Red Raiders preparing for Cornhuskers of yesteryear
By Don Williams | AVALANCHE-JOURNAL
To hear Texas Tech safety Darcel McBath tell it, the Red Raiders took nothing for granted this week. Just to be safe, instead of preparing for the current, struggling Nebraska team, they got ready for the Tom Osborne-era, Tommie Frazier-led, Herbie-is-your-worst-nightmare Cornhuskers.
That sounded like the plan anyway.
“This could be the week they put it all together. We’re preparing for that,” McBath said this week. “We know they’re a great team. They’re trying to find their self. This could be the week that they put it together, so we’re (preparing) like they’re 5-0.”
First-year Nebraska coach Bo Pelini hopes that’s the group he’s bringing to town for today’s 2 p.m. kickoff at Jones AT&T Stadium. A 52-17 home loss last week to Missouri left Nebraska at 3-2 and trying to avoid its first 0-2 start in conference play in 40 years.
Pelini, whose impressive resume includes coaching defense in the NFL as well as at Oklahoma and LSU, has another potential negative in play this week: It’s his first road game with his new team.
But that’s hardly his first concern.
“We need to be more detailed,” Pelini said. “We need to give ourselves a great chance to win game plan-wise and be figuring out what the strength of our football team is and leaning on it – and executing. A good idea is only a good idea if it can be executed, and that’s where our issue’s been.”
Nebraska quarterback Joe Ganz is a national top-20 passer at 258 yards per game, but a hot topic around Lincoln has been what’s up with the Cornhuskers’ rushing offense. Marlon Lucky, second-team all-Big 12 Conference a year ago when he ran for 1,019 yards and caught a school-record 75 passes for 705, has cracked 50 yards rushing only once in the first five games this season. If not for 330 yards rushing against New Mexico State, Nebraska would be averaging 93 yards on the ground.
Nebraska got off to wins over Western Michigan, San Jose State and New Mexico State, averaging 40 points on the way to 3-0. Then the ‘Huskers dropped a 35-30 decision at home to Virginia Tech, giving up some big passes to one of the nation’s worst passing offenses, and were carved up by Missouri last week.
“They’re big, strong, physical. They’re an aggressive team,” Tech coach Mike Leach said of the ‘Huskers. “They’re certainly a better team than some people think as a result of the Missouri game. That was a very close game for a half, and then they gave up some big plays and got frustrated.”
Even if the ‘Huskers are less talented than Leach portrays, McBath figures players’ pride counts for something today.
“They’re angry. They want to win,” McBath said. “Nobody likes to lose. They’re definitely going to push themselves in practice a little harder this week. They don’t have anybody patting them on the back. They’ll have people talking down on them. They’re going to be hungrier than some teams that are 4-1, 5-0 right now.”
Tech has faced comparatively little adversity this season. Maybe the Red Raiders weren’t as crisp as expected from week one. That seems less a concern, though, with a 56-14 rout of Massachusetts and a 58-28 massacre of Kansas State in the last two games.
“There’s no doubt we had a different mentality,” Tech quarterback Graham Harrell said of the performance at KSU.
“I think that was the first game that really showed our true colors,” offensive guard Brandon Carter said. “The fact that we did get on the same page, even when it was the fifth game, I think that’s really good for us. All we’re going to do is look forward to building on that.”
Nebraska at Texas Tech
COVERAGE
Radio: 11 a.m. on KKAM (1340 AM); 1 p.m. on other Texas Tech Sports Network stations. TV: FSN (Suddenlink Cable channel 20). Joel Meyers (play-by-play), Gary Reasons (analyst) and Jim Knox (sidelines) comprise the broadcast crew.
RECORDS
Texas Tech 5-0, 1-0 in Big 12 Conference; Nebraska 3-2, 0-1
TICKETS
The game was announced as a sellout Thursday, but Nebraska returned 100 tickets that Tech made available online Friday night. The stadium ticket office opens at 9 a.m. today.
FAST FACTS
Texas Tech QB Graham Harrell needs 256 yards passing to overtake Kevin Kolb (Houston, 2003-06) as the state’s major-college career passing yardage leader. Kolb, who had 12,964 yards, ranks fifth in major-college history. … Nebraska hasn’t started 0-2 in conference play since 1968. … Today is the fourth-latest calendar date for Nebraska to play its first road game. The ‘Huskers’ only later road openers were on Oct. 18, 1975, Oct. 12, 1985 and Oct. 15, 2005. … Tech coach Mike Leach got his 70th victory last week, moving him within six of tying Pete Cawthon in Tech career victories and within 12 of tying Spike Dykes’ school career record. … FL Mike Crabtree needs 200 yards to pass Joel Filani and Nehemiah Glover for fifth place on the Tech career receiving yardage list. He needs one touchdown catch for the Tech career record.
FORECAST
Mostly cloudy with a high near 77 degrees. A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. South wind from 10 to 20 mph.
NEXT FOR TECH
The Red Raiders visit Texas A&M for an 11 a.m. game next Saturday. It will be televised by FSN.
Compiled by Don Williams