1971 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team


The 1971 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team represented the University of Nebraska in the 1971 NCAA University Division football season. Nebraska was coached by Bob Devaney and played their home games in Memorial Stadium in Lincoln. The Huskers were undefeated at 13–0, repeating as national champions.

Schedule

The 1971 Cornhuskers were one of the most dominant teams in college football history, winning twelve of their thirteen games by 24 points and defeating the next three teams in the final AP poll. The sole close game of the season was the Game of the Century at #2 Oklahoma on Thanksgiving. Nebraska decisively beat #3 Colorado 31–7 in Lincoln and #4 Alabama 38–6 in the 1972 Orange Bowl in Miami.

Roster

Coaching staff

Game summaries

Oregon

The Nebraska reserves were on the field in the 4th quarter, working under a comfortable 34-0 lead, when a fumbled punt allowed Oregon to put in a late score to avoid the shutout with 3 minutes to play.

Minnesota

Minnesota managed a 2nd-quarter touchdown, but the game was never really in doubt as Nebraska extended their unbeaten streak to 21 games.

Texas A&M

Two huge plays left Nebraska's signature on the Texas A&M win, as Johnny Rodgers tore off a 98-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, and Bill Kosch returned an interception 95 yards for a score of his own. The Aggies also managed a big score for their only points, an equally-impressive 94-yard kickoff return touchdown.

Utah State

Utah State was behind 0-35 when they managed to avoid the shutout with a 3rd-quarter touchdown, but the PAT was blocked. The Cornhuskers ran the margin of victory back up again with a final fourth-quarter touchdown.

Missouri

Nebraska was held scoreless for over 20 minutes, but Missouri eventually succumbed to the pressure as Nebraska then ran up 36 points and shut out the Tigers in Columbia.

Kansas

Nebraska smashed Kansas at Homecoming for another shutout, holding the Jayhawks to 56 yards of total offense, barely more than one tenth of the Cornhuskers' 538 yards.

Oklahoma State

All of Oklahoma State's entire scoring was picked up in the last 2 minutes against Nebraska reserves, making the game appear closer than it was, if 41-13 can be called close.

Colorado

Nebraska rolled right out to a 24-0 lead by halftime and was cruising against #9 Colorado without much effort. The Buffaloes did manage a 3rd-quarter touchdown on a broken play, but Nebraska matched it and easily held on for the win.

Iowa State

The Cornhuskers held Iowa State to just 105 yards of offense and had no trouble holding the Sun Bowl-bound Cyclones off the scoreboard for another shutout.

Kansas State

Nebraska QB Jerry Tagge became the first Cornhusker to exceed 5000 career yards at Kansas State as Nebraska scored touchdowns on each of its first four possessions. Johnny Rodgers also entered the record book with his 10-season touchdown receptions, 45 receptions on the season, and 84 receptions for his career. No other team managed to score so many points on Nebraska this season as did the Wildcats, but another convincing win was behind them as Nebraska prepared for a showdown with #2 Oklahoma to decide the Big 8 title and potentially the national championship.

Oklahoma

and Nebraska battled back and forth in the Game of the Century in front of a sold-out crowd in Norman and over 55 million viewers on ABC-TV on Thanksgiving Day. Nebraska struck first with a 72-yard Johnny Rodgers punt return, but Oklahoma pulled ahead by 3 by halftime. The Cornhuskers came back strong in the third quarter with two more touchdowns, but the Sooners responded with two of their own to retake the lead with only 7:10 remaining. Down by 3 points, the Huskers went on a final drive and with only 1:38 remaining, Jeff Kinney scored his fourth touchdown of the day for the lead and the win.

Hawaii

Almost 1/3 of the fans in the relatively sparse crowd were dressed in red and rooting for the Cornhuskers, as Nebraska handily won this game almost as an afterthought to the vacation in Honolulu. It was 24-3 at the half, and Hawaii never saw the scoreboard again.

Alabama

In the 1972 Orange Bowl, the Huskers battled a #2 team for the second time this season, but Alabama hardly posed the challenge that the Oklahoma Sooners had been, as Nebraska sent the Crimson Tide to the locker room at the half trailing by an embarrassing 28-0. Alabama managed a feeble third-quarter touchdown but failed in the following 2-point conversion and never scored again, while Nebraska responded with 10 more points of their own to close the game and ended the season as national champions for the second consecutive year and extract revenge for losses to Alabama in the 1966 Orange Bowl and 1967 Sugar Bowl.

