Nebraska Fans Are Split On The Kind Of Saturdays They Want

As the College Football Playoff expansion looms, Nebraska football may soon embrace thrilling non-conference showdowns against historic rivals, invigorating both fan bases and TV networks.

With the College Football Playoff possibly headed toward a 24-team format, the schedule game could start looking a lot different for schools like Nebraska.

That’s the idea, anyway. If an early non-conference loss doesn’t slam the door on CFP hopes, Power 4 programs may be more willing to take on opponents that actually make September interesting. For Nebraska, that would mean fewer tune-up games and more matchups that carry some real bite.

There’s also a practical argument for it. A hard-fought loss against a quality opponent may not be the kind of thing that sinks a team in the eyes of the CFP selection folks, as long as the game is competitive and doesn’t turn into a 55-0 wipeout.

But that logic doesn’t always match what fans want. Plenty of Husker supporters would still rather watch Nebraska beat Houston Christian, 59-7, like it did last year, and enjoy the full Saturday experience that comes with a comfortable win.

Nebraska’s future non-conference slate doesn’t exactly scream danger. In 2026, the Huskers are set to face Ohio, Bowling Green and North Dakota, which looks a lot like a Mid-American Conference buffet.

In 2025, the lineup includes Cincinnati from the Big 12, Akron from the MAC and Houston Christian from the FCS Southland Conference. That Cincinnati game was the good one - a Nebraska win sealed by Malcolm Hartzog Jr.’s last-minute interception of Brendan Sorsby.

Then in 2027, Nebraska is scheduled to play Northern Illinois, Miami (Ohio) and Northern Iowa, an FCS team from the Missouri Valley Football Conference.

The broader trend is hard to miss. In 2025, only 10 of 136 FBS teams did not schedule an FCS opponent, and four of those were Big Ten schools: Michigan, UCLA, USC and Wisconsin. The other FBS teams on that list were Colorado, Notre Dame, Sam Houston, Stanford, Texas and Tulane.

That’s why the case for tougher non-conference games keeps coming up. A bigger stage, a better opponent and a prime-time slot against another Power 4 team would offer more than the usual 11 a.m. kickoff on the Big Ten Network for a game nobody expects to be close.

If Nebraska is going to dream bigger, there are obvious places to start. Oklahoma is the first one.

The old Big Eight rival last played in 2022, when the Sooners beat Nebraska 49-14 in Lincoln. The Huskers have dropped 7 of 8 in the series, which Oklahoma leads 47-38-3.

Still, this is one of the heavyweight rivalries in the sport, and The Athletic ranked it No. 6 in its top 100 college football rivalries last year.

The history is loaded. Nebraska and Oklahoma have met since 1912, when the Huskers won 13-9 in Lincoln.

The two schools also played in the 2010 Big Eight title game, and since then they’ve only faced each other twice. The 1971 “Game of the Century” remains the signature moment - Nebraska’s 35-31 win in Norman on the way to a national championship.

Colorado belongs on that list too. The rivalry was ranked No. 33 in The Athletic’s top 100 college football rivalries last year, and the most recent meeting came in 2024, when Nebraska beat Colorado 28-10 at Memorial Stadium.

That snapped a three-game Colorado winning streak and came against Buffs coach Deion Sanders. The first game between the schools was in 1898, a 23-10 Nebraska win in Boulder, and the Huskers lead the series 50-21-2.

The point is simple: traditional rivals should keep playing, no matter what the final record looks like.

And if Nebraska wants to go beyond that, why stop there? Notre Dame, Miami or an SEC opponent would all bring plenty of juice. Those are the kinds of games that would make Saturdays feel bigger before the tailgates even get started.

In Other News...

Nebraska May Have An Under The Radar Pass Rush Answer

Kade Pietrzaks first season in Lincoln gave Nebraska a little more than it probably expected from a true freshman who never left the lineup. He played in all 13 games and finished with 17 tackles, 7 tackles for loss, 2 sacks, a pass breakup and even a safety, production that helped him stand out in a defense that was still searching for reliable pressure off the edge.

Thats why Bryan Christopherson sees Pietrzak as one of the more quietly important pieces on the roster heading into 2026, slotting him 23rd on his list of indispensable Huskers. With the pass rush still a point of concern and Rob Aurich now in place to guide the defense, Pietrzaks early workload suggests Nebraska may already have a young answer waiting in-house, even if the bigger leap is still ahead. [Read more 🡒]

Former Nebraska Target Kerr Kriisa Is Suddenly Tied To Shocking Allegations

Kerr Kriisa, who once surfaced as a Nebraska recruiting target during his college transfer process, is now at the center of a far different kind of attention. The former guards name has been tied to a federal case involving a fraud scheme that investigators say stretched across several years and reached multiple victims, turning a familiar recruiting footnote into a much more troubling headline.

For Nebraska fans, the connection is mostly limited to what might have been. Kriisa did take an official visit to Lincoln, and his eventual path elsewhere ended up leaving the Huskers to pivot in another direction. What makes the story linger is the breadth of the allegations and how quickly a player once discussed in roster-building terms has become linked to accusations that now sit well outside the game. [Read more 🡒]

Why Kwazi Gilmer May Be Nebraska's Most Important Receiver

Kwazi Gilmer arrived at Nebraska with more than a transfer rsum and a familiar name for Big Ten fans who remember what he did against the Huskers in Los Angeles. The former UCLA wideout has quickly become a player the Nebraska staff views as a meaningful addition to the receiver room, bringing experience, route savvy and a reputation for doing the little things right. For a passing game looking to sort out its pecking order, that kind of steady presence can matter as much as flash.

What has stood out inside the program is how Gilmer has been received since joining the team, with coaches and teammates pointing to his work ethic, football IQ and comfort against man coverage. He is expected to fit alongside Nebraskas other key targets and help give the offense more options, especially when the game tightens and the Huskers need someone who understands how to find space. The only real question now is how quickly that trust turns into production once the games start counting. [Read more 🡒]