Why Kwazi Gilmer May Be Nebraska's Most Important Receiver

Kwazi Gilmer's transfer to Nebraska has the potential to transform the Huskers' offense, as his talent and determination place him among the team's most crucial players.

Kwazi Gilmer didn’t need long to make an impression on Nebraska. He already did that once in Memorial Stadium, and now the Huskers are counting on him to do it again - this time wearing red.

The former UCLA receiver arrived as one of Nebraska’s bigger portal wins, and the staff never pretended otherwise. Offensive coordinator Dana Holgorsen said, "We recruited hard to get Kwazi. We had to recruit him hard," and added, "He was really sought after."

That kind of chase makes sense when you look at what Gilmer brings. He’s a proven target with 50 catches for 535 yards and four touchdowns last season, and he was steady enough to post at least three receptions in nine games. He also showed he could show up when the opponent mattered most, putting up 79 yards on five catches in an upset over Penn State and 73 yards on 10 grabs against USC.

Nebraska cornerback Andrew Marshall didn’t waste time describing the edge Gilmer brings. "He's a dawg.

He wants it," Marshall said. "No matter how much food is on his plate he's going to eat it all.

You see it in the workouts he's doing."

That mentality is part of why Gilmer sits at No. 21 on our Most Indispensable Huskers list. He gives Nebraska a veteran receiver trio with the chance to become one of the team’s biggest strengths, alongside Nyziah Hunter and Jacory Barney.

Gilmer’s game isn’t just about production. He’s the kind of receiver who lives in the details, and that showed up long before he got to Lincoln. He had to absorb the long, NFL-style play calls Eric Bieniemy brought to UCLA, and he laughed about the learning curve.

"I just remember the first couple practices, I'm just, 'What the hell?'" Gilmer said good-naturedly.

"But that has got me prepared to where anytime Coach makes a play I got that on the dot, I can go run it ... And we played so many hard teams, I don't even look at the teams anymore.

It's like, 'Oh, we're playing Ohio State, they're just a normal player.' We played them last year.

They wasn't nothing different."

He also sees a better setup around him at Nebraska. In the spring, he said, "And one thing we got this year is we got an O-line," he said this spring. "That's what we didn't have at UCLA."

Wide receivers coach Daikiel Shorts noticed the football obsession right away during Gilmer’s visit through the portal process.

"When he first got here, he was like, 'Coach, you want to go over the plays? Coach, can we watch some indy drills?

Coach, can we go over certain concepts?'" Shorts said.

Matt Rhule sees a receiver who can separate against man coverage and add something different to the offense. The head coach said Gilmer brings "a dynamic nature" to the squad.

Barney has already seen the impact in the room. "He knows a lot of releases, he does a lot of drill work, footwork stuff. He brings an older role to the room."

Gilmer also showed Nebraska exactly what he can do against it. In UCLA’s 27-20 upset win over the Huskers, he went for 88 yards, including a 48-yard touchdown, and earned Big Ten Freshman of the Week honors. He remembered it simply: "Shoot, I was eating."

Now Nebraska wants a second helping, and maybe more.

The big question is whether Gilmer can help the Huskers create more explosives through the air. He said this spring that working with Anthony Colandrea has been fun, especially with the quarterback’s willingness to push the ball.

"His emphasis is just, 'Throw it deep.' Just give us receivers a chance.

I love that," Gilmer said. "Once the ball's in the air it's time for us to shine, you know."

There’s one more benchmark still sitting out there: Gilmer has never had a 100-yard receiving game in college. His best day remains the one he had against Nebraska.

Even the visit felt a little full-circle. Rhule met him in the end zone where he caught that touchdown in the upset win, and Gilmer left Lincoln with a clear sense of what he was buying into.

"I would say one thing is the culture here. That's what we tried to figure out at UCLA but we didn't get it done," Gilmer said.

"But the culture up here is amazing. Everyone sticks together.

We're all brothers. It's just like all we got is football up here.

You don't do anything else and I love that. That was a main reason why I came up here because I could only be committed to football."

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