Breaking News:Nebraska official confirm the signing young talented prospect
As you saw last year you can run the ball well, but there’s going to come times where you have to win the game where you throw the ball
It is a spring in its own category from others.
That’s not uttered in a dramatic tone like some CSI line heading to commercial break. But it’s different. Like, Thursday was different. Not that all three Husker scholarship QBs came in for interviews. We’ve done that before. But in this case two of them could otherwise be fixing to go to senior prom. And even that in itself wouldn’t be much of anything. It’s how they matter in the competition, though, that separates this from the other spring seasons.
It’s playbook studying over tuxedo shopping. And along with returner Heinrich Haarberg, the freshmen are piling up real-real-real reps. Not just those ones on the back fields with just the 3s and 4. Nothing against QBs who have started with those experiences. But that’s the different piece of this Husker spring. These are the reps of true freshmen quarterbacks preparing to play – perhaps start.
How do you say “which one of you guys is playing for second” in Japanese?
Larry Bird once uttered the phrase before dominating a 3-point shooting contest at an NBA all-star game
Keisei Tominaga won his own 3-point title on Thursday night. To little surprise of Husker fans, he was the best of the best shooters in the Hanes men’s 3-point championship in Glendale, Ariz., one of the events serving as a precursor to the Final Four.
Tominaga won with his usual flash. In the first round, well out in front, he waited for a few seconds to shoot his last money ball (worth two points) at the buzzer. He turned and faced the other way after he let it go. All net. He finished with 25 points, best of anyone in the first round.