Nebraska escaped Lawrence with a 21-20 win over Kansas in 1993, but the ending had all the tension of a coin flip. With 52 seconds left, the Jayhawks went for two instead of settling for the tie, and one failed conversion decided everything.
Kansas had just marched 80 yards in 17 plays after falling behind 21-14, leaning heavily on June Henley’s legs. Henley ran 13 times for 60 yards on the drive and finished it himself with a 3-yard touchdown.
The obvious move was to kick the extra point and force a deadlock. Dan Eichloff had the kind of résumé that made that choice tempting, too - the two-time first-team All-Big Eight placekicker had made 110 of 113 career attempts.
But Glen Mason wanted the win, and with no overtime in NCAA rules in 1993, he never entertained playing for a tie.
Nebraska defensive coordinator Charlie McBride expected Kansas to stay on the ground. The Jayhawks had already rushed for 179 yards, with Henley accounting for 148 of them, so McBride sent blitzers from both sides to squeeze the running lanes. Tom Osborne later said, “We could not stop their running game,” which made the call feel logical enough.
Except Henley was on the sideline when Kansas snapped the ball.
Instead, Asheiki Preston rolled out and threw, and Nebraska had the play covered. Preston’s pass hit the ground, the Huskers burned off the remaining clock, and the Jayhawks were left with the gamble that didn’t pay off.
The game had been tight all the way through. Nebraska answered Kansas’ opening touchdown with a 13-play, 73-yard drive finished by Calvin Jones on a 4-yard run, then took the lead before halftime on Tommie Frazier’s 8-yard touchdown pass to Gerald Armstrong. Kansas tied it late in the third quarter, but the Huskers moved back in front on a five-play, 67-yard drive capped by Frazier’s 10-yard strike to Trumane Bell.
Jones was the hammer throughout the day. He ripped off a 51-yard run on that scoring drive and finished with 195 yards and a touchdown on 29 carries. That pushed his season totals to 753 rushing yards and 10 touchdowns, even though he had missed two games and hadn’t really played in another because of injury.
Frazier was still dealing with a sore shoulder, but he did enough to keep Nebraska moving. He ran nine times for 35 yards and completed 4 of 7 passes for 31 yards and the two touchdowns.
Brook Berringer added 3-for-3 passing for 40 yards, though his late first-half interception stung. Nebraska had driven to the Kansas 6 before Berringer threw into the end zone on second-and-5.
On defense, Mike Anderson led the Blackshirts with 12 tackles, while Trev Alberts had 11 tackles but no sacks for the first time all season. Nebraska never got to Preston. No one did.
Osborne credited Kansas after the game, saying, “We felt all along that Kansas was one of the top teams in the conference, and they played like it today,” and the Jayhawks fell to 4-6 overall and 2-3 in the Big Eight.
The week before the game, Osborne had warned about what he called “Iowa State Syndrome,” and he wondered whether Nebraska had been too loose against an opponent it should have handled more cleanly. The Huskers still got the result they needed, even if it was only by a point.
That mattered in the bigger picture. A tie likely would have wrecked Nebraska’s national-title hopes, but the win got them a boost when Wisconsin tied third-ranked Ohio State and LSU upset fifth-ranked Alabama. Nebraska moved from sixth to fourth in the Associated Press poll.
Lucky? This time, that was enough.
In Other News...
Nebraska Fans Just Got Another Reason To Worry About The Backfield
Nebraska already knew its running back room was short on proven depth and veteran presence, but the latest EA Sports College Football 27 ratings added another uneasy wrinkle. On the games digital roster, no Cornhuskers running back is rated above 78, a reminder that this is a position group still looking for somebody to separate from the pack heading toward the 2026 season.
That alone does not decide anything on its own, and game ratings are hardly the final word on a roster. Still, it is the kind of snapshot that feeds the concern around Nebraskas offense: a backfield without much established reliability, and one that could end up being the biggest question mark on the team if it does not produce an obvious lead option soon. [Read more 🡒]
