Wisconsin’s decision to hire Shawn Eichorst as athletic director is being greeted very differently in Madison than it was in Lincoln, but Nebraska’s history with Eichorst offers a pretty blunt warning for Luke Fickell.
Eichorst’s first major move at Nebraska was to fire Bo Pelini, and he did it after Pelini had just delivered another 9-3 season. The Huskers had beaten Iowa in overtime, 37-34, and the win sent the program into bowl season with plenty of momentum.
Pelini’s final year also included losses by five points or fewer in two of the three defeats, with the lone blowout coming against Wisconsin, 59-24. None of that mattered to Eichorst, who moved on from Pelini just two days after the season ended.
"In the final analysis," he said at the time, " I had to evaluate where Iowa was."
That line has aged badly in Nebraska, especially with Kirk Ferentz’s Iowa program clearly outperforming the Huskers through the Mike Riley, Scott Frost and Matt Rhule eras. It also underscores the bigger concern for Wisconsin: Eichorst has shown he’s willing to make a hard cut even when the record looks respectable on paper.
That’s where Fickell enters the picture. He has not come close to matching Pelini’s success in Lincoln.
Wisconsin has dropped into back-to-back losing seasons under him, leaving Fickell at 17-21 overall. The gap is stark enough that, as the source puts it, he’d need a 50-6 run just to equal Pelini’s Nebraska tenure.
So while some Badgers fans may be excited about Eichorst’s return and the idea that he can help restore the program’s old standard, there’s another possibility sitting right there in the background: if 2026 doesn’t produce a miracle, the new athletic director may be just as ready to move on from Fickell as he once was from Pelini.
And if that’s the case, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see Fickell quietly preparing for what comes next well before December arrives.
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Anthony Colandrea gives the offense a different kind of threat, one that can stress defenses in ways Nebraska has not consistently had, while Geep Wades group has the chance to turn the front into a more dependable unit. The defenses move should also help the personnel fit the scheme better, which matters in a league where every hidden weakness gets exposed quickly. The schedule is still going to make any progress hard-earned, but this feels like one of those seasons where Nebraska can at least make the argument that the foundation is finally better than the results have shown. [Read more 🡒]
