Agreed. Nebraska punched WAY above its weight for 40 years for a number of reasons but those advantages are all gone now - first program to invest in a serious S&C program, no scholarship limits in 60s and 70s, huge walk-on program stocked with in-state kids who all grew up dreaming of playing for the Huskers and running NU’s offense, dominant running game that opponents caught up to with scheme and personnel, nearly exclusive TV coverage, facilities. Frost is going to be fired and if the next coach doesn’t get it done then I think we’ll see attendance erode and their one remaining advantage will be diluted. If there’s a day when 60,000 people show up in 90,000 seat Memorial Stadium you can put a fork in them.
I'll add that the timing of their rise was pretty opportune.
When Devaney showed up, there wasn't a ton of competition in the Midwest/Big 8. ISU sucked, Iowa sucked, Kansas schools sucked, Colorado wasn't anything special yet, Minnesota was coming down to earth from their glory days, Wisconsin wasn't the program we know today, and so on.
That allowed them to build their program and establish that big rivalry with OU, and put them on TV regularly back when that was a huge advantage. Now, everyone's on TV, and most of those schools I listed have had runs of success in one form or another.
It's kind of funny looking back at their long run of success and seeing when they faltered:
- After their 70s titles they got bested by Switzer and OU quite a few times over the next decade.
- Had trouble with Colorado's best teams in the late 80s/early 90s.
- Their 90s titles came during a down period for OU.
- Faltered after their last NC thanks to losses to Texas and Snyder's great K-State teams.
- Didn't do well in the 2000s facing off against those upstart B12 South teams like TT and OSU.
Seems like they didn't handle things well when the playing field leveled out and other programs stepped up their game, unlike Oklahoma did.