1973 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team


The 1973 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team represented the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in the 1973 NCAA Division I football season. The team was coached by Tom Osborne and played their home games in Memorial Stadium in Lincoln.

Schedule

Roster

Coaching staff

Game summaries

UCLA

The Tom Osborne era at Nebraska began in style, as the Cornhuskers exacted revenge for last year's loss to UCLA by beating the #10 Bruins in Lincoln 40-13. Nebraska jumped out to a 14-0 lead in less than 10 minutes, and though UCLA scored to come within 7, that was as close as they'd get for the rest of the game as the Blackshirts shut out the Bruins entirely in the 2nd half.

NC State

It was touch and go for Nebraska as the Cornhuskers fought to stay even with NC State until blowing the game wide open in the 4th quarter with three straight unanswered touchdowns.

Wisconsin

Wisconsin fought Nebraska to a 7-7 tie entering the 4th quarter before pulling ahead by 3 on a field goal with 8 minutes to go. The Cornhuskers replied with a touchdown, which was promptly answered by a 96-yard Badger kickoff return to put Nebraska behind again. Nebraska again responded, marching 83 yards in just seven plays to score again for the win.

Minnesota

Minnesota QB Tony Dungy managed to get a 1st-quarter touchdown, and that would be the last time the Golden Gophers saw the scoreboard, as the first Minnesota sellout since 1960 watched Nebraska dismantle the Gophers 48-7.

Missouri

Missouri handed coach Tom Osborne his first career defeat as Nebraska's 2-point conversion for the win with 1:00 remaining was intercepted, marking the first time Coach Osborne decided to forgo the tie and take a shot at the win, an approach later repeated to much attention in the 1984 Orange Bowl.

Kansas

Kansas avoided the 1st half shutout on a recovered Nebraska fumble converted into a field goal. The Jayhawks then came out from halftime and continued to hold off Nebraska while putting in their own touchdown late in the 3rd to pull ahead, though the PAT was blocked. Less than five minutes later, Nebraska responded with a field goal to pull ahead by 1 point, where a tie would have existed had the previous Kansas PAT attempt been good. From there on out, the Blackshirts held on for the rest of the quarter to preserve the razor thin winning margin.

Oklahoma State

With 2:23 remaining in a fierce contest, no scoring since the previous quarter, and a 17-17 tie still on the board, Nebraska opted to forgo the easy field goal and instead attempted to go for it on 4th and goal inside the Cowboys' one yard line, but the attempt failed, and both teams were forced to settle for a tie.

Colorado

Colorado never really had a chance in this game, as Nebraska rolled out to an early 28-3 lead by the half. The final Cornhusker touchdown was a change of plans, after a field goal setup was moved towards the end zone due to a Colorado penalty, and Nebraska instead decided to run one in. The 4th quarter Buffalo touchdown was made on a trick play against Nebraska reserves who had entered the game to mop up.

Iowa State

Once again, Nebraska ran out to a substantial early lead and coasted in for the win, as the game was essentially decided when the Cornhuskers put in a 67-yard pass touchdown just before the half. Nebraska reserves entered the game in the 4th and put in a touchdown to further pad the win.

Kansas State

Kansas State never was in this game, as the Cornhuskers blasted the Wildcats for a 23-0 1st half lead and never really slowed down, rolling up 612 yards of total offense along the way. The performances of Nebraska IB Tony Davis and IB John O'Leary on the day marked the first time two Cornhusker runners exceeded 100 yards in the same game.

Oklahoma

Oklahoma completely dismantled Nebraska in every way, as the Cornhuskers were shut out for the first time since 1968, an indignity that would not be repeated until Miami defeated Nebraska in the 1992 Orange Bowl eighteen years later. The Cornhuskers were held to just 74 ground yards and 174 yards of total offense as the Nebraska offense never crossed mid-field.

Texas

champion Texas put up the first points early in the 1st quarter with a field goal, but never saw the scoreboard again as Nebraska fought back to a 3-3 tie by the half, and then shut down the Longhorns' efforts afterwards by blocking a field goal and recovering a Texas fumble along the way to creating a comfortable lead by the end of the 3rd quarter. It was the Huskers fifth consecutive bowl victory.

Rankings

PollPreWk 1Wk 2Wk 3Wk 4Wk 5Wk 6Wk 7Wk 8Wk 9Wk 10Wk 11Wk 12Wk 13Final
AP42222211101311101013127
Coaches11

Awards

AwardName
All-America
1st team
John Dutton, Daryl White
All-America
honorable mention
Steve Manstedt
All-Big Eight
1st team
Frosty Anderson, John Dutton,
Steve Manstedt, Daryl White
All-Big Eight
2nd team
Dan Anderson, John Bell,
Randy Borg
All-Big Eight
honorable mention
Ritch Bahe, Tony Davis,
Dave Humm, Bob Thornton

1973 Team Players in the NFL

The 1973 Nebraska Cornhuskers seniors 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

The 1973 Nebraska Cornhuskers juniors selected in the following year's 1975 NFL Draft:
PlayerPositionRoundPickFranchise
Tom RuudLB119Buffalo Bills
Bob NelsonLB242Buffalo Bills
John StarkebaumDB492New Orleans Saints
David HummQB5128Oakland Raiders
Don WestbrookWR6131Baltimore Colts
Mark DoakT6147Washington Redskins
Ardell JohnsonDB11277Washington Redskins
Ritch BaheWR14358St. Louis Cardinals
Dennis PavelkaG16412Washington Redskins
Stan HegenerG17442Pittsburgh Steelers

The 1973 Nebraska Cornhuskers sophomores selected in the 1976 NFL Draft:
PlayerPositionRoundPickFranchise
Rik BonnessC384Oakland Raiders
Tony DavisRB4106Cincinnati Bengals
Wonder MondsDB4112Pittsburgh Steelers
Bob MartinLB6163New York Jets
Jim BurrowDB8218Green Bay Packers
Dean GisslerDE11308Washington Redskins
John O'LearyRB12303Chicago Bears
Brad JenkinsTE13348Tampa Bay Buccaneers
John LeeDT13351San Diego Chargers
Larry MushinskieTE14402Dallas Cowboys
Rick CostanzoT16458Dallas Cowboys

NFL and Pro Players

The following is a list of 1973 Nebraska players
who joined a professional team as draftees or free agents.
NameTeam
Tom AlwardBirmingham Vulcans
Rik BonnessOakland Raiders
Jim BurrowGreen Bay Packers
Tony DavisCincinnati Bengals
Mark DoakBirmingham Vulcans
Maury DamkrogerNew England Patriots
John DuttonBaltimore Colts
Dave HummOakland Raiders
John LeeSan Diego Chargers
Bob LingenfelterCleveland Browns
Brent LongwellMemphis Southmen
Terry LuckCleveland Browns
Steve ManstedtBirmingham Americans
Bob MartinNew York Jets
Wonder MondsOttawa Rough Riders
Bob NelsonBuffalo Bills
John O'LearyMontreal Alouettes
Tom PateHamilton Tiger-Cats
Tom RuudBuffalo Bills
Bob SchmitPortland Storm
Don WestbrookNew England Patriots
Daryl WhiteDetroit Lions
Bob WolfeBirmingham Americans
Zaven YaralianPhiladelphia Bell