for a national-broadcast on ESPN2.

Check out the Huskers’ official FacebookTwitter and Instagram account for photos and videos throughout the Huskers stay in Jacksonville.

TD Run by 7-Year-Old Voted Top Nebraska Story

Jack-Hoffman-Nebraska-Football-ESPYOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A touchdown run by a 7-year-old boy with cancer has been voted by Associated Press newspaper and broadcaster members as the top Nebraska news story for 2013.

The 69-yard scamper by little Jack Hoffman occurred during the spring intrasquad game. Jack’s pluck and the players’ aid captured the hearts of Nebraska football fans and people who saw a YouTube video that’s received nearly 8.4 million viewings. The video was played over and over on national television and it won an ESPY award as the “Best Moment.”

In October Jack’s father, Andy Hoffman, said an MRI test showed that the cancer was in remission. The encouraging news was tempered by warnings from the boy’s doctors, his dad said: More than half of all kids in Jack’s situation have relapses.

Finishing second in the voting was the resignation of Lt. Gov. Rick Sheehy after revelations that he made thousands of calls to women other than his wife on a state-issued cellphone. The calls were revealed after the Omaha World-Herald reviewed his phone records.

University of Nebraska Regent Lavon Heidemann was sworn into office as the state’s 39th lieutenant governor less than two weeks after Sheehy resigned. The former state senator had to vacate his seat on the university’s governing board.

U.S. Sen. Mike Johanns’ decision to not seek a second term finished third in the voting. He announced Feb. 18 that he would not run for re-election in 2014, saying he wanted a “quieter time” to focus on his family following a busy political career that included stints as governor and President George W. Bush’s agriculture secretary. Republican candidates to replace him include Omaha banker Sid Dinsdale, Omaha attorney Bart McLeay, former Nebraska State Treasurer Shane Osborn and Midland University President Ben Sasse.

No Democrat has yet publicly declared his or her candidacy. Jim Jenkins, a central Nebraska cattle rancher, is running as a nonpartisan candidate, but he previously identified as a Democrat.

Fourth place in the AP members’ voting was the October blizzard that decimated cattle herds in westernNebraska ranching country.

Finishing fifth was the confirmation of former Nebraska U.S. Sen. Chuck Hagel to become secretary of defense in the Democratic administration of President Barack Obama.

The tornado that struck the northeast Nebraska community of Wayne in early October finished sixth in the voting. The twister caused millions of dollars in damage and several dozen jobs at a mattress pad company that has chosen not to reopen its damaged plant. No one died in the storm, and the injuries reported were minor.

Two stories tied for seventh in the AP voting: The decision to build a new Central Nebraska Veterans Home in Kearney got the same number of votes as the arrest of an Indiana doctor in the slayings of four Omaha people tied to a Creighton University medical school program.

The doctor, Anthony Garcia, had been fired from the program more than a decade ago. He is charged with fatally stabbing Thomas Hunter, the 11-year-old son of Creighton University pathologist William Hunter, and the family’s housekeeper, Shirlee Sherman, in 2008. Garcia also is charged in the May deaths of Creighton pathologist Roger Brumback and his wife, Mary.

The state’s decision to replace the outdated Grand Island home with a new facility in Kearney was greeted with howls from Grand Island. A Grand Island/Hall County group has prepared its own proposal for upgrading the Grand Island home and says it could save 40 percent of the state’s proposed cost.

In eighth place on the AP members’ list was the Keystone XL pipeline. In January the governor approved a pipeline route through the state. The Obama administration is still considering whether to approve the project.

No. 9 in the balloting was the looming governor’s race. Gov. Dave Heineman must step down after next year because of term limits. The race has taken a series of surprising turns. Lt. Gov. Rick Sheehy and Falls City businessman Charles Herbster withdrew from the Republican race, following former Speaker Mike Flood, who bowed out last year. State Sen. Annette Dubas dropped out of the Democratic primary. Remaining in the primary contests are six Republican candidates and one Democrat.

The fate of the Nebraska football team finished 10th in the voting. The Huskers finished a disappointing regular season at 8-4, plagued by injuries and miscues. Head coach Bo Pelini kept his job, though, with a vote of confidence from the athletic director.

Gator Bowl Players To Visit Wolfson Children’s Hospital

Gator BowlJACKSONVILLE, FL—Select players and cheerleaders from the University of Nebraska and the University of Georgia will visit Wolfson Children’s Hospital tomorrow, Monday, December 30 at 12:00 noon. This provides an opportunity for the children in the hospital to meet role models and is an ideal way for the players from both universities to lift the spirits of local hospitalized children.

Media will meet in the lobby of Wolfson Children’s Hospital, 800 Prudential Drive, where further instructions regarding the visit will be relayed.

Wolfson Children’s Hospital is also the beneficiary of the Gator Bowl VyStar 5K Run that is scheduled at 1:00 p.m. on Tuesday, December 31 at the Jacksonville Landing.

Huskers Adjust to New Practice Site

nebraska_helmetJacksonville, Fla. – Due to rain throughout the day on Saturday that saturated the practice field on the campus of the University of North Florida, the Nebraska football team moved to a new practice site on Sunday, as the Huskers prepared for the No. 23 Georgia Bulldogs on field turf at Creeks Athletic Association.

The Huskers were set to practice in the morning, but moved practice to the afternoon due to morning rain in the Jacksonville area. The team continued to prepare for Wednesday’s Gator Bowl with the Bulldogs for just under two hours in shorts, helmets and shoulders pads.

Head Coach Bo Pelini met with the media following Sunday’s practice and thought his team adjusted well to the schedule and locations changes.

“It was the right thing to do, the field (at the University of North Florida) got pretty tore up with the rain yesterday,” Pelini said. “I thought our tempo was good and our guys were enthusiastic.”

The time off since the end of the regular season has given players time to heal, specifically junior wide receiver Jamal Turner, who missed five games in 2013 due to injury.

“Jamal feels a lot better, he’s more confident,” Pelini said. “At the end of the year he was frustrated. He didn’t feel like he had his burst.”

The Huskers have the rest of Sunday off and will return Creeks Athletic Association tomorrow for their final practice before the Gator Bowl. The game is set for 11 a.m. (CT) on Wednesday, Jan. 1, at EverBank Field, home of the NFL’s Jacksonville Jaguars.

Check out the Huskers’ official FacebookTwitter and Instagram account for photos and videos throughout the Huskers stay in Jacksonville.

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