Nebraska has put itself in a strong position with 2028 quarterback Jaxson Carper, and the Huskers will get another important chance to make their case when he returns to Lincoln this fall for the Ohio State game.
Carper’s June unofficial visit already gave Nebraska a boost. According to Rivals’ Bryan Munson, he came away with a strong connection to Matt Rhule, Glenn Thomas and Dana Holgorsen, and that relationship could matter a lot as Carper narrows his list and moves toward a decision.
Right now, Arizona appears to be the main competition. Rivals’ Adam Gorney said earlier this month that Arizona, Nebraska, UCLA, Iowa and Kansas make up Carper’s top group, and he noted that the Wildcats have his attention because the staff has stayed heavily involved and he likes the entire group in Tucson.
Carper backed that up in his own comments to Gorney: “Arizona is a top school for me right now,” Carper told the analyst. “I like Nebraska a lot.
UCLA, Iowa is up there, Kansas, that’s the top five right now. Arizona is top-two for sure.”
He also said he knows about Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita’s success over the years and sees that as something worth studying, even if their games are a little different.
Nebraska’s pitch is clearly resonating too. Carper said, “He’s not the biggest guy, but he’s a top guy for sure.
The way they help him, build him up, and talk so highly of him shows they have confidence in him. You want to see that in a program.
If I go there, they might talk about me like that, and it would be amazing.”
The Huskers’ interest makes sense based on how they’ve adjusted their quarterback evaluation. After the Dylan Raiola experiment ended with him departing for Oregon, Nebraska has put more emphasis on mobility instead of treating it like a bonus trait.
That fits Carper, who threw for over 1,600 yards and ran for 264 yards as a sophomore despite limited playing time. He is set to take over as a starter in 2025, and plenty of programs will be watching that junior season closely.
Carper is currently ranked No. 280 overall in the 2028 class, No. 19 at quarterback and No. 21 in California, according to the Rivals Industry Rankings. That kind of profile explains why his recruitment is drawing so much attention, and why Nebraska’s upcoming visit could matter so much.
For the Huskers, the next step is simple: make the Ohio State weekend count. If Lincoln leaves a lasting impression, Nebraska could strengthen its hold on one of the most important quarterback targets in the class.
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Tree Babalade has spent spring practice trying to make Nebraskas reshaped offensive line feel less like a collection of newcomers and more like a unit. The 6-foot-5, 330-pound transfer is in the mix at right tackle after a season in which injuries kept the Cornhuskers searching for answers up front, and he has been part of a group that includes Brendan Black and Paul Mubenga showing early chemistry as the line works to become more mobile and more physical.
For Nebraska, the appeal is obvious. Coaches and teammates have seen a group that looks better suited to protect the quarterback and create more push in the run game, two areas that have to stabilize if the offense is going to take a step forward. Babalades role is still part of the competition, but his size and spring progress have already made him one of the more important names to watch as the line continues to sort itself out. [Read more 🡒]
Nebraska Just Took A Brutal Hit To Its Pitching Staff
Nebraskas roster planning took a hit this week when two pitchers, Ty Horn and Carson Jasa, were selected early in the MLB draft, a development that could reshape the Huskers staff heading into next season. For a program trying to keep momentum going on the field while also building out its future at quarterback, it is the kind of double-edged reminder that college baseball and recruiting never really stop moving at the same time.
The timing matters because Nebraska is still working to hold together its long-term football pipeline, too, with top 2027 quarterback commitment Trae Taylor reaffirming his pledge as long as Matt Rhule remains coach. The Huskers are also pushing ahead in the 2028 class, where Jaxson Carper remains a priority target and is expected back on campus again in the fall, keeping the programs future plans very much in motion even as one part of the roster suddenly looks thinner. [Read more 🡒]
Trae Taylor Just Gave Nebraska Fans A Reason To Exhale
A little more than a year after Trae Taylor moved to Millard South High School to get closer to Nebraskas program, the quarterback commit is suddenly carrying a different kind of buzz. Rivals and On3 both bumped him to five-star status after his performance at the Elite 11 Finals, and the rise fits the kind of junior-year production that has kept him squarely in the conversation as one of the top young passers in the country.
For Nebraska fans, the timing matters almost as much as the ranking. Any time a high-profile commit starts drawing extra attention, the worry is whether the recruiting picture might shift, especially with transfer chatter never far away in modern football. Taylors camp has already pushed back on that noise, and for now the Cornhuskers can at least exhale knowing their prized quarterback remains tied to the class and to the program he moved closer to join. [Read more 🡒]