Rankings

PollPreWk 1Wk 2Wk 3Wk 4Wk 5Wk 6Wk 7Wk 8Wk 9Wk 10Wk 11Wk 12Wk 13Final
AP211111111111111
Coaches1

Awards

AwardName
National
Coach of the Year
Bob Devaney
NCAA District 6
Coach of the Year
Bob Devaney
Outland TrophyLarry Jacobson
All-America 1st teamRich Glover, Willie Harper, Larry Jacobson,
Jeff Kinney, Johnny Rodgers, Jerry Tagge
All-America 2nd teamDick Rupert
All-America 3rd teamCarl Johnson
All-America
honorable mention
Doug Dumler, Bill Kosch
All-America SophomoreDaryl White
Big Eight Defensive
Player of the Year
Rich Glover
All-Big Eight
1st team
Jim Anderson, Joe Blahak, Rich Glover,
Willie Harper, Larry Jacobson, Carl Johnson,
Jeff Kinney, Bill Kosch, Johnny Rodgers,
Dick Rupert, Jerry Tagge, Bob Terrio
All-Big Eight
2nd team
Doug Dumler, Dave Mason
All-Big Eight
honorable mention
John Adkins, Bill Janssen, Jerry List,
Daryl White, Keith Wortman

Jerry Tagge finished seventh in the Heisman Trophy balloting in 1971,
teammate Johnny Rodgers would win in 1972.

1971 team players in the NFL

The 1971 Nebraska Cornhuskers seniors selected in the 1972 NFL Draft:
PlayerPositionRoundPickFranchise
Jerry TaggeQB111Green Bay Packers
Jeff KinneyRB123Kansas City Chiefs
Larry JacobsonDT124New York Giants
Carl JohnsonT5112New Orleans Saints
Van BrownsonQB8204Baltimore Colts
Keith WortmanG10242Green Bay Packers

The 1971 Nebraska Cornhuskers juniors selected in the following year's 1973 NFL Draft:
PlayerPositionRoundPickFranchise
Johnny RodgersWR125San Diego Chargers
Willie HarperLB241San Francisco 49ers
Monte JohnsonLB249Oakland Raiders
Bill OldsRB361Baltimore Colts
Rich GloverDT369New York Giants
Doug DumlerC5108New England Patriots
Joe BlahakDB8183Houston Oilers
Bill JanssenT8206Pittsburgh Steelers
Dave MasonDB10246Minnesota Vikings
Jerry ListTE11283Oakland Raiders

The 1971 Nebraska Cornhuskers sophomores selected in the 1974 NFL Draft:
PlayerPositionRoundPickFranchise
John DuttonDE15Baltimore Colts
Steve ManstedtLB479Houston Oilers
Daryl WhiteG498Cincinnati Bengals
Bob WolfeT6156Miami Dolphins
Maury DamkrogerLB7178New England Patriots
Frosty AndersonWR10235New Orleans Saints

NFL and pro players

The following is a list of 1971 Nebraska players who joined a professional team as draftees or free agents.
NameTeam
Joe BlahakHouston Oilers
Gary DixonSouthern California Sun
Mark DoakBirmingham Vulcans
Maury DamkrogerNew England Patriots
Doug DumlerNew England Patriots
John DuttonBaltimore Colts
Rich GloverNew York Giants
Willie HarperSan Francisco 49ers
Dave HummOakland Raiders
Larry JacobsonNew York Giants
Bill JanssenCharlotte Hornets
Carl JohnsonNew Orleans Saints
Monte JohnsonOakland Raiders
Jeff KinneyKansas City Chiefs
Brent LongwellMemphis Southmen
Steve ManstedtBirmingham Americans
Dave MasonNew England Patriots
Bill OldsBaltimore Colts
Johnny RodgersMontreal Alouettes
Bob SchmitPortland Storm
Jerry TaggeGreen Bay Packers
Don WestbrookNew England Patriots
Daryl WhiteDetroit Lions
Bob WolfeBirmingham Americans
Keith WortmanGreen Bay Packers